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Shortly after the Bills announced their rather shocking hire of George Edwards, just a month after he had accepted the same position at the University of Florida, Edwards announced that he would transition the Bills to a base 3-4 defense in the 2010 season.
For a Bills defense that had more than its fair share of struggles last year, particularly against the run where they finished third to last, this move makes quite a bit of sense. Brian Galliford of SB Nation’s Buffalo Rumblings breaks down both how the 3-4 Over scheme works, and what it means for their current roster:
The beauty of this scheme is that you don’t need the massive, two-gap, blubbery nose tackle in the middle to make it work. The alignment focuses on employing lighter, quicker, one-gap linemen and bigger, faster linebackers behind them to make it work, as illustrated in the photo above the fold. Players would be asked to beat blockers to spots and maintain gaps, rather than overcome multiple blockers via brute strength and bulk.
Buffalo doesn’t have a lineman that can play the traditional two-gap nose tackle role. What they do have are a bunch of guys stout enough and athletic enough to play one gap pretty well. A defensive line of Kyle Williams, Marcus Stroud and Spencer Johnson could absolutely handle the one-gap responsibilities of this defense as starters, and they can bring in lighter guys to rush the passer on obvious passing downs.
Aaron Schobel, should he decide to return rather than retire, would play an outside linebacker spot (and put his hand on the ground on third downs, in all likelihood), as would 2009 first-round pick Aaron Maybin. Paul Posluszny and Kawika Mitchell would be capable of handling the inside linebacker spots. All can handle one gap as well.
The real beauty of this scheme insofar as it relates to Buffalo’s current personnel, however, is the fact that purely from an alignment standpoint, it’s easy to disguise your looks. Buffalo’s not-so-great pass rush could use a little creativity to it, and as far as pass-rushing schemes go, this is one of the best in the business.
The Bills have announced the hiring of former Dolphins' linebacker coach George Edwards as their new defensive coordinator, per Adam Schefter's ever-popping Twitter feed. Edwards has fifteen years of experience as a pro coach, and is well-regarded among his peers in the NFL, but that's not the odd thing about this story.
The weirdness is that he leaves his current job as Florida's defensive coordinator after only a month on the job, putting Florida back in coaching limbo after the departure of former defensive coordinator Charlie Strong to Louisville, wide receivers' coach Billy Gonzales' move to LSU, and the resignation/un-resignation of Urban Meyer. For Florida fans, the offseason required reading has been the "seeking positions" section of Coaching Monthly.
As for Bills fans, Edwards' reputation among his peers can't be solace for those seeking a name-brand hire after the less-than-thrilled reception they gave Chan Gailey. But then, after hiring Chan Gaily to reinvigorate the franchise, how much worse can it get?
Report: Florida Hires Arizona Cardinals DB Coach Teryl Austin
According to an Arizona radio station, Florida has replaced departed defensive coordinator George Edwards with the Arizona Cardinals’ defensive backs coach Teryl Austin.
Austin has some connections to the current coaching staff at Florida, having spent three years on staff with interim head coach and offensive coordinator Steve Addazio at Syracuse from 1996-1998, and was solid recruiter during a three year tenure at Michigan from 1999-2001. He has no experience as a defensive coordinator, however, and has spent the past seven years coaching defensive backs in the NFL.
It’s an odd hire on the surface, but it fits the mold his predecessor Edwards fit: that of an NFL-minded defensive coach with the ability to recruit. Since things at Florida are typically done collaboratively with titles used as near-formalities, expect Austin to carry a co-coordinator tag or for some compensatory nameplate shuffling to be done between Austin and the existing assistants on staff.
Feb 11 5:30p by Spencer Hall - 0 comments