NFL: How Phil Snow is taking the Panthers defence to a new level

The Carolina Panthers’ defence is one of the best in the league after three games and is walking on a historically good path. Defensive coordinator Phil Snow, the brains behind the success, is tweaking his defense day and night – literally.

Munich – The bluff is one of the oldest tricks in the world of card games. By deliberately deceiving the opponent, the player gains an advantage. Phil Snow, defensive coordinator of the Carolina Panthers, makes use of the bluff and, thanks to his innovative scheme, runs the best defence in the NFL at the moment.

A scheme built on deception, confusion and irritation for the opponent, in this case the offensive line and the quarterback. After three days of play, the Panthers are at the top of the NFC South standings with an unblemished record. Phil Snow and his defence have played a big part in that.

Historically good

In league comparisons, the Panthers finish second with 30 points allowed, first with 3.8 yards per play and 14 sacks. No opposing team has managed to accumulate over 50 rushing yards. Carolina is allowing an average of just 45 rushing yards, an all-time high.

Snow, the architect behind the defensive colossus, is paving the way for success with his scheme, tweaking the smallest details day and night. When the Panthers beat the New Orleans Saints on the second day of the game, Snow disappeared into his office after the game, worked for a few more hours before sleeping on the sofa bed.

The next morning, head coach Matt Rhule had to remind him to leave the building and re-enter for the weekly Corona test. Maybe it’s those extra hours that give Snow the upper hand and make his defense look so good.

College Influence

The 65-year-old may come across as an old school coach with his work methods and fairly unemotional press conferences, but he relies on innovation instead of “old school” in his defensive scheme.

Snow designs his defensive scheme for variability. The 3-3-5 formation, a formation that is very popular in college but rarely used in the NFL, serves as the basis. However, Snow does not cling to a “base defence”, but sometimes has four defensive linemen defend from a 4-3 defence, sometimes with three defensive linemen from a 3-4 or 3-3-5 defence. On nearly 60 percent of the snaps, the Panthers play a nickel defense, meaning they use another cornerback for a linebacker.

From that scheme, Snow blitzes a lot, on just under 40 percent of the snaps, one of the highest numbers in the league. He creates confusion with a lot of pre-snap and post-snap movement; quarterbacks have a hard time immediately identifying which defensive players are chasing quarterbacks and which are dropping into coverage. 14 different players were already putting pressure on the quarterback.

Exclamation point against the Saints

After the Saints-Panthers game, a visibly upset Sean Payton appeared before the press. Payton has a reputation as one of the best offensive play-callers in the league and is known for his smart plays, but he was checkmated against the Panthers.

“Our main problem was pass protection. Our communication and handling of the exotic defensive schemes we faced has to improve,” he acknowledged after the game.

“Love him as a coach “

The exotic defensive designs are causing the star players in the Panthers defence to flourish. Linebacker Shaq Thompson is emerging as a tackle machine under Snow and is taking a big step forward in pass coverage.

Jeremy Chinn offers the position flexibility needed to get creative. Last year’s rookie already saw snaps as a pass rusher, linebacker, slot cornerback, strong safety and free safety.

Edge rushers Brian Burns and Hasson Reddick contributed a combined 24 pressures and seven and a half sacks. “I love him as a coach. We play a variable defense, but he makes it very simple for us. He puts us in positions where we can flourish,” praised Burns.

Rotation players like Morgan Fox and Frankie Luvu are finding their roles as important pieces of the defensive puzzle, contributing to the team’s success with pressures and, most importantly, very good run defence.

Rhule and Snow: Pretty best friends

Head Coach Matt Rhule also praised his Defensive Coordinator after the Saints game, “Phil had a great gameplan and had the right answers in the game itself. It was a great game by our defensive coaching staff, but also by the players.”

Rhule and Snow have worked together for years, Rhule has yet to officiate a game as head coach where Snow was not his defensive coordinator. He first brought Snow to Temple University, then took him to Baylor University and finally to Carolina.

Although the roles were once reversed. Rhule started as an intern on the coaching staff at UCLA in 2001, at which time Snow was the defensive coordinator. “He’s always asking me if the coffee machine was broken, which was like, ‘bring me a coffee,'” Rhule said.

The two formed a friendship and Rhule speaks highly of his former mentor, “Everything I do or everything I learned had to do with him directly or indirectly,” he said in an interview with “ESPN.”

Great test against the Cowboys

With all the justified euphoria, however, it must be noted that the Panthers had a thankful opening programme with the New York Jets, an injury-plagued Saints team and the Houston Texans.

That will change next Sunday. The Dallas Cowboys welcome the Panthers. Cowboys quarterback Dak Prescott has been convincing in the first three games, throwing for 878 yards, six touchdowns and two interceptions so far.

Prescott is getting rid of the ball just under 2.5 seconds after the snap this season, scanning defenses quickly and consistently finding his dynamic pass receivers.

“Dak is playing impressive, doing a lot of work at the line of scrimmage, recognizing well what defenses want to do,” Rhule praised at a press conference a few days ago.

It will be a stern test for Snow and the Panthers defence against the highly touted Cowboys offence. But it’s also clear that Snow can not only bluff, but certainly has an ace or two up his sleeve.

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Published
3 years ago
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NFC
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