Well, I blast him every time he writes with feeble logic. So we should praise him when he gets something right. This piece, was a very enjoyable read. My only quibble is that with the Bears having O line trouble early, Martz and Cutler went to a lot more 3 step drops versus the Cowboys last week and it worked to keep Cutler upright and completing passes in the second half. So some of the battle we may see might be defending the shorter passing game if the Packers can get to Cutler early or if Martz doesn't risk it early.
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Captain, Give Bedard Some Kudos: Martz vs Capers
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Agreed. Insightful. Balanced. Un-Bedard-like.
Not to pick on him, because I did like the article, but he stays true to form in not letting the facts get in the way of a good story...
Since Saban was the head coach and Capers was only calling the defensive plays, they didn't really "match wits?"It almost seems inconceivable given their status as two of the top thinkers on their side of the football, but Monday night will mark the first time Chicago Bears offensive coordinator Mike Martz and Green Bay Packers defensive coordinator Dom Capers have matched wits in the National Football League.
Martz directed the Detroit Lions against the Miami Dolphins in 2006, but Capers was calling the plays for Nick Saban's personal defense at the time.
Bedard could have rephrased that to make the same point, but he flat out contredicts himself within two sentences.
Just sayin'
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I got a kick out of the articles recently. You'd think our scheme is a bunch of gimmicks and Chicago's is tough to penetrate. A couple of things stood out. I think this article kept talking about how: if you don't get pressure, there are a lot of holes in the defense on 5 and 7 step drops. Well, most defenses are in trouble if you don't get pressure on 5 and 7 step drops. The thing that bugged me though is they talked about all these holes, but other articles basically made it sound like the only place to attack Chicago's cover-2 is down the middle with a good TE. I guess we are in trouble. What's funny to me is that Green Bay plays cover-2 in the backend most of the time also. How are things fundamentally different? People confuse 3-4 defenses with blitzing all of the time. To me, bringing one LB in a 3-4 is not blitzing. It's no different than playing a 4-3--except there is deception on who the 4th rusher is. Behind the 3 down linemen and the one blitzing LB, the coverages often are rather similar. Now, the article would have some merit if Green Bay brought 5 guys a lot, but they generally don't. I'd imagine that the true blitz percentage difference between the two teams were rather minimal last year--although I don't have the numbers readily available."There's a lot of interest in the draft. It's great. But quite frankly, most of the people that are commenting on it don't know anything about what they are talking about."--Ted Thompson
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Originally posted by HarveyWallbangersI got a kick out of the articles recently. You'd think our scheme is a bunch of gimmicks and Chicago's is tough to penetrate. A couple of things stood out. I think this article kept talking about how: if you don't get pressure, there are a lot of holes in the defense on 5 and 7 step drops. Well, most defenses are in trouble if you don't get pressure on 5 and 7 step drops. The thing that bugged me though is they talked about all these holes, but other articles basically made it sound like the only place to attack Chicago's cover-2 is down the middle with a good TE. I guess we are in trouble. What's funny to me is that Green Bay plays cover-2 in the backend most of the time also. How are things fundamentally different? People confuse 3-4 defenses with blitzing all of the time. To me, bringing one LB in a 3-4 is not blitzing. It's no different than playing a 4-3--except there is deception on who the 4th rusher is. Behind the 3 down linemen and the one blitzing LB, the coverages often are rather similar. Now, the article would have some merit if Green Bay brought 5 guys a lot, but they generally don't. I'd imagine that the true blitz percentage difference between the two teams were rather minimal last year--although I don't have the numbers readily available.
Rubish pure rubish! If you only have 1 DL and everyone else is standing you blitzed at least 2 people on that play. It's a blitz! It's a blitz!
Great point Harvey! And the one thing we do have is a stud TE who will push the seam between the safeties in their Cover 2.But Rodgers leads the league in frumpy expressions and negative body language on the sideline, which makes him, like Josh Allen, a unique double threat.
-Tim Harmston
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The weakness of Martz's system (after watching his time in Detroit) is that you really put a lot of pressure on the QB and the offensive line. A five step drop means more time for the pass rushers to get there, and the multiple passes and kinds of throws seem to require a strong grasp of the system, a good quarterback mind. And an arm to do it with. And a body to take the hits you have to take in order to give your receivers time to get open.
Jon Kitna was actually a pretty good quarterback for that system."The Devine era is actually worse than you remember if you go back and look at it."
KYPack
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Totally agree on Kitna - he played for the lions, but he was a gamerOriginally posted by FritzThe weakness of Martz's system (after watching his time in Detroit) is that you really put a lot of pressure on the QB and the offensive line. A five step drop means more time for the pass rushers to get there, and the multiple passes and kinds of throws seem to require a strong grasp of the system, a good quarterback mind. And an arm to do it with. And a body to take the hits you have to take in order to give your receivers time to get open.
Jon Kitna was actually a pretty good quarterback for that system.
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As you said, every defense will get beat if the QB is given too much time, but I've always thought Martz' offense was particularly dependent on that, and more effective than most when the QB is given more time. That was the point I took from the article. Pickett pointed that out.Originally posted by HarveyWallbangersI think this article kept talking about how: if you don't get pressure, there are a lot of holes in the defense on 5 and 7 step drops. Well, most defenses are in trouble if you don't get pressure on 5 and 7 step drops.
We've also seen how Capers' defense can be sliced up when it doesn't get pressure. Sure they all can, but it's a particular concern for the Packers, given last year's experiences.
The article was more focused on the Packers' perspective and concerns vs. the Bears' concerns, but I took that as the premise of the article. I have a hard time beating him up over that. Just my take.
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I understand that someone could be confused, but Bedard and his coordinator/source are pretty clear. IF you run a zone blitz (by definition, rush more than 4) than you can open up holes in the back end of the defense. I don't think either intimate otherwise in the article. Or course, what goes unsaid, is that this is true of almost any blitz. When they say scheme, they mean zone blitz, not just 3-4. Given that the article is about Martz's passing attack, the Packers won't be in a 3-4 for most of those passing downs. But they may be zone blitzing on them.Originally posted by HarveyWallbangersI got a kick out of the articles recently. You'd think our scheme is a bunch of gimmicks and Chicago's is tough to penetrate. A couple of things stood out. I think this article kept talking about how: if you don't get pressure, there are a lot of holes in the defense on 5 and 7 step drops. Well, most defenses are in trouble if you don't get pressure on 5 and 7 step drops. The thing that bugged me though is they talked about all these holes, but other articles basically made it sound like the only place to attack Chicago's cover-2 is down the middle with a good TE. I guess we are in trouble. What's funny to me is that Green Bay plays cover-2 in the backend most of the time also. How are things fundamentally different? People confuse 3-4 defenses with blitzing all of the time. To me, bringing one LB in a 3-4 is not blitzing. It's no different than playing a 4-3--except there is deception on who the 4th rusher is. Behind the 3 down linemen and the one blitzing LB, the coverages often are rather similar. Now, the article would have some merit if Green Bay brought 5 guys a lot, but they generally don't. I'd imagine that the true blitz percentage difference between the two teams were rather minimal last year--although I don't have the numbers readily available.
The question always comes down to: can you get pressure with 4? A zone blitz is just a way to send 5 and play a solid coverage behind it. However, except for extreme down and distance, is Capers playing Cover 2 if he sends 5? That would leave him very vulnerable short middle, with only 2 players in the short to intermediate middle of the field.Bud Adams told me the franchise he admired the most was the Kansas City Chiefs. Then he asked for more hookers and blow.
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Those Lions started out 6-2 in '07 but they eventually fell of the Earth that year. They, not unlike the Bears of this year, were living off of defensive turnovers (led the league with 24 through 8 games) and an ok offense. Once those turnovers dried up though, they really died. Their offense under Martz was not strong enough to carry them through games when they weren't producing 3+ TOs on D.Originally posted by FritzThe weakness of Martz's system (after watching his time in Detroit) is that you really put a lot of pressure on the QB and the offensive line. A five step drop means more time for the pass rushers to get there, and the multiple passes and kinds of throws seem to require a strong grasp of the system, a good quarterback mind. And an arm to do it with. And a body to take the hits you have to take in order to give your receivers time to get open.
Jon Kitna was actually a pretty good quarterback for that system.
How much of the Martz offensive system has relied on a great O-Line to be truly successful? It's not like Detroit didn't have weapons that year -- they had Megatron, Roy Williams, and Kevin Johnson. And Kitna was indeed pretty good that year. But their line was bad and so their offense was just average. Likewise, this Bears line is pretty bad. They're currently 30th in CHFF Offensive Hog Index and 23rd in FO's Offensive Line Rankings. They have weapons too, but I'm not sure they have the line to sustain a successful campaign.
Those early 2k Rams where the Greatest Show on Turf really flourished had a superb line, with Pace at the peak of his career at left tackle and Obi-wan-Warner at QB throwing to Isaac Bruce and Tory Holt. Weapons + time = juggernaut.
So I guess that what I'm saying is that I'm not ready to buy into the Martz-as-offensive genius narrative yet. Call me a homer but I think that M3 is a much better Offensive mind.When the going gets weird, the weird turn pro ~Hunter S.
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I agree with the O-Line sentiment. Trent Green, Warner and then Bulger all put up similar numbers running the Greatest Show On Turf. Warner had 1 year where his stats were other worldly. The Rams really had a good line and it didn't really matter who the QB was as long as he could make the reads and get the ball out. Once their O line started to age and crumble Bulger couldn't put up similar numbers to earlier in his career.Originally posted by denverYooperThose Lions started out 6-2 in '07 but they eventually fell of the Earth that year. They, not unlike the Bears of this year, were living off of defensive turnovers (led the league with 24 through 8 games) and an ok offense. Once those turnovers dried up though, they really died. Their offense under Martz was not strong enough to carry them through games when they weren't producing 3+ TOs on D.Originally posted by FritzThe weakness of Martz's system (after watching his time in Detroit) is that you really put a lot of pressure on the QB and the offensive line. A five step drop means more time for the pass rushers to get there, and the multiple passes and kinds of throws seem to require a strong grasp of the system, a good quarterback mind. And an arm to do it with. And a body to take the hits you have to take in order to give your receivers time to get open.
Jon Kitna was actually a pretty good quarterback for that system.
How much of the Martz offensive system has relied on a great O-Line to be truly successful? It's not like Detroit didn't have weapons that year -- they had Megatron, Roy Williams, and Kevin Johnson. And Kitna was indeed pretty good that year. But their line was bad and so their offense was just average. Likewise, this Bears line is pretty bad. They're currently 30th in CHFF Offensive Hog Index and 23rd in FO's Offensive Line Rankings. They have weapons too, but I'm not sure they have the line to sustain a successful campaign.
Those early 2k Rams where the Greatest Show on Turf really flourished had a superb line, with Pace at the peak of his career at left tackle and Obi-wan-Warner at QB throwing to Isaac Bruce and Tory Holt. Weapons + time = juggernaut.
So I guess that what I'm saying is that I'm not ready to buy into the Martz-as-offensive genius narrative yet. Call me a homer but I think that M3 is a much better Offensive mind.But Rodgers leads the league in frumpy expressions and negative body language on the sideline, which makes him, like Josh Allen, a unique double threat.
-Tim Harmston
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Things are very different.Originally posted by HarveyWallbangersWhat's funny to me is that Green Bay plays cover-2 in the backend most of the time also. How are things fundamentally different?
When Chicago plays cover-2, they are usually using the Tampa-2 variant that really should be called cover-3, where the MLB is one of the 3 deep men. The Tampa-2 vaiant is zone coverage across the board, with agressive CB's in short zones, safeties in a 2 deep shell, and linebackers dropping to cover the CB-S and S-S seams.
When GB plays cover-2, it is generally the man-2 variant. In man-2, the CB's play aggressive at the line and use trailing man technique to increase the number of interceptions. The safeties over the top shut down the big play potential and do some hawking themselves.
When GB plays zone coverage it is generally a form of sky or cloud cover-3, which fits nicely with zone blitz concepts.
Tampa-2 and Man-2 are both very effective at shutting down the quick short passing game. Tampa-2 defenses are succeptable to intermediate routes and plays in the deep middle. Man-2 defenses tend to be succeptable to late developing short stuff.
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While I agree with much of what you wrote (and you are correct on the fact that Chicago plays a cover-3), I'd disagree with your take on the corner play. At least from my understanding. Correct me if I'm wrong. A traditional Tampa-2 corner plays an off zone coverage (sometimes they press to force an inside release, but then drop into zone coverage), keeps things in front of them, and then makes the tackle. This allows them to minimize big plays, but I think the weakness generally is considered to be the propensity to give up short completions in front of their corners. It's a bend but don't break defense. Ronde Barber and Antoine Winfield are ideal Tampa-2 corners because they are smart and can tackle.Originally posted by WaldoTampa-2 and Man-2 are both very effective at shutting down the quick short passing game. Tampa-2 defenses are succeptable to intermediate routes and plays in the deep middle. Man-2 defenses tend to be succeptable to late developing short stuff.
I guess my main point is that most defenses don't do well when you don't get pressure on the QB on 5 and 7 step drops. I got the feeling from this article that the Packers defense is gimmicky (Psycho may qualify for that). Another article I read recently made Chicago's defense out to be one with few weaknesses--other than the TE up the seam. I just disagree with the difference in "tone" that I read between the two articles."There's a lot of interest in the draft. It's great. But quite frankly, most of the people that are commenting on it don't know anything about what they are talking about."--Ted Thompson
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The thing that gave rise to the Tampa-2 was its ability to shut down the short passing game of WCO teams that could rip right through other forms of defense. It shuts the quick 3 step drop stuff down by playing aggressive at the snap (even if they don't press, CB's are positioned to jump the 3 step drop stuff). They stay in relatively shallow zones though to quickly swarm to any late developing short passing. That is how it bends. T-2 teams don't tend to give a high completion % on 3 step drops.Originally posted by HarveyWallbangersWhile I agree with much of what you wrote (and you are correct on the fact that Chicago plays a cover-3), I'd disagree with your take on the corner play. At least from my understanding. Correct me if I'm wrong. A traditional Tampa-2 corner plays an off zone coverage (sometimes they press to force an inside release, but then drop into zone coverage), keeps things in front of them, and then makes the tackle. This allows them to minimize big plays, but I think the weakness generally is considered to be the propensity to give up short completions in front of their corners. It's a bend but don't break defense. Ronde Barber and Antoine Winfield are ideal Tampa-2 corners because they are smart and can tackle.Originally posted by WaldoTampa-2 and Man-2 are both very effective at shutting down the quick short passing game. Tampa-2 defenses are succeptable to intermediate routes and plays in the deep middle. Man-2 defenses tend to be succeptable to late developing short stuff.
I guess my main point is that most defenses don't do well when you don't get pressure on the QB on 5 and 7 step drops. I got the feeling from this article that the Packers defense is gimmicky (Psycho may qualify for that). Another article I read recently made Chicago's defense out to be one with few weaknesses--other than the TE up the seam. I just disagree with the difference in "tone" that I read between the two articles.
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I think the coordinator in Bedard's article basically covers the entire question. Every defense has a weakness somewhere. The question is where and can the offense you face exploit it?
He didn't like the zone-blitz as an approach because he felt the weakness was deep. And if this coordinator is going to lose a battle, he is going to lose it short and force the offense to make more good plays to score, rather than give up a big gainer.
Capers and LeBeau have made a living by continuously racheting up pressure until they get a stop or big play for the defense. Ironically (not if you are named wist), Capers went away from this concept last year when DBs were dropping like flies. I agree with wist that this approach is beneficial in today's game, where the advantage has been tilted so far in the offense's direction, that putting together a string a good, short plays is commonplace. To string the offense along is simply delaying the score. QB completion percentages are off the charts, in part, because of the rule changes.
Its worth noting that the West Coast offense was designed specifically to defeat the Cover 2 of teams in the seventies like the Pittsburgh Steelers. Dungy began his coaching career with the Steelers during a time when they switched from the famous Steel Curtain 4-3 after all the HOFers retired. Pittsburgh went back to the 3-4 when the 4-3 was ascendant. But they still played plenty of zone.
Fast forward to Tampa, where he was faced with the same challenge of stopping the West Coast offense, but merged his ideas with Kiffin and suddenly he was combating the West Coast in a 4-3 with zone coverage again. As Waldo points out, it was a different kind of zone and required different personnel to run it. Though, like in Pittsburgh, you needed a MLB who could run like the wind.Bud Adams told me the franchise he admired the most was the Kansas City Chiefs. Then he asked for more hookers and blow.
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Re: Captain, Give Bedard Some Kudos: Martz vs Capers
I don't usually respond to direct requests - particularly for reporters but ahh, what the hell....Originally posted by pbmaxCaptain, Give Bedard Some Kudos: Martz vs Capers
"Everyone's born anarchist and atheist until people start lying to them" ~ wise philosopher
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