Koya
Footballguy
Something being discussed here on NY sports radio was the unreal performance by the Giants defensive line. To call it dominating would be an understatement.
The only way to have a chance against the Pats offense, especially under perfect field/weather conditions, is to utterly disrupt Brady. The Giants did that and more.
It got me thinking... with the passing rules re: DB's non ability to be physical, have the Giants provided THE Blue Print (the Big Blueprint if you may) on how to build a defense in today's NFL?
You have two of the top outside pass rushers in the game, and can anyone name a better interior pass rusher than Justin Tuck right now? Having the leadership and athleticism of a Pierce in the middle (and Kiwanuka who has been hurt to boot!), does this enable a team to disrupt a passing game in an era where even the best DBs are at such a huge disadvantage as compared to the WRs?
You cant man up guys since you cant touch them and zone can only go so far especially against a team that puts 4 or 5 WRs into patters... but by focusing your cap resources on the line you have the chance to make even average DBs look very good.
The blueprint in my opinion as the Giants have shown the past month: Spend a LOT of money on exterior AND interior rushers, get a very athletic LB ie Pierce and DBs who may not be great, but can get an INT (unlike giants DBs in the past who were better at coverage, but had stone hands and never capilized). This might be the best approach, and one other teams will look to follow, to combat the explosion of passing offenses.
How else are you to beat the Cowboys, Colts, Pats and perhaps even Steelers if they continue to throw so much with the rules as they are? Plus, spending on your D line, if done wisely, can and should ALSO help you defense the run... you just need to make good choices in the defensive backfield if that will be the position that is a little weaker (counterintuitive, but a weaker D-backfield and dominant line seems to be better suited to stop the open passing attack than a weaker line and dominant set of D Backs - then again, if you send 4 or five into coverage, even three All Pro DBs cant cover the fourth or fifth guy. A defenslive rush can mean the QB never has a chance to get to even his 2nd or 3rd read).
The only way to have a chance against the Pats offense, especially under perfect field/weather conditions, is to utterly disrupt Brady. The Giants did that and more.
It got me thinking... with the passing rules re: DB's non ability to be physical, have the Giants provided THE Blue Print (the Big Blueprint if you may) on how to build a defense in today's NFL?
You have two of the top outside pass rushers in the game, and can anyone name a better interior pass rusher than Justin Tuck right now? Having the leadership and athleticism of a Pierce in the middle (and Kiwanuka who has been hurt to boot!), does this enable a team to disrupt a passing game in an era where even the best DBs are at such a huge disadvantage as compared to the WRs?
You cant man up guys since you cant touch them and zone can only go so far especially against a team that puts 4 or 5 WRs into patters... but by focusing your cap resources on the line you have the chance to make even average DBs look very good.
The blueprint in my opinion as the Giants have shown the past month: Spend a LOT of money on exterior AND interior rushers, get a very athletic LB ie Pierce and DBs who may not be great, but can get an INT (unlike giants DBs in the past who were better at coverage, but had stone hands and never capilized). This might be the best approach, and one other teams will look to follow, to combat the explosion of passing offenses.
How else are you to beat the Cowboys, Colts, Pats and perhaps even Steelers if they continue to throw so much with the rules as they are? Plus, spending on your D line, if done wisely, can and should ALSO help you defense the run... you just need to make good choices in the defensive backfield if that will be the position that is a little weaker (counterintuitive, but a weaker D-backfield and dominant line seems to be better suited to stop the open passing attack than a weaker line and dominant set of D Backs - then again, if you send 4 or five into coverage, even three All Pro DBs cant cover the fourth or fifth guy. A defenslive rush can mean the QB never has a chance to get to even his 2nd or 3rd read).