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Long time Pittsburgh Steeler Defensive Coordinator Dick Lebeau (currently with the
Tennessee Titans) is known for his firezone pressure package. Coach Lebeaus 3 under 3
deep firezone coverage concept has been the topic of multiple posts on Blitzology in the
past. This post is a continuation of those same concepts. The following information is
from the 2003 Kentucky Defensive Playbook. The defensive coordinator was Mike Archer.
Before his time at Kentucky, Coach Archer served as the linebacker coach for the
Pittsburgh Steelers from 1996-2002. With Coach Archer coming from the Lebeau
coaching tree much of the firezone terminology and techniques are similar.
This post focuses on the Seam Drop. Coaching points for this drop from Coach Lebeau
were covered previously on Blitzology (Here).
The Seam technique from Coach Archer follows many of the same coaching points.
3 Under
Seam
3 Receiver Hook
Seam
3 Deep
FZ 1/3 Corner
FZ 1/3 Corner
The diagram shows in the simplest form the responsibilities of the Seam player. If the
#2 receiver runs:
Outside = Match
Vertical = Carry
Inside = Deliver
Seam Drop Played in 3 underneath 3 Deep zones. Align inside or outside of the #2
receiver. Match-Carry-Deliver the deepest and outside of #2 or #3. Vs. a removed #2
with over split between he and #3 align inside and drop inside the #2 receiver and work
to his outside shoulder maintain vision and break.
The seam player aligns 1-2 yards inside of #2 and 6 yards deep vs. a wide split between
#2 and #3.
Deliver #2 / #3 outside in on any inside release until forced to come off with either a
call or another eligible crosses your face from the inside out
The Seam player is working from inside to the outside shoulder of the vertical release of
#2. The Seam player will only collision the #2 outside in and never inside out. All of the
Seam player's help is inside from the 3RH and the Lean Post Safety.
The Seam player drops with width and then squeezing inside.
Match = Leverage first to the flat of #2 / #3
The Seam player is playing with depth over the first to the flat (#3). This should keep
the Seam player in the window of any route by #1.
By keeping depth over the first to the flat the Seam player is still in body position to play
deep to shallow on the #2 and #3.
Deliver #2 inside until another color crosses your face outside.
Flood = 3 Receivers releasing into routes to the weak side of the formation
If the #3 receiver is releasing away from the Seam player the Seam player locks on the
#2 receiver and covers him man to man.