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Ignore An example of Snyder's mastery of in-game adjustments Reply
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This play offers a great example of how Snyder is one of the best, if not the best college coach at making in-game adjustments. You can get the full context if you watch the Miami secondary adjust to our formations for the entire game because you'll see Miami adjust to our 4 WR formation. If you'd rather not, simply know that by this point in the game, Snyder is fairly confident that in response to this formation, Miami will play cover 3, even though Miami will try and make it look like they are playing cover 2.
Cover 3 is a bad defense against 2 WRs on each side because it leaves a gap where the 1/3 deep zones meet. Cover 2 is ideal because it eliminates the gap in the deep zones, making a deep or intermediate pass much harder to complete. Everyone knows Cover 3 is a bad idea against 2 WRs on each side and Miami is trying to hide it.
If you watch, Miami gives the cover 2 look until right before the ball is snapped. Even though Miami is giving the cover 2 look, Klein knows that they Miami's defense will switch to cover 3 and he puts the ball right in the gap in the zone, in stride to Sexton. Klein knows this because Snyder has figured out earlier in the game that Miami is adjusting to our offensive formations, just as they do on this play.
Need more explanation? Cover 3 means that the defensive secondary splits the deep zones in 1/3s, with the corners and a safety splitting the deep zone. Cover 2 means that 2 secondary players split the deep zones into 1/2s, with the safeties usually doing the work. However, when a team has more than 1 receiver on a side, a defensive corner is taught to go deep if both receivers go deep, effectively making it a 1/4-1/4-1/2 arrangement. If there are 2 or more wide-recievers on each side, and more than 1 goes deep on each side, you end up with a cover 4 arrangement, with the corners and safeties playing 1/4s on the deep zone.
Here are some pictures to help visualize:
Cover 2:
Cover 2, turning into cover 4 as the WRs go deep:
Now this is how we attacked the cover 3: