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Combo coverage from a cover 3 lookby: Craig D. Coleman© More from this issue
Diagram 1.
Diagram 2.
Diagram 3.
Diagram 4.
Diagram 5.
Diagram 6.
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Establishing coverage to combo cover different receivers is an
excellent changeup especially from a three-deep shell. (Diagram1)
Combo coverage of TE or No. 2 receiver fits in the scheme of either a 4-3 or
50 defense. It also helps the defense get a fast alley player to both sides on
run.
The corners must have good man-to-man coverage skills but not necessarily great
skills because the corners will get help from one of the safeties. The corners
must be able to play both inside and outside man technique. There alignment is
6-7 yards off the receiver.
The strong safety must be able to read run or pass. If it is pass, the strong
safety reads the release of the No. 2 receiver or TE to execute his assignment.
We teach three releases, they are vertical, inside and outside.
Coaching point: the safeties play the initial release of the TE to avoid confusion.
The alignment of the strong safety is 3x5 off TE or outside shade at six yards
off a slot receiver.
The free safety plays a normal 3-deep alignment 10-12 yards. He also reads TE
or No. 2. He must also play the three releases.
On a vertical release we get an inside-outside double with strong safety and
free safety on No. 2. (Diagram 2)
If TE releases outside, the strong safety takes him man-to-man. The free safety
cuts the post or dig route to the No. 2 receiver side. If there is no threat,
play the quarterback’s intentions. (Diagram 3)
The inside release of the TE or No. 2 receiver, the free safety takes him man-to-man.
The strong safety plays the post with his body position and area clue to the
quarterback. (Diagram 4)
The linebackers also play a 3-on-2 combo on the running backs. The remaining
LB zones off and plays the quarterback for the scramble. (Diagram 5 and 6)
Finally, the run support in this coverage is sky to the strong safety side and
backer or read on the open side. The free safety is an alley player both ways.
This coverage is effective versus play action pass, boots and waggles.
About
the author
Craig D. Coleman
Craig D. Coleman was the defensive coordinator at Morris Brown from
2001-03, after serving as linebackers coach and recruiting coordinator
at Wayne State University (1997-2001), tight ends coach and minority
affairs coordinator at Kent State (1995-96) and the outside linebacker
coach at Ohio University (1993-94). Coleman graduated from Adrian
College in Adrian, Mich., with bachelor’s degree in biology
before earning a masters degree in sports sciences and coaching from
the United States Sports Academy in 1988. Please email Coach Coleman
with any questions at Slaw690@aol.com. |
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