mthoopsfan
Well-known member
bgbigdog said:My complaint with the 3-3-5 at UM has been to do with slot coverages. For five seasons, teams like SacState, and Eastern have put their top receivers in slots, knowing the cornerbacks wouldn't be there to run with them. It's not five DB's with the same cover skills. It's three safties who are expected to support the run stop efforts, first, and two corners, mostly on islands which is why Corbin and Ford were so valuable.
If you've got two good corners, then you're less vulnerable to overloading slots strategy with trips packages. Maybe this year, if he has the luxury, Bradford goes with three corners against the heavy passing teams like CPSLO. Hoping the rush gets to the QB in time seems like.a problem strategy for dealing with a passing game, but that's likely just me.
Corners don’t cover slot receivers. They cover outside receivers. Outside receivers can sometimes run a slant route. Cotton is a good coverage guy. Nice speed. Part of the 3-3-5 blitzing strategy is to get to the qb early and rattle him. 2 of our 3 “safeties” have had significant pass responsibilities. Only RH was more run support. The new d-line coach knows the 3-3-5. Yes, corner is an important position.