Anonymous CFB coaches sound off on Alabama’s defense

What do anonymous college coaches have to say about Alabama’s defense ahead of the CFP Rose Bowl semifinal?

Alabama and Michigan are set to meet in Pasadena for the College Football Playoff Rose Bowl semifinal to determine which team moves on to the national championship game. Much has been said about both teams and how their strength on both sides of the ball has led to their CFP berth.

While both offenses have their stars and elite capabilities, it is the defenses of both teams that have stolen the spotlight. For Alabama, it’s a combination of young players and veterans all over the defense that has boosted this team.

Recently, ESPN’s Pete Thamel shared quotes from anonymous college football coaches (subscription required) from across the nation on both the Crimson Tide and the Wolverines. What they had to say about the Tide’s defense should resonate with fans.

On the secondary, one coach shared extremely high praise.

“I’ve never seen a team cover so well. They are Velcro,” said an opposing coach. “We couldn’t create separation on them. And their back end is what we really worried about. They are so sound, you aren’t going to get big ones.”

When it comes to applying pressure to the quarterback, one coach discussed how difficult it is to go up against Dallas Turner.

“The way he plays with his hands,” said one opposing coach. “How experienced he is, and he knows how to defeat the offensive line. He can get skinny and is slippery. He’s got good ability to close on the quarterback. You can get your hands on him once-in-a-while. He can make a play a game.”

The Rose Bowl will certainly be an interesting game to watch as no one is quite sure how it will play out. Nearly all score predictions have it ending in a relatively close game, regardless of who wins it.

Roll Tide Wire will continue to follow Alabama football as the College Football Playoffs get underway.

Contact/Follow us @RollTideWire on X, and like our page on Facebook to follow ongoing coverage of Alabama news, notes and opinion. You can also follow AJ Spurr on X @SpurrFM. 

Chiefs DC Steve Spagnuolo reveals potential plan to play without CB L’Jarius Sneed vs. Bengals

Kansas City #Chiefs defensive coordinator Steve Spagnuolo revealed his plan to play without cornerback L’Jarius Sneed against the #Bengals.

The Kansas City Chiefs suffered a disappointing loss on Monday against the Las Vegas Raiders in more ways than the scoreboard. Injuries to Isiah Pacheco, Mike Edwards, and L’Jarius Sneed have their availability this week in question; with the prospect of their top cover cornerback missing a must-win game, there is growing concern.

During his Thursday press conference, Chiefs defensive coordinator Steve Spagnuolo addressed these concerns about Sneed’s availability.

“It’ll look a little different. I mean, you guys have seen LJ (L’Jarius Sneed) kind of traveled with, usually, the top wideout,” Spagnuolo explained. “So, the decision we’ll have to make is, do we put somebody else in that role? Or do we do what we normally do and stay right and left? So we’ll figure that out. When the time comes.

“We’re hopeful for L’Jarius. I mean, I thought he and Mike Edwards, going back in the game last week, was big; they got dinged up there. And when you lose two key secondary guys, and in any game, there’s some shuffling and some scrambling. And when those guys bounce back in there, that was huge, but you know, we’ll, you know, the training staff will, and LJ will make that decision. So hopefully.”

Sneed left momentarily during Monday’s game with a calf injury and has continued to suffer lingering effects by missing practice on Wednesday and Thursday.

“We got to have plans A, B, and C, and that’s what we do now,” said Spagnuolo, “The other guys that are in there as we practice will practice as if we don’t have LJ, and then we’re ready to go if we get to Sunday, and that happens.”

Sneed still hasn’t been officially ruled out for the New Year’s Eve battle with the Cincinnati Bengals, but Spagnuolo and his staff will be prepared for the worst possible outcome.

Vikings have incredibly unique defense

Brian Flores has created a true anomaly on defense with the 2023 Minnesota Vikings

The Minnesota Vikings don’t just have a great defense, it’s borderline historic.

Pro Football Focus’ Timo Riske clustered every defense from the past five years to find schematic similarities and differences between the 160 separate variations. He found that the 2023 Vikings’ defense was the furthest away from any other in the study, making it the most unique defense in the past five years.

For a short definition, clustering is a method data scientists usually use to scout how a player was utilized in an offense. They take multiple data points from a player, such as a corner’s pre-snap positioning and how often he’s asked to blitz, and compare it to others to find similarities and differences in their usage. Riske used this method to determine how defensive coordinators utilized different coverages to attack NFL offenses.

Riske found that Minnesota had several aspects of its scheme that made it unique, including its insane usage of both cover-zero and cover-two. The league average for cover-zero and cover-two are 4.0% and 10.3%, respectively. Brian Flores’ Vikings are running these two coverages at a rate of 11.5% and 22.6%. The teams that are closest to them, just in 2023, are three teams that run cover-zero at a rate of 7.1% (New England, New York and Arizona) and the Chicago Bears that run cover-two at a rate of 18.1%.

Flores has fielded a true anomaly on the defensive side of the football. As Cody Alexander has stated, Flores is playing a completely different game from anyone else in the NFL. It has resulted in a lot of confusion from opposing quarterbacks and a top-ten defense from a unit that was firmly at the bottom of the league at the end of last year.

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Dennis Allen’s defense allowed the Rams’ longest drive of the 2023 season

Dennis Allen’s defense allowed the Rams’ longest drive of the 2023 season. It’s a tough wakeup call for the Saints:

That isn’t how you want to start a prime time game. The New Orleans Saints offense floundered inside Los Angeles Rams territory to start Thursday night’s game and settled for a punt, which was covered well and stopped at the L.A. 5-yard line. With head coach Dennis Allen’s handmade defense having gone two games without allowing a single touchdown, they figured the favorable field advantage would give them a big advantage.

But that wasn’t the case. Rams head coach Sean McVay got the better of Allen and conducted a 14-play, 95-yard drive to get downfield and score the game’s first touchdown; quarterback Matthew Stafford hit rookie wide receiver Puka Nacua on a 2-yard touchdown pass on fourth down.

It was rough. And it was the longest drive the Rams offense has had all season. They went into this game with 9 drives having started inside their own 10-yard line and just one ended with a touchdown after gaining 94 yards (helped by a 15-yard penalty on the defense).

This wasn’t a bad bet by Allen and the Saints. They should have won this battle and gotten a stop inside Los Angeles territory to get the ball back in Derek Carr’s hands. Allen spent years drafting and developing players to fill out his defense and he trusted them to hold up under pressure.

But the Saints lost that bet, and suddenly found themselves playing from behind against one of the league’s most aggressive teams. The Saints offense has taken a long time to get up to speed, meaning their defense — Allen’s defense — has had to shoulder the load. That defense is supposed to be the strength of the team. If they aren’t pulling their weight, what does it say about Allen?

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Will Jayson Tatum and Jaylen Brown make a 2023-24 NBA All-Defensive team?

If Tatum and Brown keep progressing and taking pride on defense, while the team culture emphasizes that end of the floor, the Celtics have a strong chance of meeting their lofty defensive goals this season.

Will star Boston Celtics forwards Jayson Tatum and Jaylen Brown make one of the 2023-24 NBA All-Defensive teams this season? The Boston duo entered the season with a shared goal of making the All-Defense Team, a commitment they seem to be living up to so far.

Are they on track to meet their admittedly lofty individual but also shared goal? And how often have they impacted the defensive side of the ball for the Celtics so far this season in their drive to a league-best 20-5 record and a franchise-record 14-0 record at TD Garden so far this season? Celtics head coach Joe Mazzulla said before the season that he wants the team to be top 5 in both offense and defense.

If Tatum and Brown keep progressing and taking pride on defense, while the team culture emphasizes that end of the floor, the Celtics have a strong chance of meeting their lofty defensive goals this season.

Check out the clip embedded above to hear the hosts of the CLNS Media “Garden Report” podcast weigh in on Tatum, Brown, and Boston’s defense.

Listen to the “Celtics Lab” podcast on:

Apple Podcasts: https://apple.co/3zBKQY6

Spotify: https://spoti.fi/3GfUPFi

YouTube: https://bit.ly/3F9DvjQ

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Miscommunication at root of Packers defensive issues, starts with coaching

Packers coach Matt LaFleur pointed to multiple failed points of miscommunication as the biggest reason why the defense has struggled.

You name it, and it probably went wrong for the Green Bay Packers pass defense against the Tampa Bay Buccaneers. At the root of it all, according to Matt LaFleur on Monday, was a lack of communication.

“When you’re having basic communication problems,” said LaFleur, “and you’re supposed to be in a certain coverage, or certain rotation and we’re not getting that communication, that’s what’s disappointing to me.

“The fact that it was poor communication. And it always starts with us. It starts with myself and it goes to all of our assistant coaches. So obviously, the coaching wasn’t up to the standard and our performance on the field showed that as well.”

The lack of communication from the linebackers and back-end of the Green Bay defense resulted in several broken plays with defenders out of position. In general, there were a lot of pitch-and-catch opportunities for Baker Mayfield and his receivers as they consistently found the soft spots in the Packers’ heavy zone defense.

The end result was Baker Mayfield completing 22-of-28 passes for 381 yards and four touchdowns. LaFleur said on Monday that he counted 14 explosive plays surrendered by his defense and on eight possessions, the Bucs scored on six of them, including three touchdowns in the second half.

“It happened by people not talking and setting the front a certain way,” said LaFleur. “Or making sure the safety rotation is the right way. So you’re backers aren’t glossed over one way and you’re rolling that way. There was way too many examples of that. As dumbfounded as you are right now, that’s how I felt watching it.”

When things go this poorly, especially in a de facto playoff game for the Packers, everyone is to blame, including the players. However, if multiple players throughout a game don’t know what to communicate or where to line up, that ultimately falls on coaching—defensive coordinator Joe Barry, specifically, for not having his group prepared in Week 15.

These issues aren’t new to Green Bay. They just so happened to rear their ugly head over and over again in a crucial game. Keisean Nixon said after the game, “they knew what we were in,” referencing that the Bucs’ offense knew what was coming. This shows a predictability and lack of creativity of the Packers defense, along with a lack of adjustments being made.

When an opponent finds instant success on the first few drives of the game, you can blame the gameplan. When they find success in the third quarter, it can often be chalked up to a lack of adjustments. When individual players aren’t progressing throughout the course of the season or are making mistakes that should have been cleaned up in training camp, it’s a lack of development. All of that happened on Sunday and all of it falls on coaching.

However, with all of that said, at least for the time being, there won’t be any changes to the Green Bay coaching staff.

“Yeah, that is the plan,” said LaFleur when asked if he would keep Barry as defensive coordinator for the remainder of the season. “If I thought that was the best solution today, then we would make that decision.”

Perhaps with the Packers playoff hopes still alive, LaFleur doesn’t want to shake things up with a drastic change—although the 10-3 Philadelphia Eagles just made a change of their own at defensive coordinator over the weekend. Or perhaps LaFleur is sticking with Barry because there is no clear cut replacement for him on the current coaching staff.

We will likely never truly know the answer to that question. But when LaFleur was asked why now wasn’t the time for a change given how Sunday unfolded, well, it’s because this defense has previously been able to execute on all the things that went wrong against the Bucs.

“I’ve seen us execute this stuff before,” LaFleur said. “It’s unfortunate that it happened this time of the year in such an important game. But I’ve seen us execute it in previous games.

“Now, certainly are there some calls, I’d be the first to admit, there’s a couple play calls I’d like to have back in that game. I know there’s some Joe would like to have back, in particular. Some of those third and three to four yard plays where we are playing soft zone and they can easily get a free completion. Just like there were a couple of calls I’d like to have back in the red zone. But hopefully we can learn from that and not make the same mistake twice.”

To add more accountability and to make sure that everyone is on the same page, LaFleur said that throughout the week he will take on a larger role with the defense, making sure the coaching staff is aligned and the communication responsibilities among the players are clear.

Understandably so, Barry has and will continue to take the brunt of the heat as the defensive play-caller. However, at the end of the day, LaFleur is the head coach and the one in charge. He decided to bring Barry back for a third season. He signs off on the game plan each week. And as the Bucs were shredding the Packers throughout the game, he didn’t step in and force Barry to make changes.

Already the offensive play-caller, is having to be fully engaged on the defensive side of the ball a lot on LaFleur’s plate on game day? Absolutely. But it’s his team and it’s the position that he and the Packers find themselves in. The status quo isn’t working and if Barry is going to remain the defensive coordinator for the final three games, as LaFleur said on Sunday, he needs to find solutions. But I’m not sure that they exist as things are at the moment.

“I’ve got to be more present with those guys and making sure we are all on the same page,” LaFleur said on Monday. “Football is, if you don’t have all 11 on the same page, obviously it starts with our staff. Making sure all our coaches are in lock step, but if you don’t have all 11 on the same page, it takes one guy and then everything goes to crap after that and you get exposed. And unfortunately, we got exposed in a really bad way.”

Barry was LaFleur’s hire. Barry was brought to Green Bay to run a specific style of defense that LaFleur wanted. The two are already very much connected, but the longer this relationship goes on, especially if this unit continues to struggle over the final few weeks, the more this situation reflects negatively on LaFleur.

Chiefs DT Chris Jones believes adversity will make the team stronger

Star defensive lineman Chris Jones believes adversity will make the #Chiefs a stronger team.

The defense continues to be praised for the Kansas City Chiefs AFC West-leading record and is on the brink of clinching another postseason spot. However, the current two-game losing streak has pushed the team’s limits on both sides of the ball, creating an unusual sense of concern for the franchise this late in the year.

Chiefs defensive tackle Chris Jones is one of the leaders on the team and has been around long enough to know when things aren’t moving smoothly. He remains confident that things can turn around, as he explained to the media during Wednesday’s press conference that adversity can help bring a team together.

“I think, it’s hard to say, but I think these games are beneficial for us as a team, to go through this adversity early,” Jones explained. “We got a young group got a lot of young guys. And if there was on the team last year, they didn’t have to go through this type of adversity we’re going through now.

“So, always said adversity builds character, and it prevails teams, you know, tough times, make tough people. So we’re in a tough situation right now, coming off back-to-back losses. We haven’t had those in over a decade; I haven’t been here for back-to-back losses. So spirits are good, spirits are good.

Jones hasn’t recorded a sack since November 20th’s two-sack game against the Philadelphia Eagles and showed some frustration on the sidelines last Sunday. He continues to preach preparation and fighting through the miscues as the team aims to repeat as Super Bowl champions.

“I think, right now, sharpening the mind, making sure we (are) upping our game,” said Jones. “Making sure we look in the mirror at our own game, seeing where we can get better at and then executing, whether its a drill, a play, executing at a high rapid pace, and by the end of this week, we’ll be where we need to be.”

AP’s first-team All-America includes three Alabama players

AP All-American first-team led by three Alabama defenders

With only bowl games left in the 2023 college football season, the year is sadly nearly done. After the Army-Navy game, we are at that point in the winter where our attention has shifted to the awards and accolades before playoffs get underway.

The first of the major awards was announced on Saturday night as LSU quarterback Jayden Daniels was recognized as the 2023 Heisman Trophy winner after guiding the Tigers to a 9-3 record and finishing second in the SEC West. As great as Daniels was, the Tide defense was one of the few teams to keep him in check during a 42-28 victory in Tuscaloosa this season.

The Tide’s defense was so sensational that they had three players named to the AP first-team All-America, all on the defensive side of the ball. Dallas Turner and Kool-Aid McKinstry come as no surprise, but it was Terrion Arnold’s emergence in the secondary that came as a surprise. Arnold led the defense with five interceptions and 11 passes defended and was also good for 61 tackles.

Offensive lineman JC Latham and defensive back Caleb Downs also qualified for the second team while kicker Will Reichard was named to the third team.

All of these accolades are noteworthy, but every single player on Alabama’s roster will tell you that all that matters is the game on Jan. 1 against Michigan in the Rose Bowl.

Contact/Follow us @RollTideWire on Twitter, and like our page on Facebook to follow ongoing coverage of Alabama news, notes and opinion. You can also follow Sam Murphy on Twitter @SamMurphy02.

What is Alabama’s biggest question to answer in the 2024 offseason?

Alabama has a big question to answer over the 2024 offseason if it wants to succeed next year.

Alabama has had a memorable 2023 college football season with plenty of ups and downs. While it’s not over yet, as the Tide are set to play Michigan in the Rose Bowl for the College Football Playoff, some questions loom over the program.

ESPN recently revealed the biggest question for every top 25 team as the 2024 offseason nears. For Alabama, it’s about replacing defensive production.

In his first year back with the Crimson Tide, defensive coordinator Kevin Steele has done a great job. It also helps that he inherited a defense full of talented players. However, much of that talent is expected to depart for the NFL once the season officially comes to an end.

Alex Scarborough of ESPN broke down what the Crimson Tide must answer leading up to the 2024 season.

“It will take some time for a full picture of the departing starters on defense to become clear,” writes Scarborough. “But it’s safe to say that more than a few key players will be gone, whether it’s seniors Malachi Moore(defensive back), Jaylen Key (safety), Chris Braswell (linebacker) and Trezmen Marshall (linebacker) or underclassmen Dallas Turner (edge), Kool-Aid McKinstry(cornerback) and Terrion Arnold(cornerback). On top of that, outside linebackers coach Coleman Hutzler is reportedly set to join the Mississippi State staff. The good news? Alabama has one of the best young players in the country in defensive back Caleb Downs to build around and a front seven that should return some experience in Jaheim Oatis, Deontae Lawson and Jihaad Campbell. And five-star cornerback Jaylen Mbakwe is on the way. That said, don’t be surprised if Nick Saban and his staff go into the portal and try to pull out a potential starter or two.”

Throughout Nick Saban’s tenure as the head coach of the Crimson Tide, the motto has been to reload and not rebuild when losing key contributors like those named by Scarborough. If Alabama wants to build upon the success of the 2023 season, Saban must find a way to rebuild the defense in a way that doesn’t sacrifice its existing high level of production.

This can be done by either utilizing the talented players in the 2024 recruiting class or by promoting those who are currently a few levels down on the depth chart.

Roll Tide Wire will continue to follow Alabama football as the College Football Playoffs get underway.

Contact/Follow us @RollTideWire on X, and like our page on Facebook to follow ongoing coverage of Alabama news, notes and opinion. You can also follow AJ Spurr on X @SpurrFM. 

WATCH: Chiefs DL Mike Danna sacks Jordan Love, forces late-game field goal vs. Packers

#Chiefs DL Mike Danna took down #Packers QB Jordan Love to keep Kansas City in the game late in the fourth quarter

The Kansas City Chiefs’ hopes of victory against the Green Bay Packers in Week 13 are still alive late in the fourth quarter after defensive lineman Mike Danna sacked quarterback Jordan Love to force a field goal attempt.

By holding Green Bay to just three points, Kansas City needed a touchdown to take a late lead and could have hypothetically completed an improbable comeback after losing several key players to injury.

On the ensuing drive, Patrick Mahomes threw an interception in Packers territory to give Green Bay the ball with just minutes remaining in the fourth quarter.

This didn’t put the Chiefs completely out of contention, but certainly shifted momentum back in the Packers’ favor after Danna’s sack seemed to give Kansas City a wind at its back.

If the Chiefs intend to make something special happen to earn their ninth win of the season, it will need to come on their next offensive drive.