Search This Blog

Showing posts with label Cameron Jordan. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Cameron Jordan. Show all posts

Wednesday, July 31, 2013

Who Dat Say Dey Gonna Run 3-4?

Preseason is so close, I can smell it. I thought I would give my fellow Who Dats another does of local flavor. The New Orleans Saints, under new defensive coordinator Rob Ryan, will be transitioning from a traditional 4-3 scheme, to a 3-4. The 3-4 capitalizes on intensive linebacker blitzing and tackling. Grown up Saints fans may recall that the Saints employed a 3-4 defense under former Head Coach Jim Mora, Sr. during the "Dome Patrol" years in the late 1980s and early 1990s, the golden age of Saints football prior to the arrival of current Head Coach Sean Payton.

Whether or not Ryan can duplicate the success enjoyed with the Dome Patrol - Hall of Fame linebacker Rickey Jackson, perennial Pro Bowler Pat Swilling, former Pro Bowler Vaughn Johnson, and the late Pro Bowler and former NFL assistant coach Sam Mills - remains to be seen.

Special thanks to Dan Delaney of Saints Stuff for producing this piece. The original piece can be found at saintsstuff.com.

3-4 Scheme is Coming Along.

So far the biggest change is Will Smith moving from Defensive End to Outside Linebacker.
3-4
3-4 Defense's new outside linebacker.

 This is what SI.com has to say; 

The New Orleans Saints highlighted last week one of the reasons teams often are hesitant to undertake scheme shifts on defense. Saints GM Mickey Loomis said, according to Larry Holder of NOLA.com, that Will Smith will open camp competing for an outside linebacker spot in the team’s new 3-4 defense.
That’s 6-foot-3, 280-pound Will Smith, a player who has spent his entire nine-year NFL career playing as a defensive end in New Orleans’ former 4-3 look. Despite 67.5 career sacks, Smith’s roster spot suddenly looks unsafe, despite him taking a massive pay cut this offseason (from $9 million in 2013 to $3 million) in an effort to stick around.
This is one of the challenges when a coaching staff opts for a new attack — the players on the roster don’t always fit.

Keep reading on SI.com

Akiem Hicks will be the starting defensive end. Here is what nbcsports.com has to say;

3-4
3-4 Defense has Akiem Hicks as defensive end.

 
With new defensive coordinator Rob Ryan taking control of the New Orleans Saints defense, there were bound to be some changes to scheme and personnel as the Saints attempt to overhaul a defense that ranked dead last in the league last season.
One of those moves will be shifting a player to a new spot on the defensive line.

Keep reading on nbcsports.com

Cam  Jordan is moving back to the position he thrived in back in college. Here is what Nola.com has to say;

The Saints’ Cam Jordan may be one of a select few defenders from 2012 who can say he improved last season. Now Jordan is moving back to a 3-4 defense, a scheme he played in college at California.

Keep reading on Nola.com

3-4
3-4 should facilitate improved play from Cam Jordan.

The last change has more to do with Rob Ryan then the scheme itself. Here is what Sports Illustrated had to say;

3-4
The 3-4 captain.
Rob Ryan figures his firing in Dallas will only help him relate to a Saints defense humbled by a historically bad season.
“I don’t like getting fired,” Ryan said Thursday during his first meeting with reporters since Sean Payton hired him in February to revamp New Orleans’ last-ranked defense. “I know I got my feelings hurt and so did our players. We’re looking to do something about it.”
The Saints gave up 7,042 yards in 2012, the most ever in a single season in the NFL. Payton has said that performance forced him to make a change at defensive coordinator, even though he felt bad letting Steve Spagnuolo go after only one highly unusual season.
Spagnuolo never got to coach with Payton, who was suspended all of last season in connection with the NFL’s bounty probe. Yet shortly after Payton was reinstated, the relatively calm, analytical Spagnuolo, who favored a read-and-react 4-3 defense, was replaced by Ryan, who runs a pressure-heavy 3-4 scheme (three down linemen, four linebackers).
Ryan also has been known to exhibit a brash demeanor more akin to that of Gregg Williams, the Saints’ defensive coordinator from 2009 to 2011

Keep reading at sportsillustrated.com

What this all says to me is we will go from having a dead last defense to a top 10 defense. When you combine that with our offense that easily make us Superbowl contenders.

Friday, April 29, 2011

The Saints are Coming!

1
The New Orleans Saints were clearly the winner in last night's first round of the 2011 NFL Draft. The Saints selected University of California Defensive End Cameron Jordan, an absolute beast by any measure, and a great value at pick #24. The real whopper, however, was a trade up with the New England Patriots to the #28 spot to draft University of Alabama Running Back and 2009 Heisman Trophy winner Mark Ingram, Jr..

Cameron Jordan

The selection of Jordan shores up a significant hole on the Saints' defensive line that was never fully shored up after the release of Charles Grant. The Saints signed Alex Brown in the 2010 offseason to replace Grant, but Brown often proved to be a cut below par against the run. Jordan's speed, agility, and strength in his 6'4" 287 pound frame should provide an immediate boost to the Saints' front seven.

Notice how svelte Cameron Jordan is? Can you imagine how much muscle THIS guy is packing at 287 pounds? 2

Mark Ingram

The selection of Mark Ingram provided more questions than answers for the Saints. Ingram has all of the tools to be an elite superstar power running back in the NFL, an asset the Saints have sorely lacked since Deuce McAllister's last productive season in 2006. The Saints recently signed RB Pierre Thomas to a multi-million dollar extension and have second year workhorse RB Chris Ivory. This throws into question how Thomas and Ivory's roles may have changed. The elephant in the room, in the view of many, however, was the future of Reggie Bush, the former 2005 Heisman Trophy winner, second overall pick in the 2006 draft, one of the most popular and (when healthy) versatile players on the team.

Mark Ingram: Get ready, NFL! 3

Reggie Bush

Much of the sports world was abuzz after Bush posted "Its been fun New Orleans" from his Twitter page. Listening to New Orleans Saints Head Coach Sean Payton's remarks very shortly after the pick, I am of the opinion that Payton has no intention of letting Reggie go. Bush's role is different from that of Ingram, Ivory, and Thomas. He has a different skill set and, whether he touches the ball or not, a significant portion of the offense (directly or indirectly) runs through or around Bush.

I doubt that the Saints will keep Bush at the nearly $12 million salary he is expected to receive next year. I also think he is more valuable to the Saints, because of the coach and the offensive scheme, than he would be to another team. If and when Bush and the Saints renegotiate, I think they will make Bush a more favorable offer than he would receive elsewhere. I do not blame Bush for being a upset, though. That is human nature.

Can you believe this was Reggie's "workout" (with Kim Kardashian) barley over a year ago? Now this? How fortunes change quickly in pro football! 4

Great Start

The sparks flew for the black & gold in last night's draft. With the plugs they acquired, the fireworks should be bright in the Big Easy in 2011. What is certain is that the Saints got their men. WHO DAT!


Don't forget to vote in the fan polls!

To advertise with The Daily Hat Trick, or submit a guest column, please contact the editor at eric@thedailyhattrick.info.

1) The NFL Draft logo is a trademark of the National Football League; Image from whosright.com
2) Image from goldenbearlair.com
3) Image from blogs.sun-sentinel.com
4) Image from celebritysmackblog.com