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View Full Version : How Ted Thompson, Dom Capers Turned Packers' Run Defense into Dominant Unit



SnakeLH2006
10-17-2013, 03:23 AM
http://bleacherreport.com/articles/1812620-how-ted-thompson-dom-capers-turned-packers-run-defense-into-dominant-unit

At the end of the 2008 season, the Green Bay Packers rushing defense was ranked No. 26 in the league in yards allowed (2,105). The Packers had finished the year—Aaron Rodgers' first as a starter—with a disappointing 6-10 record.

The run defense under Bob Sanders, which allowed the sixth-most rushing touchdowns (20) and more than 130 yards on the ground per game, was a clear culprit for the losing season.

Five years later, the unit is third in overall run defense and first in yards allowed—just 391 in five games.

That shift has been developing since the groundwork was laid in 2009, and the credit for the recent success goes to the aggressive rebuilding of the unit Ted Thompson, Mike McCarthy and defensive coordinator Dom Capers began five years ago.

After being courted by multiple teams, including the New York Giants, Dom Capers, who had been serving as the secondary coach in New England, was hired by the Packers in January 2009. The team subsequently announced it would transition to Capers' specialty, a 3-4 defense, after running a 4-3 since 1992.

Though Capers' expertise from his college coaching days was as a defensive backs coach, the Packers weren't looking to dramatically improve their secondary. In contrast to its 2008 rushing defense, Green Bay's passing defense held opposing quarterbacks to the fourth-lowest passer rating in the league and a cumulative completion percentage of just over 55 percent.

Though many Packers fans think that the switch in schemes was a result of Capers' hiring, McCarthy had wanted to make the transition. One of his top priorities was to hire someone with knowledge of the scheme.

The move to a 3-4 scheme was directly geared toward rebuilding the run defense.

"But it's an excellent run defense [and it] creates pass rush on the quarterback," McCarthy said at the time of Capers' hiring, via ESPN's Chris Mortensen. "From an offensive standpoint ... it really cuts the menu of the offense probably in half of what you would normally do [against] a four-man front."

As Capers explains in the above video from 2009, the Packers' transition from a 4-3 scheme to a hybrid defense and then to a pure 3-4 scheme would be dictated by personnel. Thus, it was time for Thompson to go about getting some players to plug into it.

In 2009, Thompson had, arguably, the most aggressive and the most successful draft of his tenure as Green Bay's general manager, second possibly only to his decision to take Rodgers in 2005. It was heavily focused on defense.

Thompson used three of the Packers' seven picks to acquire players who would become three of the 2013 team's starting front seven (injuries notwithstanding): B.J. Raji went seventh overall, followed by Clay Matthews with the 26th pick in Round 1 and then Brad Jones in Round 7.

The well-documented move for Matthews was especially aggressive. The Packers traded their second-round pick (41st) and two third-round picks (73rd and 83rd) to the New England Patriots to get back into Round 1 to take Matthews at 26th overall. (They also got a fifth-round pick.)

With the switch to the 3-4 scheme came the need for a pass-rushing linebacker, and for Thompson and Capers, Matthews was that guy. It was a bonus that he would prove to be just as effective at stopping the run.

The moves—the hiring of Capers, the transition to a 3-4 defense and the defensive draft—paid off almost immediately. At the end of the 2009 season, Green Bay's run defense was No. 1 in rushing yards allowed (1,333) and rushing touchdowns allowed—just five, down from 20 the season before. The unit had cut its rushing yards allowed nearly in half from 2008.

The table below shows the dramatic increase in rushing defense success the Packers had after they switched to the 3-4 scheme in 2009, as compared to the lackluster 2008 season.

Packers 2009 Run Defense After Switch to 3-4 Scheme Rushing Yards Allowed TDs Allowed Yards Per Attempt Allowed
2008 2,105 (26th) 20 (27th) 4.6 (26th)
2009 1,333 (1st) 5 (1st) 3.6 (2nd)

At home, against the Chicago Bears, in Jay Cutler's first game against his new archrival, Capers brought both outside linebackers (here, Aaron Kampman on the left and Brady Poppinga on the right) down to the line to blitz on the Packers' very first regular-season defensive play under his tenure.

Under Dom Capers, Green Bay's defense was aggressive right off the bat in 2009. Here, Capers has called a blitz and moved both OLBs to the line of scrimmage.

In that game, the Packers held the Bears to just 76 rushing yards, according to Pro-Football-Reference.com.

Matthews had made an impact immediately as a rookie in 2009, playing in all 16 games at the right outside linebacker position and notching 10 sacks and 36 tackles, according to Pro-Football-Reference.com. Raji, too, played most of the games his rookie year as a defensive tackle and had 19 tackles.

Jones was on the second-team defense at outside linebacker—on the right side, at first, and then on the left in 2010—and it wasn't until he was made a starting middle linebacker in 2012 that his talents fully emerged.

His success surged as a result of the position change; he had 52 tackles and 21 assists last season, stepping up for the injured Matthews, who only played 12 games. He finished the season ranked 10th against the run among all inside linebackers, according to Pro Football Focus (subscription required), with a score of 8.6.

Raji, who started at nose tackle rather than defensive end in 2012, also had a breakout season last year. His 19 quarterback hurries and 19 tackles were good enough for him to end the season sixth in Pro Football Focus (subscription required) rankings among all nose tackles against the run.

With all the personnel in place by 2012, the Packers, as Capers had said, were running a pure 3-4 defense. In 2011, the unit's production dipped slightly, which may have been due to the fact that the Packers were running sub-packages, like the nickel, more often than a true 3-4 scheme with three defensive linemen on the field.

McCarthy noted at the end of the 2011 season that the Packers would use more of the base defense.

The first was moving Brad Jones from outside linebacker to the inside in the offseason proved invaluable. Starting inside linebacker Desmond Bishop was placed on injured reserve after the Packers' first preseason game in 2012. D.J. Smith moved up to fill in for him, but he, too, was placed on IR after Week 6.

It also became clear in 2012 that Clay Matthews was just as important to the run defense as he was a pass-rusher.

The table below shows how many rushing yards the Packers allowed with Clay Matthews in 2012 and how many they allowed without him. The difference in the effectiveness of the rushing defense is shocking as a result of losing an outside linebacker, rather than a defensive end or inside linebacker.

Packers 2012 Run Defense With and Without Clay Matthews Rushing Yards Per Game Allowed Rushing TDs Allowed
With Matthews (10 games) 96.8 6
Without Matthews (4 games) 158 5

Though Matthews and Jones have certainly helped the Packers rise to third-overall in rushing defense, all hope is not lost for Capers' unit while they sit out with injuries.

That's up from No. 7 before the Packers faced the Baltimore Ravens in Week 6. His elevated play, good enough to move him up in the rankings, certainly helped the Packers do so, as well—the team, too, moved up two spots, from the fifth-best run defense before Week 6 to the third-best.

Additionally, Ryan Pickett, starting at nose tackle and flanked on both sides by defensive ends Raji and Johnny Jolly—the three of whom, combined, weigh literally one ton—has the strength and the girth to easily double-block run gaps.

Thompson is accused of being too conservative in his hesitancy to make moves in free agency or through trades, while Capers has been lambasted for what some see as a lack of preparation, such as after the Packers' loss to the San Francisco 49ers in the 2012 playoffs when his unit was unable to defend against Colin Kaepernick's skill set.

These claims, levied over and over, may have some occasional merit. Remember that this examination has been focused solely on the results that Thompson and Capers have been able to achieve with Green Bay's run defense, not its secondary.

That being said, there is no possible way to look at how ineffective the Packers rushing defense was in 2008 compared to the complete turnaround to No. 1 in 2009, and its current position at No. 3 in the league, and not give credit to Capers, for running the scheme, and Thompson, for acquiring the players.
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Just relax before anyone goes..Snake just posted a full article...it's just Bleacher Report shit...which is just some dude's take else I wouldn't have...but fuck ya our Run D is amazing. 4 downs to get a TD and Ravens can suck it.

It's hard to give credit to one dude...but Jolly is the guy. He was there in 2009 when we had the best run D...and is there again stuffing it up..making dude's better. Love that fucking guy. Raji and Pickett feed off Jolly...such a tough SOB.

Now if only our maligned offense could get off the ground....although Lacy has been as good as I thought....but ARod has really not been the MVP I praise him for...seeing how other great QB's elevate the game despite losses or lack of talent (Favre was great at it..don't hate me...and Brady has been awesome at it till this year).

denverYooper
10-17-2013, 09:06 AM
the three of whom, combined, weigh literally one ton

I could tell Jolly gained weight, but I didn't think he was up in the 650 lb range.

pbmax
10-17-2013, 09:11 AM
I don't think that word means what they think it means, but I take their point.

Maxie the Taxi
10-17-2013, 09:21 AM
http://bleacherreport.com/articles/1812620-how-ted-thompson-dom-capers-turned-packers-run-defense-into-dominant-unit

Now if only our maligned offense could get off the ground....although Lacy has been as good as I thought....but ARod has really not been the MVP I praise him for...seeing how other great QB's elevate the game despite losses or lack of talent (Favre was great at it..don't hate me...and Brady has been awesome at it till this year).

Sunday's game will be telling. Arod has been stripped of two of his big guns at WR. We'll see if Stubby and Arod are going to try to force their old scheme (Arod holding the ball waiting for separation downfield) with substitute receivers, or if they are going to adjust the scheme to the substitute players' talent.

pbmax
10-17-2013, 09:28 AM
Packers are fifth in the NFL in scoring average per game. Its hard to elevate much higher. And that is WITH red zone issues.

denverYooper
10-17-2013, 09:28 AM
Packers are fifth in the NFL in scoring average per game. Its hard to elevate much higher. And that is WITH red zone issues.

They'll get that fixed.

Upnorth
10-17-2013, 09:49 AM
I hope the downward trend in scoring reverses and returns to Packer normal, so 30ish per game. You know who we need right now?

Greg Jennings (he typed while ducking)

Regarding the defence, I am very impressed with how they tend to control most of the game, but incredibly frustrated with how a they get lost for a few minutes at a time during the game. My question is it due to opponent adjustment or a change in our d's style?

Maxie the Taxi
10-17-2013, 09:55 AM
Upnorth, you spoke of the elephant in the room.:grin:

hoosier
10-17-2013, 10:14 AM
Not having both Perry and Neal on Sunday might make us think we are watching a rerun of 2011. Minus, of course, the unstoppable GB offense.

SnakeLH2006
10-18-2013, 01:21 AM
They'll get that fixed.

It's all about pad level.

SnakeLH2006
10-18-2013, 01:24 AM
Not having both Perry and Neal on Sunday might make us think we are watching a rerun of 2011. Minus, of course, the unstoppable GB offense.

I dunno..The D is fine. Hawk has proven me wrong thus far and Jolly/Micah Hyde are playing lights out. No one can run on us and the secondary only gets better with experience and Hayward back soon.

The O might be scoring stat wise but looks lost thus far. As ARod is not ARod this year..not really worried bout him..just the lack of talent/cohesiveness with the young pass-catchers.