Cover 3 & Zone Basics
Cover 3 & Zone Basics
Of course, I did not expect Clemson to be able to land Steele away from a
burgeoning national powerhouse at Alabama, and thought we'd end up with
Bumpas or The Chief. When it became more clear that Steele was a real
candidate, I started looking through his coaching history and as many old
interviews as I could find. Since some other Clemson bloggers just post
bullshit and rants, without anything really about football itself or thinking
about why things are, I figured I would go into some real X's and O's.
Kevin Steele has a background of running both a 3-4 and 4-3 defense. His
playing days at Tennessee were in essentially a 50-style defense under
Johnny Majors. If you watch tapes of the 1981 Clemson team, you see a
similar scheme. He worked on Dom Caper's best 3-4 teams at Carolina,
coaching Kevin Greene, Sam Mills, and Lamar Lathon. He worked under
Nebraska's great DC Charlie McBride in the early '90s, and they ran an
attacking 4-3 scheme. We've all seen Mickey Andrews' defense at FSU, and
Steele was the ace recruiter and LB Coach there for 4 years. Most thought
that since Alabama was based on 3-4 last year, and since he ran a 3-4 at
Baylor as HC, that it is what he'd run here. Few fans follow Saban's
schemes outside of Alabama fans, so they just see a 3-4 scheme advertised
in the starting lineup on TV, and don't actually pay attention to what they
are doing. The truth is that a Saban scheme is very complex, and Saban is
smart enough to adjust it to what personnel he has. At LSU he ran a 4-3
nearly all the time. Also, wee have two guys on this staff who were part of
Saban's staff: Steele and Harbison (LSU 2001), co-coordinators of our
defense.
Steele has said in every published interview that he isn't inventing a new
scheme, he's just copying one. Given that his longest tenures on staffs
were with Alabama, FSU and Nebraska, and his failure at Baylor, its pretty
fair to assume we'll be running a 4-3 attacking scheme based on those
three defenses. Given that Steele has praised Saban for his teaching ability,
and the scheme itself, its fair to assume that he will essentially copy his old
Alabama playbook. Saban's philosophy is the following, from his 2001 LSU
playbook:
The LSU philosophy on first and second down is to stop the run and play
good zone pass defense. We will occasionally play man-to-man and blitz in
this situation. On third down, we will primarily play man-to-man and mix-in
some zone and blitzes. We will rush four or more players versus the pass
about ninety-percent of the time.
Last year, VK primarily ran what was called Cover 0 in his terminology, but
in technical terms Cover 0 (no deep safety) is actually man coverage. What
we ran was a 3-deep zone coverage and a Cover 4 (4-deep/quarters)
coverage. WR's hate to see zone coverage compared to man, because its a
fair chance that they are not going to only get hit by one guy, but 2 or 3 at
once. His philosophy was to make those WRs nervous and have a few
hitters to lay the smack on them (Hamlin) to make them gun-shy on the
next play. He generally played his underneath coverage as spot drops,
forcing the opponent to execute all the way down the field to score.
Here is one basic Cover 3 call, using either a bump & run corner or matchup
zone:
Saban's schemes use Cover 3, particularly when he blitzes (a 3-under, 3-
deep), with a combination of "cloud" or "sky" calls and rolling coverages.
This is no different from VK's scheme in the basics, we will just blitz out of it
next year. I'm not covering the blitz packages just yet, but in any event, the
call will be made by sidelines for the front and the secondary coverage will
be whatever is called behind that.
A "Sky" call refers to what the Safety is doing. When this is called, usually
upon seeing the strength of the formation by the FS, it is the FS and two
CBs who have deep responsibilities. The SS would have primary run support
(force) if this is called, and would key the RB in addition to whomever he is
assigned based on the formation. He could also be assigned to blitz or cover
a free-space in the underneath zone, vacated by a blitzing LB. A wrinkle
that is sometimes added is to give the FS the run key, and have the SS
back up in deep zone after the snap....it could be read by the QB as a
Safety blitz, when he is not even coming. The Sky call is strong against the
run but weak against the quick out pass to #2 receiver on that side. This
flip of the safeties (it can also be done between a S and a CB) called an
inversion, and in some DC's playbooks the "force" is played by the FS
instead of the SS. Here is an adjusted Cover 3 Sky call.
A "Cloud" call refers to one of the Corners. When this is called by the FS, it
is the two safeties and one of the CBs who have deep responsibilities. A
OLB would shift into the underneath zone vacated by this deep CB, for
example. Blitz MIKE from that shifted-OLBs usual spot, and you have a
difficult read. The other CB has primary run support (force) and keys the RB
in addition to his assignment. Usually the coverage rolls to the CB who has
the run key and isn't playing deep, and a S lines up behind him, with the
other Safety taking the middle. The Cloud call is strong against the quick
out pass to #2 but weak against the run except on wide runs. Anytime the
#1 receiver does not align wider than the safety is off the line of
scrimmage, the Safety will check to a Cloud call which keeps the defense
from being outflanked. Anytime the #1 receiver does align wider than the
safety is off the line of scrimmage, the Safety will make the Sky or Cloud
call according to the coverage called by the coach. So you see, it all
depends on how they line up.
You might also divide the deep field into quarter-quarter-half, assigning the
FS one half of the field, and giving two quarters to the SS and CB to cover.
This will all depend on formation and strengths of the opponent.
Here's another example of what you might see next season, rotating the 3
over behind the CB blitz:
(note: you'd never CB blitz from the wide side of the field, only the short
side unless its a Nickel)
When the opponent likes to throw fade passes, fly patterns, and sideline
routes, quarter-half-quarter coverage can force those receivers to come
across the middle.
But what is the "seam" you always hear about on TV? When the announcers
refer to a "seam route" they mean that the receiver ran a fly route into the
cracks of the defense. Each defense has a place to attack it, and Cover 3
has two of them that run from 15 yds from the sideline and are a few yards
wide. This would be because your slot receiver/TE runs between a OLB who
has Curl responsibilities and a run key (meaning he has to wait and see
what the RB does), and a CB who would have flat responsibilities, for
example. Like the seam in the standard Cover 2 (not the Tampa 2, which is
actually closer to Cover 3) it runs from 15 to 25 yards deep, and the hole
between the deep coverage and the underneath LB/CB.
A problem that many zone coverages have is the coverage on the boundary,
where a WR might still find the sandwich hole between the deep S/CB and
the guy in the flats.
How can they do that better? They watch the drop of the quarterback,
knowing that short drops lead to shorter passes. They watch his eyes, and
the position of the shoulders: longer passes require the quarterback to dip
his back shoulder. They learn the difference between a passer's pump-fake
and his throwing motion, and they look for clues, like patting the ball, that
indicate that the quarterback is ready to release. This is done in the film
room.
Against Cover 3, the TE might run a 10 yd Curl route and be sitting next to
a SAM in zone. At the same time, a RB flies out in a wheel route, and a WR
running a deep post or fly. The deep route takes up the deep coverage, and
the LB is forced to pick who to cover if the CB drops back with that deep
receiver. Only disciplined and experienced players will stick to their
assignments like they are supposed to. A secondary taught in pattern
recognition will expect this route combination based on alignment of the
WRs/RBs/TE and film study, and that CB would read the WR and TE release,
and stay in his flat to pick up the RB, for example.
While VKs schemes did a lot of spot-drops, because they are easy to teach,
Harbison will almost certainly do pattern reading. Spot drops are simply
that, a LB drops into his zone and watches the QB. The weakness is that
good WRs can find the hole in the zone, and just run to it. Here is a
depiction of the different passing zones defenders drop into.
But pattern-reads teach the defenders what to expect, and they essentially
matchup onto whomever comes into their zone in man. Once he leaves
their zone, they release him to someone else. Its also referred to as a
Combination coverage and is more difficult for a QB to read pre-snap. In
Saban's LSU playbook, he has hundreds of examples of combo routes the
offense will run, and the defender is expected to recognize them. Where
Saban excels is in how simple he can make all this information and teach it
to his whole defense, instead of just a couple DBs. Each defender is
essentially looking at only two guys, and he can adjust based on that. With
Harbison being someone who learned under him, I'd expect us to do well in
a year or two at pattern-reading.
The Strong Corner keys #2, and if #2 runs up the seam he's supposed to
keep an eye on him as he releases from the LOS, keeping the combinations
of the #1 and #2 in his mind. Otherwise, if the TE blocks or runs into the
flat, he squeezes the #1 reciever matched on him.
The adjustment, labeled BUMP (in case Cloud is called), is to jam #1 and
then play flat/curl. This is a CLOUD adjustment.
The Weakside CB does essentially the same, with an eye on the RB and the
combinations he can run with the split end.
The SS aligns, in the basic package, 4x5. That means he's 4yds off the #2
(TE here), and 5 yds deep off the LOS. He drops 10yds down the seam, and
plays curl/flat on the TE. All the while, he has to watch #3 on that side, the
RB. #2 and #3 will run a pattern, and if the TE runs a seam route the SS
picks up the RB in the flats, otherwise he stays in his curl zone. In case
BUMP is called, he would pickup the deep 3rd instead of the Strong CB.
Another adjustment would be to line him up in front of #1 and jam him.
The FS aligns 12 yds deep off the Weak OT, keying any uncovered linemen
to the backs. He essentially backs up straight against the pass and covers
his 3rd of the field. He watches for a post route up the seam, particularly by
#2 (RB in the figure, remember the SC has the TE if he runs a post, but it
could also be a slotman), and tries to read the QBs progression to break on
the ball.
The SAM keys the TE, through the linemen to the near RB. His alignment
will depend on whether sky or cloud is called and the call of the front. He
plays the hook zone. His responsibility on pass is to read the pattern of
those two receivers and attack any short dumps from the inside out,
meaning he tries to force everything from his zone to the sideline.
The MIKE is watching the RBs, and aligns straight up 4 yds off the Center.
In the figure above he is sent into the other hook zone. WILL essentially
mirrors the SS, moving at first outside into the flat and backing up into the
curl zone.
In the next post, I will go into blitz packages which play Cover 3 behind
them.