Showing posts with label Pat Narduzzi. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Pat Narduzzi. Show all posts

Tuesday, February 22, 2022

Pitt Panthers Coach Pat Narduzzi Defense Scheme: fronts, coverages, pressures and more

 Pat Narduzzi is one of the best college coaches in the country. Someone I admire and have a tremendous amount of respect for. He is one of the best defensive coaches in college football and has been both at Michigan State as defensive coordinator and at Pitt as Head Coach.

Coach Narduzzi runs a 4-2-5 defense with press quarters as the base coverage. Press quarters is an agressive zone concept with man principles. It allows 9 players to play the run, while having cornerbacks on the outside in man coverage using press bail technique unless your WR goes inside at less than 5 yards. 

Your safeties are aggressive run defenders who key #2. If they read run fill. If they read pass, play off #2. If # 2 goes vertical at more than 8 yards, you play #2 man for man. 

They also can give a solo call vs 3x1 alerting the corner to the 1 wr side he is locking on #1. We go over that in more detail below. 

Here's a few variations of the base coverage and how Pitt will align:

VS 2x2 formations

You will see the following coverage:   CB are 1 yard off and will bail while maintaining outside leverage. Some will argue it makes it easy to run slants but you have the Sam and the Will both being aggressive flat defenders. This makes it harder to complete those quick slants vs the defense. 

The safeties are at 10 and keying #2 and reading his release. Depending on the call the Safety will fill C or D gap vs run or alley to the 2 wr side. If #2 goes vertical at more than 8 yards he becomes the responsibility of the Safety. It becomes a match up man situation.


VS 3x1 Formations
Their are a few  adjustments vs 3x1. 
Weak CB-Is now locked on the #1 WR. Expect no help
FS- Now he reads #3 and has to play #3 if he goes vertical
SS-Will split #2 and #3 by alignment but his read doesn't change
Sam- will split the difference between #1 and #2


Strengths of the defense

1. Solid vs the run because you have 9 players in the box

2. Aggressive and by alignment makes it tough to throw the quick game, short screens and free access throws.

3. Simplifies things for your CB. Expect fades an sideline routes vs the coverage as that is what most teams will run. In football, that is a low percentage throw so your CB's are well adapted to those type of throws. Understand that teams will try to hit #1 vertically quite often so expect that throw often.

4. Sam LB's are aggressive to the flat, no curl responsibility, Double Robber to both sides.

Weaknesses of the coverage that  teams will try to expose

1. Teams will try to run the post/dig concept in college but it's not the NFL and a very difficult pass to throw and get time to throw. At the NFL level, you don't see as much of the coverage because teams can make that throw on a consistent basis. 

2. Route combinations where #2 (either a slot or RB) will run a wheel. Probably the toughest route to defend in the defense. Very hard to defend. Thus, why you don't see the coverage as much at the NFL Level where QB's can make those throws consistently

3. The 6-8 yard out route by #2 as the Safety has to really drive on that route. (see below)

4. If they have better matchups on the outside they will throw some fades throughout the game. But as discussed earlier, if you are playing this coverage, you are confident in your corners ability. If they can't cover don't play press quarters.

1st play of the game vs Louisville, they run the fade concept to #1 off play action

Teams will always try to test you with a fade concept.
Your CB have to be able to cover.

Nice job as they get the fade up top and the comeback to the bottom of the screen. 
Good defense

5. Toss crack or just crack block  in the run game, You will get a 2 for 1 on the outside when they crack because the CB will at times hang on the WR initially. here you see it vs Notre Dame. They get a 2 for 1 and a nice 10 yard game on the toss crack.


Notre Dame cracks from the condensed look and the DB gets drawn inside. 
Nice scheme offensively.

These are just a few of the issues. Like any defense their are a few weaknesses, but overall I love the press quarters concept.

Coverage Cover 4 examples

Here are some examples vs 2x2 coverages vs BC in 2020


vs 3x1

vs Louisville you can see the solo concept to the single wr side with press quarters everywhere else.The safety reads #3. Louisville tries to divide the 2 safeties but is unsuccessful with the concept.3 verts with a shallow are difficult vs this coverage.

vs 3x1 you will give a solo call to the 1 wr side at times(depending on what you get)
cb locks as he gets no other threat his way.

3x1 defense vs Notre Dame


Here are some Clips vs BC where they play some press quarters vs BC

Here's another clip of them playing it vs. Louisville.

vs condensed

Some teams will check out and maybe go to cover 2 but here Narduzzi stays with the cover 4 call vs 2x2. They have it played nicely but the safety jumps the 5 yard out on the bottom. If he played it right they would have had great double coverage on both vertical routes. 

cb playing press bail on the perimeter
good defense except for the safety

They also can play some cover 3 as shown below when they fool Notre Dame into an interception. They show quarters pre snap and rotate.



Base front alignment and run fits

Pitt will be in a 4-2-5 on early downs. They prefer this personnel grouping vs 11 personnel or 10 personnel. Here is the basic alignnment vs Notre Dame. 4-2-5 vs 11 and 10 is the norm. Where they set that front depends on the tight end and RB.


Here it is vs Louisville. They line up in 4-2-5 front again with the sam to the field.



Run game movements

You will see Pitt move on early downs and at times  have 2 LBs at times be responsible for both the A and B gaps to their side. Here they are moving away from the strength and playing the run with 2 LBs in the same gap. They can move without blitzing or do it as part of their 2 under 3 deep package. Below they are in their 2 under 3 deep blitz scheme. 

In the example below they are in their 4-2-5 vs Notre Dame. They are moving and you can see how disciplined they are playing their gaps. Notre Dame tries to run power and they blow it up.




As discussed They are a 4-2-5 base but will align in some 4-3 vs 12/21 personnel. Here you can see 4-3 vs BC when BC is is 12 personnel. 



Here's the 4-3 vs Louisville when Louisville went 21 personnel



2 under 3 deep pressure package

Coach Narduzzi loves to bring pressure utilizing a 2 under 3 deep philosophy Here is my other post with in depth coverage on the concept:  2 under 3 deep article

Most coordinators won't dare bring 6 and play a 5 man zone coverage but Narduzzi uses the package several times throughout the game.  This is a staple in his defensive package.

  1. The advantage in  this is in the disguise. You aren't showing cover 0 where you have to move your safeties over vs 3-1 and tell the whole world you are coming. The element of surprise is key. 

 2. You also can really bring pressure and use this as a good 2nd/3rd and long defense. Why sit back and play cover 4 when you can bring 6 play the seams and rally to the short stuff. How many teams throw hot in these situations so this is a great call.

 3.  These blitzes and coverages can be out of 3-2 , 4-2 and any other fronts. You can bring any 6 man pressure you want.

2nd and 9

Pressure double edge with both outside LB

Result: Throw hot to RB -2 yard loss

Here's the beauty of it: Sometimes the coverage may not be perfect but the pressure often can cause a bad throw and incompletion.  Here's a perfect example as Lousville calls good route beaters but the pressure gets home before the QB can get set and throw the football. He is forced to throw early and incomplete.

2nd and 10

Louisville goes condensed and Narduzzi brings the boundary corner and will LB

Pat Narduzzi


Pat Narduzzi



Pat Narduzzi, 2 under 3 deep

The Pitt Panthers run some very good 6 man pressures vs Delaware. They bring the cb and will on the first snap and run their 2 under 3 deep. You can see some of the other clips in the Delaware game. You will see other clips with different blitzes but the first one is shown below. 

Please  understand every 6 man pressure has 2 underneath defenders and a 3 deep secondary. Clips below.


They run a nice 2 under 3 deep vs Notre Dame in 2019 but the LB doesn't get his head to the right gap and it's a 6 yard gain. They have a slant away from the strength with a sam and mike blitzing the a and b gap. If they blitz the right gap, its a minimal gain. Nice design but a small mistake by the LB leads to a 6 yard gain 





3rd Down Defense

On 3rd down you will often see them run their odd package. In the package they can run a multiple of pressures and coverages. The nice thing about it is they sub out 1 d lineman for a LB/DB and they can run all of their coverage concepts. 

They have played man free, 2 man, some cover 3. a little cover 2 and other concepts in the film I have seen.

In 2021 they were very good in this category, holding teams to 33% efficiency on 3rd down conversions. 

In 2020 they were 35% so they have done a good job in this category.


Here are some examples of the odd front discussed above.

Front odd 3-3 

They disguise only send 4 and play cover 3 on the snap. Excellent disguise look causes confusion and they get the stop.





In the example below, you see cover 2 man with The LBs adding in late


3rd down package film to go with the concepts discussed above


I hope you enjoyed this article and defensive study on Coach Pat Narduzzi and his defense over the years. He is one of my favorite coordinators to study and I enjoy watching his defense play.


Here are some other resources:

2 under 3 deep Narduzzi

http://www.blitzology.com/2020/07/2-under-3-deep-overload-pressure.html

press quarters 4-3 defense

https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=X68WXhv27R8

Narduzzi and the aggressive cover 4

https://www.shakinthesouthland.com/2021/10/21/22736260/narduzzi-and-the-aggressive-cover-4

Narduzzi Defense Philosophy

https://grantland.com/the-triangle/michigan-state-oregon-pat-narduzzi-defense-breakdown/

Narduzzi Cover 4 principles

Press cover 4 foundation












Friday, January 14, 2022

6 man Zone Pressure: 2 under 3 deep coverage NFL and College, Pitt Clemson, Syracuse and More!


 6 man Zone Pressure:  2 under 3 deep coverage NFL and College, Pitt Clemson, Syracuse and More!
 


6 man pressures with 2 under 3 deep coverage

One of the new trends in football is sending 6 and playing 2 under 3 deep coverage. Its aggressive and pre snap loks like traditional match quarters or cover 2. Easy to disguise and excellent to use in long passing situations. 

This is different from the old style of sending 6 and playing man coverage. Im not saying you need to get rid of man to man all together but, sending 6 and playing zone is an option.

Let's evaluate the difference between 2 under 3 deep and cover 0. 

Advantages in 2 under 3 deep:

            1. The advantage in  this is in the disguise. You aren't showing cover 0 where you have to move your safeties over vs 3-1 and tell the whole world you are coming. 

            2. You also can really bring pressure and use this as a good 3rd and long defense. Why sit back and play cover 4 when you can bring 6 play the seams and really to the short stuff.

          3.  These blitzes and coverages can be out of 3-2 , 4-2 and any other fronts. You can bring any 6                 man pressure you want.

Traditional 6 man cover 0 pressures have certain flaws.

Weaknesses of playing cover 0(man to man)  when sending 6. 

            1.  3x1 because you really lose the disguise. Tips off the offense and gives easy read for qb

           2.   Free safety has a long way to run vs 3x1 and makes it very difficult to get there.

         3.   players turn and run and create running lanes. At times you end up with 2 guys blocking 1 because they are running with wr and eyes are not on the football. Heres an example below. 

The Godfather of the 2 under 3 deep is Pat Narduzzi. He has been running it back to his days at Michigan State. Rarely does a game go by when he doesn't run the scheme.

2021 Colts vs Bills week 11

The Colts ran it 3 times vs the Bills and were efficient on 2 with a big interception and also had great coverage the 3rd time but Allen scrambled for 8 yards in their 41-15 win week 11. The coverage definitely confused Josh Allen. The video clips are below

#1 Odd 6 man pressure with the LB looping to contain rush. The Bills try to run 2 vertical routes with a post and the Colts are sitting on it. Allen forced to run.







#2 2nd and 7

Double Edge pressure but the LB loses his contain and Allen scrambles for 8






The Blitz was not successful because the LB left his rush lane. Gave Allen an opening for 6 yards to run.

#3. Same blitz as #1 great coverage and a nice interception. Blitz gets home late and Allen is hit as he throws.Here is the blitz you saw earlier. 2 under 3 deep. Great coverage as they try to hit Diggs on a 20 yard comeback. Great coverage and break on the ball.










2020 Pitt vs Louisville

2nd and 9

Pressure double edge with both outside LB

Result: Throw hot to RB -2 yard loss



Here's the beauty of it: Sometimes the coverage may not be perfect but the pressure often can cause a bad throw and incompletion.  Here's a perfect example as Lousville calls good route beaters but the pressure gets home before the QB can get set and throw the football. He is forced to throw early and incomplete.

2nd and 10

Louisville goes condensed and Narduzzi brings the boundary corner and will LB

Pat Narduzzi

Pat Narduzzi


Pat Narduzzi, 2 under 3 deep



The Pitt Panthers run some very good 6 man pressures vs Delaware. They bring the cb and will on the first snap and run their 2 under 3 deep. You can see some of the other clips in the Delaware game. You will see other clips with different blitzes but the first one is shown below. 

Please  understand every 6 man pressure has 2 underneath defenders and a 3 deep secondary. Clips below.


Pitt Defense vs Clemson Offense 

2 clips below from 2018

Example #1 They bring the boundary cb and 2 lb from the weak side. 

Example #2 They bring the safety and 2 lb from the weak side. 


Pitt Panthers vs NC State Offense 

Here they bring the cb and will off the edge. NC State sees it and makes a nice adjustment and completion for 7 yards.



Heres another stunt from their 3 hands look on 3rd and 10. Again another situation to run it in.
They get the quick pressure and force an early throw. 





Here are some 2 under 3 deep pressures of Pitt  vs NC STATE

Michigan State 2014

Narduzzi when he was still the dc at Mich State.

Narduzzi runs a sam mike pressure to the 3x1 side.

They anticipate the slide and get 2 off the edge with the DE and the Sam. The mike is taken by the offensive tackle giving the advantage.





On 1st and 10 they use it as a run defense.

The Ohio State goes 3x1 to the field. State runs a double dog inside blitz and brings the free safety down as the pouch defender. Ends up being a free run defender. Makes the tackle for a short 4 yard gain, Nice design by Narduzzi and a nice pickup by the ohio state off line.





Here are a few clips of the 2 under 3 deep blitzes discussed above.


Notre Dame defense  vs Alabama

Notre Dame runs a sam mike pressure Great design, as the tide is 4 man slide protection. But Mac jones eludes it avoids the sack and gets a 4 yard completion.






Syracuse 2 under 3 deep pressure.

Syracuse running double ilb pressure with 2 under 3 deep principles. Good scheme and design.



Colts vs the Jaguars week 17.

They bring the Sam and the will lb and get a hit on the qb.

Colts 6 man pressure Week 8 vs the Lions

6 man pressure 2 under 3 deep

mike engages then drops

























video clip from the Colts Nickel 6 man pressure, 2 under 3 deep


Colts vs Panthers

 Here you see a 6 man pressure with the Sam and mike coming. CB basically have all of 1 but playing deep 1/3. The pouch defenders are reading the qb's shoulders and looking to break on the first movement and react quickly. The benefit of this is the disguise. 

coaching point: The widest rusher has to peel and take the back if he releases. That is an important teaching point. In this case if the rb releases sam would have to peel and take him. 
























Video Clips of the Colts and Pitt Panthers running different variations of the blitz.

You can run man different combinations and keep the coverage the same!  It's 2 under 3 deep coverage. 

You can send the following combinations:

mike and sam,   weak cb and sam (my favorite) , mike and will. will and free safety.

The coverage is strong or weak and whatever you want to call it. we call it slim for strong safety coming down and fat for free safety coming down. 

Film study:


Clemson vs Ohio state
2019  Fiesta Bowl







Additional Clemson Tigers Video footage

from Coach Dicko's youtube page.



Here is the Clemson 6 man pressure. It shows double a gap pressure with the following pass responsibilities.

Sam-poach 

Free-poach

mike-blitz A

WIll-blitz A

Anchor middle 1/3 

cb-press bail













Clemson 2019 National Championship

In the 2019  national championship game the Clemson Tigers ran it out of their Base 4-2-5 and also out of their nickel.

There are 2 clips in the film below. The 1st is a standard double a gap blitz that they ran before. See diagram above. The 2nd blitz they ran vs Ohio State was really a great design. 

They end up bringing 2 off the edge out of their 3 safety 3-2 dime look. 














You can see the pressure concepts. The blitz above was a key sack in a critical situation of the national championship. Its the 2nd clip below:


The Bucaneers run it as well but vary it with their 2 defensive lineman.

They add a wrinkle and have 2 defensive lineman bail late and look for shallow crossers. You can see their variation of it in the 2 games they used it this year on the clips below.


Here is the Washington's  running it on 1st and 9. They run it vs. 20 personnel.




Additional video Clips!

Here’s an issue when you bring it in short yardage situations.The back releasing can be an issue as shown in this 3rd and 4


Here the Colts run a nice pressure vs the Jags. Get a hit on Qb and force the turnover.



     

video clip from the Colts Nickel 6 man pressure, 2 under 3 deep



        


     Here you see a 6 man pressure with the Sam and mike coming. CB basically have all of 1 but playing deep 1/3. The pouch defenders are reading the qb's shoulders and looking to break on the first movement and react quickly. The benefit of this is the disguise. 

coaching point: The widest rusher has to peel and take the back if he releases. That is an important teaching point. In this case if the rb releases sam would have to peel and take him. 


























Video Clips of the Colts and Pitt Panthers running different variations of the blitz.

You can run man different combinations and keep the coverage the same!  It's 2 under 3 deep coverage. 

You can send the following combinations:

mike and sam,   weak cb and sam (my favorite) , mike and will. will and free safety.

The coverage is strong or weak and whatever you want to call it. we call it slim for strong safety coming down and fat for free safety coming down. 

Film study:



College and NFL Teams that run the coverage: (There are more)

Pitt Panthers(they run a ton of it) watch them play Syracuse in 2019 for some good clips


Clemson Tigers Video footage

from Coach Dicko's youtube page.



Here is the Clemson 6 man pressure. It shows double a gap pressure with the following pass responsibilities.

Sam-poach or eyes defender

Free-poach or eyes defender

mike-blitz A

WIll-blitz A

Anchor middle 1/3 

cb-press bail













2 more additional clips:

In the 2019  national championship game the Clemson Tigers ran it out of their Base 4-2-5 and also out of their nickel.

There are 2 clips in the film below. The 1st is a standard double a gap blitz that they ran before. See diagram above. The 2nd blitz they ran vs Ohio State was really a great design. 

They end up bringing 2 off the edge out of their 3 safety 3-2 dime look. 














You can see the pressure concepts. The blitz above was a key sack in a critical situation of the national championship. Its the 2nd clip below:


The Bucaneers run it as well.

They add a wrinkle and have 2 defensive lineman bail late and look for shallow crossers. You can see their variation of it in the 2 games they used it this year on the clips below.


The Pitt Panthers run some very good 6 man pressures vs Delaware. They bring the cb and will on the first snap and run their 2 under 3 deep. You can see some of the other clips in the Delaware game. You will see other clips with different blitzes but the first one is shown below. 

Please  understand every 6 man pressure has 2 underneath defenders and a 3 deep secondary. Clips below.



Another Pitt Panther variation vs Notre Dame in 2018. They go odd and send send 6 on 3rd and 5 vs 2x2.

Notre Dame picks it up and gets the ball out for a 1st down and 6 yard gain.



Here is the look from the endzone view. The Panthers are in their dime package and 3-3 odd look. They walk the olb up and run a game with the left de and 23.


Completion but not bad coverage on 3rd and 5.

Here is another example of Notre dame on 3rd and long. This time they bring the inside pressure with both lb going double a gap.







Here are 3 clips of Pitt running different combinations of 2 under 3 deep vs Notre Dame in 2018


Here is the Washington's NFL  running it on 1st and 9. They run it vs. 20 personnel.



Here’s an issue when you bring it in short yardage situations.The back releasing can be an issue as shown in this 3rd and 4



Here the colts run a nice pressure vs the Jags.

Get a hit on Qb and force the turnover.
















Bonus coverage:

Pitt vs UCF






Hope you enjoyed our 2 under 3 deep analysis and coverage of this pressure concept. Keep looking for some additions to this post.

6 man Zone Pressure: 2 under 3 deep coverage NFL and College, Pitt Clemson, Syracuse and More!

 6 man Zone Pressure:  2 under 3 deep coverage NFL and College, Pitt Clemson, Syracuse and More!   6 man pressures with 2 under 3 deep cover...