翻訳と辞書
Words near each other
・ 46th Filmfare Awards
・ 46th General Assembly of Newfoundland and Labrador
・ 46th General Assembly of Nova Scotia
・ 46th General Assembly of Prince Edward Island
・ 46th Golden Globe Awards
・ 46th Golden Horse Film Awards
・ 46th government of Turkey
・ 46th Grand Bell Awards
・ 46 (number)
・ 46 Aquilae
・ 46 BC
・ 46 Boötis
・ 46 Cancri
・ 46 Capricorni
・ 46 Ceti
46 defense
・ 46 Hestia
・ 46 High Street, Nantwich
・ 46 Leonis Minoris
・ 46 Long
・ 46 Minutes
・ 46 South African Brigade
・ 46 South End
・ 46 Squadron
・ 46, XX/XY
・ 46-48 Brown Street
・ 460
・ 460 BC
・ 460 Scania
・ 4604th Support Squadron


Dictionary Lists
翻訳と辞書 辞書検索 [ 開発暫定版 ]
スポンサード リンク

46 defense : ウィキペディア英語版
46 defense

The 46 defense is an American football defensive formation, historically the first to regularly employ eight men in the box, and six along the line of scrimmage (4 playing line technique, 2 in a linebacker technique).〔Ryan, Rex and Walker, Jeff, ''Coaching Football's 46 Defense'', Coaches Choice, 2000, page 9〕 There are two players at linebacker depth playing linebacker technique, and then three defensive backs. The 46 defense was originally developed and popularized with the Chicago Bears by their defensive coordinator Buddy Ryan, who later became head coach of the Philadelphia Eagles and Arizona Cardinals.
Unlike most defensive formations that take their names from the number of defensive linemen and linebackers on the field (i.e. the 4-3 defense has 4 linemen and 3 linebackers), the name "46" originally came from the jersey number of Doug Plank, who was a starting strong safety for the Bears when Ryan developed the defense, a role typically played in the formation as a surrogate linebacker.〔Mackall, Dave. (Q&A with Doug Plank ) (October 19, 2006), The Pittsburgh Tribune-Review. Retrieved on February 16, 2008.〕
== Description ==

The 46 defense was an innovative defense with a unique defensive front, designed to confuse and put pressure on the opposing offense, especially their quarterback. Compared to a 4-3 base defense, the 46 dramatically shifts the defensive line to the weak side (the opposite end from the offense's tight end), with both guards and the center "covered" by the left defensive end and both defensive tackles. This front forced offenses to immediately account for the defenders lined up directly in front of them, making it considerably harder to execute blocking assignments such as pulling, trapping and pass protection in general. Moreover, the weak side defensive end would be aligned one to two yards outside the left offensive tackle, leaving the opposing tackle man-on-man when trying to block the pass rush.
Another key feature of the 46 is that both outside linebackers tend to play on the strong side of the formation. To avoid confusion, the strong and weak side linebackers (who are no longer lined up on opposite sides) are often renamed the 'Jack' and 'Charlie' linebackers, respectively. The linebackers line up behind the linemen somewhere between one and three yards from the line of scrimmage. The primary tactic is to rush between five and eight players on each play, either to get to the quarterback quickly or disrupt running plays, although dropping some players back into pass coverage after seemingly indicating that they will blitz (see zone blitzing) is another method of creating confusion. Ryan would use all of these rushers to out-man and overwhelm the offense. Another major key to the 46 is the ability of the cornerbacks to play man free and bump and run coverage. Bump and run can allow the defense to take away the quarterback's immediate decision-making ability, by disrupting the timing of short routes needed to make a quick throw to beat the 46 defense.〔Coaching Football's 46 Defense (The Art & Science of Coaching Series) (Paperback) by Rex Ryan〕
The formation was very effective in the 1980s NFL because it often negated a team's running game and forced them to throw the ball. This was difficult for many teams at the time because most offensive passing games centered around the play-action pass, a situation that often favored the defense even further with the quarterback lined up to receive the snap from directly behind the center.
Currently, the 46 is rarely used in professional and college football. This is largely because of multiple receiver and spread formations.〔Jaworski et al., pp. 189-190〕 The eight man line that the 46 presented was most effective against the two back, two wide receiver sets common in the 1980s.
A minor weakness of the 46 defense can be too many defensive players lining up near the line of scrimmage to blitz, leaving areas open for receivers to catch passes. Also, short, timed passes can be thrown before the players blitzing have a chance to reach the quarterback. Another problem is that most teams do not have enough impact players to run the 46 as effectively as the Bears and Ryan's other two major successes, the late 1980s Philadelphia Eagles for which he was head coach and the 1993 Houston Oilers for whom he was defensive coordinator, did. Those teams fielded some of the best front-seven defenses ever, and included such players as Mike Singletary, Steve McMichael, Richard Dent, Dan Hampton, Clyde Simmons, Reggie White and Wilber Marshall.
In today's game, the 46 defense is often simplified to its main component of walking the strong safety up to the line of scrimmage as an eighth man in the box to help contain the run. Defenses today may also run safety blitzes and corner blitzes at crucial moments without committing wholly to the "46" defense. Up front, teams still use the concept of the "T-N-T" alignment, where two defensive ends are covering (lined up directly across from) the guards, and a nose tackle is covering the center. In the case of a zone-blocking scheme, this makes it difficult for the offensive linemen to reach any of the linebackers on the second level.

抄文引用元・出典: フリー百科事典『 ウィキペディア(Wikipedia)
ウィキペディアで「46 defense」の詳細全文を読む



スポンサード リンク
翻訳と辞書 : 翻訳のためのインターネットリソース

Copyright(C) kotoba.ne.jp 1997-2016. All Rights Reserved.