khiladi
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In Cover 2, if the slot receiver on the other side had run a crossing pattern into Davis' deep zone while Lloyd had run a deep comeback route on the sideline, Davis would be responsible for that slot receiver in his zone, NOT Lloyd.
The key-word is IF he had a run a crossing pattern into his zone. I didn't ask about that situation, what I asked was if there was nobody in the vicinity of Keith Davis as in this particular play.
The slot receiver didn't run a crossing pattern. SO what would be the responsibility of Keith Davis in a cover-2 when he only has one threat on his side, that of the receiver manned-up one-on-one against the outside receiver?
Like I said, Davie's description is a little more of a zone on the secondary responsibility than what we (and a lot of NFL teams) played. Instead of the secondary responsibility being a quarter zone, it's doubling the outside receiver. Notice how Parcells said Davis should have helped out on Lloyd, even though Lloyd wasn't in Davis' quarter zone? That's because he's not playing a zone.
The objective of football is to prevent a score. Everything falls into that realm as it concerns defense. Parcells told him to help, not for the sake of the play being called, but to prevent Lloyd from catching the ball. Parcells said very clearly he should have helped out because he had no responsibilites.
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.
What he stated was that he wasn't being threatened and he was simply taking up space. You can spin it any way you want to, but those are the explicit words of Parcells. Keith Davis should have been smarter.
Exactly -- because he's not playing Cover 2 or a zone. He's playing quarters coverage, and his responsibility (when his key, the back, doesn't run a vertical route) is to double the outside receiver on his side.
He had that responsibility because that is the only receiver in the area. It would have been the same responsibility if it was cover-2.
Then you've got a problem.
If you're playing safety in Cover 2, you can't immediately leave your zone a tenth of a second after the ball is snapped. In quarters, you can go double the outside receiver that soon if you know that your primary responsibility isn't running a vertical route.
Actually, you got the problem. You won't be leaving your zone in Cover 2 to help out on a deep ball in a tenth of a second, because there is no receiver in the world that can get 20 yards in a tenth of a second.
Who is talking about a tenth of a second?
Your responsibility is to do what you're supposed to do. You can't have people abandoning their responsibility right after the snap. Otherwise, the whole scheme falls apart.
When did I say after the snap? Why are you qualifying statements that I never qualified? The responsibility of the scheme is to prevent a score. As a player, you got to know when to read-and-react and make plays on your own. That is what separates average from great.
You've never been a coach, have you?
Have you ever played football and been relevant on the field when you did play?