Ravens have Eagles vs. Patriots game tape on their iPads….

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Talking with Ravens’ DC Chuck Pagano yesterday on a radio show, I couldn’t help but ask:

“Do you have highlights of the Eagles-Patriots game on your guys’ iPads in preparation for the big game in Foxboro this weekend?”

Pagano’s resounding answer: an absolute “Yes”.

First of all, it should be noted the Baltimore Ravens are the first team in the NFL to go away from traditional tape study and paper playbooks to the incorporation of everything upon an iPad tablet. Their players get every game plan detail and also individualized studies of positional opponents’ tendencies downloaded to their iPads every Tuesday of every game week.

I believe the Eagles will soon be adopting this electronic game prep trend, if not already…

The bigger matter at hand, though, is what can the Ravens learn from the Eagles, especialy in the area of stopping or slowing down the great production of the Pats’ huge and talented tight ends, Gronkowski and Hernandez?

You remember that Week 12 game… it kinda ended the Eagles playoff hopes at the time. We man-pressed Gronkowski and Hernandez at times, and we tried zone coverage with linebackers, too… none of it worked.

Brady threw for 361 yards and three touchdowns and the Patriots beat the Eagles 38-20 in a rematch of the 2005 Super Bowl. Filling in for the injured Michael Vick for the second straight game, Vince Young couldn’t keep Philadelphia’s fading playoff hopes alive despite throwing for a career-best 400 yards passing.

The six-time Pro Bowl quarterback Brady finished 24 of 34, Deion Branch had 125 yards receiving and Wes Welker caught eight passes for 115 yards and two TDs. Brady’s favorite targets, tight ends Rob Gronkowski and Aaron Hernandez , also chipped in big-time. Gronkowski caught his 11th TD pass and Hernandez had six receptions. BenJarvus Green-Ellis scored twice on the ground.

The Eagles (4-7 after that one) were all-but-mathematically eliminated from playoff contention.

Down 10-0 early, the Patriots rallied behind Brady. New England scored on five of its next six possessions, excluding a kneel-down at the end of the first half.

“Overall we did a great job of staying composed on the sideline and making the right adjustments and doing pretty much what we game planned for,” Branch said. Brady and coach Bill Belichick improved to 4-0 against Reid’s Eagles, including a 24-21 win for their third NFL title in four years after the 2004 season. “Tom did a good job really pressing the issue,” Belichick said. “He felt he had them on the run with some of the mismatches. Tom kept pressing it, guys got open and Tom did what he does best, finding the open guys.”

Well, that’s what the Ravens are up against this coming Sunday. The problem is, much like the Eagles, the Ravens have a pretty decent secondary coverage unit… but no man-to-man press personnel that can account for Gronkowski or Hernandez.

So the Ravens are looking at the Eagles game tape to find anything that worked against Brady’s tight ends… and perhaps more importantly, to dissect everything that went wrong.

Problem is, you can cover Gronk or Hernandez like a cheap suit, and at their respective heights (6-6, 6-5),  they can still beat a defender without achieving horizontal separation. Often they can just go up for a vertical leap and come down with the ball.

A lot of folks have told me you should try to stop Gronk and Hernandez by pressing or chucking them at the line of scrimmage.  Three main things wrong with that theory:

1. Brady lines these guys up in the backfield a lot;
2. Brady splits Gronk into the slot or even as a wide-out in the flank a lot;
3. Even if they are lined up at the traditional TE spot on the line, chucking down either one of these huge guys is not an easy task; and by assigning a DE or LB to that task, you’ve just removed a piece of your pass rush on Brady.

In the photo above, Brady has both Gronk and Hernandez lined up in the backfield beside him!

Last week against Denver the Pats spent a bulk of the game in a no-huddle that featured tight ends Rob Gronkowski and Aaron Hernandez (who lined up all over the place) and wideouts Wes Welker, Deion Branch and Julian Edelman. Remarkably, they were able to run effectively out of this personnel grouping, as Hernandez carried the ball five times out of the backfield for 61 yards total rushing of his own.

The real purpose of putting Hernandez in the backfield is the same purpose as all of New England’s other alignments: to get a potent pass catcher matched up on a linebacker. Even safeties have major trouble covering Hernandez and Gronkowski.

Andy Benoit has a nice piece on this subject at CBSSports.com Film Room.

Benoit reminds us of a few hard cold realities for the Ravens: most notably, Baltimore’s starting safeties will not be able to cover Gronkowski…at least not in the traditional sense when we think of the term “coverage”…

“Baltimore’s strong safety Bernard Pollard is simply not capable of doing it, and the Ravens are unlikely to remove Ed Reed from centerfield. Brady rarely throws in the direction of starting cornerbacks. Even when he goes to Wes Welker, it’s often when Welker has drawn a matchup against a backup slot corner or non-cornerback. Because the Patriots don’t try to confuse defenses so much as force them into bad matchups, HOW the Patriots LINE UP to play is almost more important than how they actually play. Most of the damage is done through crafty presnap alignment. (This is one reason so many of Brady’s throws come off three-and five-step drops; the decision of where to go with the ball is made prior to the snap.)”

“The Patriots frequently go up-tempo to prevent defenses from having enough time to regroup or alter matchups before the snap. The only sure way to take the chess match element out of the equations and force the Patriots to win with execution is to play press-man coverage across the board. Problem is, no defense, including Baltimore’s, has enough quality cover artists to do this.”

And like we talked about earlier, you could have a “quality cover” with press-man coverage on Gronk, and he can still beat you with a basketball move.

So pressing Gronk or Hernandez when they’re not lining up in the backfield is not the answer. The Ravens will probably do a zone containment on Brady’s tight ends…and combine that with a pass rush that comes from multiple looks designed to confuse Brady a little and Gronk a lot… and hope that their safeties and linebackers can swarm to the target and hold Gronk and Hernandez to less-than-great gains when the tight ends do catch the ball.

Look for the Ravens to do plenty of presnap communicating and disguising at the line of scrimmage. It helps that they’re comfortable playing a bunch of different coverages. The outcome may be decided by which side can both bully and finesse the other into a reactionary position. The Patriots can do that by going hurry-up; the Ravens can do it by blitzing up the middle….or, more importantly, making it LOOK like a blitz up the middle.

As Benoit astutely observes: “Recent playoff history shows that if a defense can create pressure and doubt, Brady will eventually start eating up the play clock worrying about protections. That makes him a significantly less dangerous player versus when he’s hurrying things up and concentrating on his receivers’ routes.”

The question is, can the Ravens generate a pass-rush? If they blitz, they likely can. But one of the best kept secrets in football is that this is generally a four-man rushing defense. Because the Ravens use so many 3-4 or 2-5 fronts, their four pass-rushers come from a variety of different spots, thus creating the illusion of a blitz.

The Ravens use a lot of zone exchange concepts in their pass-rush. A zone exchange is essentially a four-man pass-rush where linebackers or safeties rush the quarterback, while a defensive lineman or another linebacker drops back into coverage. It can be confusing, often creating the illusion of a heavy blitz.

[Benoit gives you a nice visual look at the Ravens “zone exchange concept” in his article… Worth a look.]
Here’s what the Ravens do from a 3-4 base when they “zone exchange”…  if the Eagles could adapt “zone exchange” from their 4-3, maybe the kinds of losses we saw against the Patriots and othe
r tight-end based offenses (like Atlanta) would have turned out a little differently…

Ravens have Eagles vs. Patriots game tape on their iPads....
The Ravens use a lot of zone exchange concepts in their pass-rush. A zone exchange is
 essentially a four-man pass-rush where linebackers or safeties rush the quarterback,
while a defensive lineman or another linebacker drops back into coverage.
It can be confusing, often creating the illusion of a heavy blitz.
 The Thanksgiving night game – in which Baltimore had nine sacks –
provided a good example.

Upon first glance, this appears to be a blitz featuring five,
 possibly six pass-rushers.

Below: #90 (Pernell McPhee) drops back off the blitz look to cover the
 passing zone that may include TE Vernon Davis or anyone else coming
 out of the 49ers backfield into his zone of responsibility.
To the quarterback (Alex Smith), it appears everything’s covered…
and his choice of targets has been greatly diminished.

Ravens have Eagles vs. Patriots game tape on their iPads....

So the Ravens will be studying the Eagles tape to observe where and how Gronkowski and Hernandez got beyond the zones of coverage so often in the Week 12 matchup. They will tweak their zone exchange concepts accordingly.

You can also bet Juan Castillo and Andy Reid will be taking notes too on the Ravens-Patriots game this Sunday.

 

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