You can't be serious. Your telling me that Keith Davis, in cover-2, would not double a receiver
when no additional receiver is anywhere in his zone? ARe you saying he is just suppose to sit there and wait for the other eligible receivers that are nowhere to be found to maybe enter his zone? Are receivers 'jumpers' now, where they can vanish in and out of paricular zones?
Please...
No, it's because THAT is the inside receiver on his side. The very next thing Davie said was, "If the No. 2 receivers show pass, the safeties then play zone in their quarters. If the No. 2 receiver threatens their quarter, they play a man-to-man technique as long as the receiver is in their zone. If the No. 2 receiver runs a route that immediately takes him out of the strong safety's zone, he simply zones his quarter."
So the safety is suppose to simply zone his quarter if there is no threat of a No. 2 receiver, which was the case with Davis on Lloyd. How is that any different than cover-2? Who is Davis suppose to cover in that situation, if there is only one receiver on his side and the play-action went to his opposite side.
No, no, no. There's NO WAY to know where the slot receiver is going that soon after the snap.
The question was posed by the reporter, not me. The reported was saying that Keith was trying to help, but not 'take up space' be peeking at the slot receiver.
Isn't that what he did, though? Didn't he peek inside on the slot receiver?
The only slot receiver was the one to the left. Parcells admits that it could have been a possibility, but he should have pretty much been smarter than that.
Well, yeah, he might have, but a tenth of a second after the ball was snapped, he should have looked for the X (receiver). A tenth of a second. Because both backs ... had no vertical threat. It was just a split end on his side. They were in I formation. Simple.
Parcells admitted that was a possibility. But he should have reacted a tenth of a second after the ball was snapped straight to the outside receiver. Parcells was essentially stating that there is no well in hell Keith Davis shouldn't have double-teamed Lloyd, because nobody was in his vicinity at all. He brought the point that they were in I-formation as well, which precluded the possibility that receiver could have been a number 2 threat.
I see no difference if this was a cover-2 situation...
You can't tell where any of the receivers are going yet. Lloyd could be running a sideline hook, and the slot could be running a post right toward Davis. In Cover 2, he'd have to focus on his zone, not Lloyd. But Parcells makes it clear that he can focus on Lloyd. Why? Because we were in quarters, not Cover 2. His responsibility is different.
1.
The post you just quoted said that in qaurters coverage, they are to focus on zone, unless the No. 2 receiver threatens their quarter. Then they switch to man.
If the No. 2 receiver threatens their quarter, they play a man-to-man technique as long as the receiver is in their zone.
2.
No, that is not what he said. What he said was that they were in I-formation. The RB went to the opposite side, so Keith Davis should have reacted to double, because nobody was in his vicinity to cover.
It was a play-action pass away from him, so he basically was free of any responsibility. Well, the only responsibility, the only receiver left on his side was the guy that caught the ball. So why wouldn't you turn, with no other threat, wouldn't you turn that way to help? That's what you should do, and he didn't do it. So he's just back in there doing nothing. OK?
Is Keith Davis allowed to do nothing when in cover-2?
As Parcells says before:
Well, he's taking up his space, OK, when he should be realizing that he wasn't threatened. OK, now, 'where can I help?' You're certainly not going to help the other corner. He's way over there, two positions over. So. that's part of those growing pains I'm telling you about. That's part of the growing pain, right there. Not enough experience.
The whole point is that your a football player and you react to plays. It isn't simply about your 'responsibility', especially when your in a position to make a play.