This is about “bend but don’t break” defense technique, the
legacy of a passing strategy first invented by Don Coryell and implemented by his
strong-arm quarterback Jim Hart.
During the Seahawks-Browns game (12/20/15) you might have been puzzled
and annoyed because our defense kept giving up first downs, usually on the
third. This happened over and over again. They defense let the Browns get halfway across
the field or even to the 20 yard line before finally stopping them, but doing
so with authority. We were even treated to the Mebane Belly Dance after he sacked Manziel.
"But why
couldn't you do that until right now?" asked Hawks fans. "You should be giving them something else
for Christmas, not first downs!"
The defense only gave up one touchdown and a couple of field
goals, though. On the last drive, we even got a pick. This leads me to believe the Seahawks were experimenting with
“bend but don’t break.” They let the Browns trudge across the field, working hard for every first down (remember, the first was usually given up on the
third) and allowed them to have their goal in sight before an authoritative
stop, sometimes with a sack thrown in. Over and over.
It is possible that the defense were having a bad day, but
that is not what the score says.
The score says that the Seahawks were trying out a new
variation of an old theory called “bend but don’t break.” You shade the
receivers deep (cover them but do not let them get past you), which opens up
the potential for short plays but keeps the long ones from getting out of
control.
One of the reasons that some defensive teams go with “bend
but don't break” is that a short field is much easier to defend than a long
field. When the other team is on their own 20 yard line, they have tons of room
to go over the top. If the defense plays tight coverage, it is highly likely
that one receiver will put a good move on the defender and get way past him. The
fact is, most defenders in tight coverage inevitably end up between the
quarterback and receiver. Hopefully only by a few inches at first but in 2
seconds a good receiver can stretch that distance into a few steps. This isn't
too bad since you want to be in the way of the pass when the ball is in the air. Ah, but if the quarterback is going over the
top for a deep pass, then a few steps behind means the receiver can pull away
for a touchdown once he gets the ball. Here is Tyler Lockett doing exactly that off a Russell Wilson pass for 49 yards.
So a good defender tries to delay that break point (that
point where there is separation of more than one step) to further down field.
How far down the field is safe? Most people would say about 30 yards because surely
the defensive line will put the quarterback under pressure by the time the deep
receiver is that far down the field. However, a quarterback with a strong,
accurate passing technique can throw the ball (on a high “rainbow” trajectory)
at that same point in time but it won’t
come down until the receiver is 50 yards
down field. So really the defender is responsible for about fifty yards. That's
at a minimum!
I say it is the minimum because the limiting factor here is
the quarterback's arm strength and long ball accuracy. Most quarterbacks can
throw 50 yards. To put this in perspective, guy who went through training in
high school football— not the quarterback, but one of his high school team members— throws for
about 35 yards.
Interestingly, Eli Manning and Russell Wilson can both throw for 65 yards with accuracy far above the average quarterback, though they
have very different reasons for this. Part of that is physical. Wilson is tight
knit and muscular while Manning is long and lanky. Much more of throwing long,
accurate passes has to do with technique, however.
Real passing ability comes from how you wind up to throw and
your point of release of the ball, but also it comes from your hips and even
your feet. This is why Phil Simms often comments about an interception “the quarterback
threw that off his back foot.” That means he did not step forward and rotate
his hips into the throw, and that's why the ball did not have that
"pop" when the ball left his hands. Sometimes Simms notes that
improper technique but the ball does have some "pop" anyway, in which
case Simms says, "That was all arm!" partly in admiration and partly
an admonition to do it right next time.
Here, in a nutshell, is the difference between a quarterback who can unwind his body with maximum efficiency for a long, wicked-accurate pass versus an inefficient quarterback who expends a lot of energy for a passthat does not go very far: Rodgers and Tebow, respectively. Rodgers, Manning,
and young Wilson all exhibit proper technique although they have three
different builds.
Where am I going with all this? Why, we are going all the way
back to the beginning of long passes. Back in the day, it wasn't this way at all. Long bomb passing technique did not matter as much before the 1970s.
The start of 50 to 60 yard
strategy came from a man named Don Coryell. “Air Coryell” described his philosophy
and his scheme at a time when the running game had an overwhelming emphasis
across the NFL. One could safely say that Coryell was 30 years ahead of his
time.
Before Coryell's time the St. Louis Cardinals were a joke. After his time they would be a joke again (then they’d move to Arizona, where they
are today) but during the 1970s they were not only a terror for the NFL, they were a bewildering terror. The secret ingredient that Coryell added was his passing
scheme that could score from anywhere, at any time, developing pass route
combinations and timing concepts are used to this day. He even the idea that receivers ought to
'read' the defense and run the right route based on that. Yes, that was a
concept that the Giants used until recently. All these innovations back
then is why smart defenses today have to use the "bend but don't
break" philosophy.
This defensive structure is the legacy of Don Coryell and his
strong-arm quarterback Jim Hart, who once threw a pass that was in the air for 80 yards! If Wilson and Manning have “pop,” Hart had “boom.” The “Air Coryell” strategy would simply not have been as spectacular without Hart.
On shorter passes Hart was known to throw with such velocity it was
called a "rope," which means the ball had an incredibly flat
trajectory. A Jim Hart pass could sprain a receiver’s fingers. Rumor was that
some of those 'sprains' were actually fractures. Yes, your eyes are popping
open. They should be.
Here’s to you, Jim Hart and Don Coryell. OsQ is praising you like we should, for innovations that changed “The Way of It” for the NFL. Back when people hadn't seen it before, this strategy was
baffling and frustrating.
My father, one of generations of Giants fans, was treated to
the “Air Coryell” circus twice a season as a kid because the St. Louis Cardinals and the New York Giants were in the same division at the time. He had this to say.
"That's how you throw it!"
my father [OsQ’s
grandfather] would blurt out during a
game. It was also a lament because the Cardinals were going to beat the Giants,
and we noticed that Harts passes were hard to intercept. The defenders seemed
to be afraid to try to catch it! And they couldn't because you had to get used
to that velocity. Surely there was or is some quarterback who could throw the
ball a few yards farther, but for me its Jim Hart who is the king of the long
pass.
Sadly, neither Coryell nor Hart are in the Hall of Fame. While Coryell is known to astute football fans, Hart has been all but forgotten.
What they were doing back then would not seem strange to most fans because they would recognize it all as common pass plays today. It has become normal fare in the NFL. Maybe that's part of why people don't remember Coryell and Hart? People have a bad habit of supposing that what is “normal” today has always been there, which means a kind of amnesia in respect to the ones who first invented the things we take for “normal.”
What they were doing back then would not seem strange to most fans because they would recognize it all as common pass plays today. It has become normal fare in the NFL. Maybe that's part of why people don't remember Coryell and Hart? People have a bad habit of supposing that what is “normal” today has always been there, which means a kind of amnesia in respect to the ones who first invented the things we take for “normal.”
In the Madden-Coryell clip from earlier, Madden expresses understanding
that he is in the Hall of Fame because he's standing on the shoulders of an
innovator. His next funny story in that clip is a variation on that theme: at the
conference, everybody else went to the speaker about "I Formation,"
but Madden figured he'd go to the guy who taught the speaker. Why didn't anyone
else do that?
Why indeed.
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"The Way of It" is a collaboration between Ada Fetters and Michael Howard.
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"The Way of It" is a collaboration between Ada Fetters and Michael Howard.





























