Showing posts with label Tony Gibson. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Tony Gibson. Show all posts

Monday, December 19, 2022

NC State Tony Gibson 3-3 stack defense-Base Fronts, Alignments and run fits

Tony Gibson is an excellent defensive coordinator. He was a a  nominee for the 2021 Broyles Award - given to the nation’s top assistant coach. He has had great success at NC STATE.

- The 2021 NC State defense ranked second in the ACC in scoring defense (19.7 points), third in total defense (331.6 yards), third in rushing defense (124.0 yards),  second in passing efficiency  defense (111.1) and third in passing yard allowed (207.6 yards).

The 2022 version was was 21st in the country in scoring defense allowing 20.9 ppg and only 108 yards rushing per game. They held 8 opponents to 21 points or less, which is quite impressive. They were also 20th in the country in yards allowed per game.

FRONT AND PASS STRENGTH CALLS

Well, lets look at the front, They are primarily an odd front team which utilizes movement as part of the scheme. They have definite alignment rules. 

Here's how they align vs 11 with the te to the boundary. They bring the weak safety into the box but stack to twins side. They bring the lb down over the h back to the boundary.


The Sam and lets just call him the Jack for arguments sake travel together. They go to the pass strength side of the formation or if the ball is on the hash to the field.

Base Alignment with personnel. 

vs 11 with the strength call to the right.
FORMATION INTO THE BOUNDARY, STILL GO TO THE FIELD WITH THE JACK AND SAM


#2 They show presnap cover 2 and bring the lb's to 10 techniques. They walk the lb down to the h back again but vs 3x1 they align the sam to the field with the jack.

Here's how they align vs trips, presnap looks like cover 3. Alignment rules in place.


Once you understand the basic alignment, then they can make all their calls off it. 

Here's another base call with the tight end to the boundary. They stack away from the tight end with the same alignment rules in place.

RUN FITS 
Let's look at a few examples of how well they fit the run on all three levels. UNC comes out in 11 personnel and they align in their odd front cover 3. They move the De inside and watch the spill overlap technique. DE spill everything, LB box it to the safety. Mike often will play the c gap with all the pinching up front. Safety just fills off the rb. Just mirrors him and is often a free hitter.

You can see the +1 situation they create

NC State will be very aggressive with the DT and spill everything.

Great run fits below

Safety unblocked and plays off the rb. 
The Safety usually just plays off the rb in the scheme. 

2nd example of how they play it on all three levels.
They will often move with the de, he's hard inside so they get the spill, with the overlap LB. Safety usually fills off the back unless they change that with a call.
Mike is a C Gap player, Nose usually off A, OLB will play the cutback.

Safety fills off the back and does an excellent job.

Not enough blockers to block the safety


One more example as you can see the de on the left spill it and both LB filling over the top to the b and c gap.

ILB overlap to b and c gap. Sam forces it back inside.

Again safety looks to fill.

Great design, Only problem is it's play action so you see the safety put on the brakes

Here's 2 more clips of how explosive the safeties are in the run fits. They come down hill in a hurry when they read run.

2 plays vs Texas Tech this year. Great job of filling and players playing their gaps.



Lastly, 

The thing I love is the way they line up to end over. They dont give you a soft corner back to the weak side. The go cb over.

They bring the cb over and have the free safety play to the boundary tight on the line of scrimmage. At times they will bring that safety to support the run. Nice alignment vs end over and very effective alignment vs these unbalanced formations.

So much to cover and add.Stay tuned.

Coverages
They play a considerable amount of man free combo vs 11 personnel.
In the example of they are playing cover 1 on the outside. They will move the d line away from the pressure. They all slant rt below.  They bring the Jack and sam makes his way down into the box. Guessing they are playing combo on the tailback and h back depending on who goes where.

Here you see man free with the safety coming into the box.

The Safety sees the play action and reacts.

You can see the whole dline slant to the right and they use the safety and jack in the run fit. NC pulls and tries to hit 2 on the seem route vs man free on the rpo.

D line all moves rt. the jack and safety are entering the picture. Forces the pull read and rpo throw to #2



Here's 2 clips of the man free coverage concept.
The safety doesn't do a good job filling on the 2nd clip, thus the 20 yard gain. He should fill more inside off the lb.

Now they get formation to the boundary and have the ability to run the same concept.
They just take the sam and send him and the free comes down and takes the #2 to the boundary. That's the nice thing about the coverage, the sam and free can cover #2 based on where he aligns.

Formation to the boundary Sam and jack come instead of the SS....The FS has to cover #2 and the Anchor/SS now is middle 3rd. Easy adjustment
Sam comes to the top of the screen. Jack is aligned there. 


You can see the man free combo by the 2 ILB. They add in once the TE and RB block. 
Once the 2 ILB see the TE and RB block they add it.
You see the 2 in the picture below.


Vs 3x1 they will play a 3 safety look.
They try to get 5 over 3 to the 3x1 side and 3 over 2 to the split end side. IF its empty it's 3 over those 2 wr. 
 Ran it several times vs Florida State's trips. Its cover 2 with a robber. 
Pass responsibilities:
5 over three to the trips side
3 over 2 to the weak side

They always try to get a plus 1 in many of their coverages.
Vs. Florida State 2022 ran this concept several times vs 3x1
Presnap single high go to  a roll concept to the strong side and play 5 over 3 while only sending 3 in the pass rush.

You can see the zone starting to develop. 


They go 5 over 3 and 3 over 2. 


vs empty they play it the same way on the front side but go cover 2 on the backside.

Another example of the concept below. 


5 over 3 and 3 over 2



You can see how the coverage works. Easy reads and a plus one situation

Sprint out LB Contains.

vs empty still keeping the 5 over 3 and 3 over 2 to the weak side.


Again they have numbers in coverage. They give up some in pass rush to play coverage
Try to hit the comeback to the single side but curl defender gets in the passing lane and deep 1/2 defender is over the top.



3 SAFETY vs Clemson 
3 safety 5 under 3 deep
Vs Clemson
Take the sam and make him a deep 1/3 player. They play the mike at 5 and play the middle safety extremely deep which opens up the dig window.


3 man 3 safety pre snap

3 man rush


3 safety look pre snap



3 safety look and nice disguise


v

Next up,

1. We will get into some of the coverages and blitzes.

2. Look more closely at the movements

3. We will get into how they shift into a 4 hands look on third down and a few of the 3 safety looks they show on 3rd down.



Monday, July 26, 2021

Game analysis Nc State Defense vs Liberty Offense-How NC State stifled Liberty's offense

 How NC State shut down the potent Liberty rushing attack

Liberty was 10-1 last year with 1 loss on the season. It came against NC State who did an excellent job containing future NFl Star Malik Willis. They did it playing their 3-3 stack defense with nose guard Alim McNeill and company shutting down the run.

The NC State defense  held him to 13/32 for 172 yards with 2 td and 3 interceptions. They also sacked him 3 times. They also held him to 15 carries for 44 yards. It was a great game plan by Defensive Coordinator Tony Gipson, controlling a high powered offense which consistently put up 30 points per game.

They also held a great rushing attack to 38 carries for 107 yards. That is 2.8 yards per carry as the defense was highly effective. This from a team that averaged 252 yards per game on the ground with a potent rushing attack. They also average 5. 7 yards per attempt and didn't come close to that in this game.

The game plan was very simple but effective:

1. Rush only 3/4 and try to spy him as much as possible. They often sent 3 spied him with a lb and took away zones underneath while only sending 3 rushers.

2. Play a tremendous amount of zone coverage and get an extra hat in the box. This was very effective in shutting down the run.

3. Disguise coverage and give him different looks. Show cover 2 and at times roll to a cover 3 look. 

4. Scrape exchange the zone read and play a more athletic strong safety or olb on the qb in the zone read game. Keep the OLB to the side of the back wider to give him better leverage in the zone read game. 

Game Notes:

One of the few times they decided to send 5, they go man free which doesn't have anyone on the back. Willis shows how dangerous he is as he scrambles for 25 yards. The scheme was sound but it's hard to defend him when you don't spy him as he can take off and is so dangerous with his legs.

Liberty free releases the back which opens up the middle of the field.




They also showed great discipline and eyes on Willis in key situations, here on a key 4th and 1, they don't get fooled as Liberty tries to run a bootleg off a fake reverse. The De stays home makes a great read and forces the incompletion. This was a key stop early and kept the score at 0-0.

Later on with the score tied o-o in the 2nd quarter, Liberty tries to go unbalanced with an end over formation. NC State goes man free with an edge pressure but does a great job as the linebackers keep their eyes on Willis. They give him no running lanes and get the sack. 


Here is the clip as they do a great job containing Willis.


AGAIN, HERE WERE SOME OF THE MAIN COMPONENTS OF THE GAME PLAN.

1. PLAY SOFT ZONE COVERAGE

Later on you see one of the many times they go cover 3 against the Liberty offense. They play soft zone coverage and Willis tries to force it into a tight window when they run 2 slant routes. Great job by the NC State defense and they get the interception 





2. SPY WILLIS

As discussed earlier, the did a great job really spying Willis regardless of the coverage. Here they run man free while spying Willis again. 

They keep the LB's shallow to take away running lanes and when Liberty and Freeze keep the rb in it gives the defense an extra defender to spy him. Here they go man free spy. The Flames go 6 man protection and it gives NC State the extra defender to keep eyes on the QB.




3. CONTAIN WILLIS IN ZONE READ GAME WITH SS/LB ON HIM

In the run game they played the outside LB on him , giving them a more athletic player on the qb vs the zone read. They also scraped the LB over the top as the 4i took the dive. Here the Flames run duo with a read component. 

THE MIKE SCRAPES RIGHT AWAY. THEY GET A 2 FOR 1 ON WILLIS AS A RESULT





Later on they play it the same way. The De to side of the back slants to the b gap, auto scrape exchange with the OLB responsible for Willis playing it well with great leverage. 





The way they played it really was exceptional and they had great results all game vs the Liberty run game. 

with 9 minutes to go in the game, and a crucial 3rd and 10,  the Liberty flames are up 14-9. Again they rush 4 play 2 man spy with a nice pass rush game. The De ends up spying and the mike loop stunt gets home. to the boundary.





 The game gets pressure and the CB does a great job breaking under the route for the interception. 


As you can see the NC State game plan was tremendous and the results were a 15-14 win over a very tough Liberty team. 

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