Grandview Defensive Coordinator featured in Sports Illustrated (article from November)

thetrza

Well-Known Member
Article from last month, but NFL head coaches are talking to a 35 year old guy who lives on the East Side about how to stop spread offenses in the NAIA and the NFL.

As points come in unprecedented waves, NFL defensive minds search in unexpected places with hopes of sparking the counter-revolution

RANCH-STYLE HOUSES of red and tan brick border Grand View University, nestled into a leafy neighborhood a few minutes outside Des Moines. The morning quiet is sporadically broken by alert Pomeranians sprinting through doggy doors to bark at unfamiliar faces heading to class on the campus where, upon a whiteboard inside the athletic department's facilities, you might find the dry-erase scribblings of defensive football's future.

This is three days before an October game against Peru (Neb.) State College, and Travis Johansen, the GVU Vikings' 35-year-old defensive coordinator, has his opponent's personnel groupings laid out in front of him in the form of four neat diagrams. Grand View won the NAIA title in 2013, the year Johansen arrived, and his defense has been among the nation's dozen best every full season since.

.....

At Grand View, Johansen's approach is rooted in simplicity. He uses a micro playbook, about two pages long, that changes each week. Instead of forcing his entire working theory upon his defense, he arms players with only a few fundamental techniques that they'll need for the upcoming game—simple maneuvers they'll rep over and over during practice.

Keeping things simple allows the defense to stay flexible. Against RPO-based teams, for example, his Vikings may appear in what looks like a dime front (six defensive backs) when, in reality, it's a balanced run D that swaps out slot corners for safeties who can assist against the ground game, like smaller linebackers. In other words: "position-less football," says Johansen, who pulls up one concept, circles his safety and notes, "he's anything from a defensive end to [a DB] playing Cover-0 in the slot."

Those linebackers and defensive backs whom offenses are trying to manipulate with RPOs? Johansen teaches each one to treat the receiver in front of him like a sparring partner in a boxing ring. And he structures his defense, at times, with just three down linemen, each with the responsibility of widening the tackle box to prevent breakaway runs. Johansen is, in his words, "reinventing the defense" every week.

https://www.si.com/vault/2018/11/13/scheme-save-defenses
 




I think we saw that hybrid/star role born with Kirksey, though not intentionally. They realized he was such an elite athlete that they could put him on receivers without much worry.

Niemann took over as Phil Parker's scheme began to reflect that philosophy, and he performed admirably as well.

Full circle when we get to Hooker, who instead of being an LB with DB athleticism, is a DB with LB physicality.
 


You are starting to hear the term "'position less players" in football the way you hearing it now in basketball. Your back 7 better be able to play in space. Think about Bob Sanders if he were playing now, he would completely have to change his game.
 


You are starting to hear the term "'position less players" in football the way you hearing it now in basketball. Your back 7 better be able to play in space. Think about Bob Sanders if he were playing now, he would completely have to change his game.
Well, unfortunately for Bob, he'd likely be sitting out every other game if he played today.
 


The other coordinator in the piece, Jay Bateman, coached Army defense this season. He had an incredible game against Oklahoma and Heisman winner Kyler Murray. He was hired by Mack Brown to be on the staff at North Carolina next season.
 




You are starting to hear the term "'position less players" in football the way you hearing it now in basketball. Your back 7 better be able to play in space. Think about Bob Sanders if he were playing now, he would completely have to change his game.
Bob was better in coverage than most people seem to recall. He had CB speed. He ran a 4.35 40 at the combine.
 












After a while, looks like will have just a jumbo nose tackle and two D ends and the rest (8) above average sized hybrid cornerbacks and safeties. No zone.
 




Latest posts






Top