I didn't call him a liar. I said not to believe everything that unnamed coaches say, because said coaches are often self-serving and have no reason to divulge accurate info to the media.
The Colts scored 29 points in the Super Bowl. 7 of those points were on an INT returned for a TD. Another 6 were on a blown coverage deep. This isn't an example of "exploiting" the system; it's just a blown coverage, which can happen in any system. That leaves 16 points that the Colts scored... not the stuff of legend. Hell, the Bruce Gradkowski-led Tampa Bay Bucaneers scored 30+ points a couple of weeks before during the regular season. And Payton Manning and Colts offensive players > Bruce Gradkowski and the dreck that the Bucs were running out on the field.
But here's some examples of "not football smart":
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a Colts offense that gained 191 rushing yards in 42 carries
Wow... 4.5 yards per carry! Amazing! All with the Bears best D-lineman injured. That's not a fantastic shock.
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Since then every coach has gone over that game tape looking for the ways to break down Tampa 2 coverages around the league.
This is probably true, in a "coaches watch lots of game tape" sense, but the burden of proof is on you, or Kirwin, to tell me why 16 points scored by exploiting the defensive scheme is so tremendous.
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What Dungy did exposed the Tampa 2 coverage being used by more than half the teams in the NFL.
Leaving aside the "exposed" part, nowhere close to that many teams ran primarily Tampa-2 systems. Probably 100% of teams, at some point during their games, play cover-2, but that's been true since the 40s.
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Besides what the Colts were able to do, there are a number of teams running an over/under principle on the Tampa 2 coverage: Drive a seam route down the middle -- usually by a tight end -- and trigger the deep drop by the Mike, or strongside middle linebacker, and then run a 12-yard dig route by a wide receiver under the tight end and in front of the Mike. The big stretch by the deep route can produce a nice hole in the middle of the field.
This revolutionary play left defensive coaches entirely unable to adapt their systems.
Teams have been doing this since the early part of the decade against Tampa. The system is not merely the same defensive play run over and over again, and there are ways of disguising coverages. The defense can account for that route combination.
And, no, he doesn't basically agree with me, except for in the superficial (but obvious) sense that the scheme is not used as an overarching system by any team anymore (with the possible exception of the Vikings who, by the way, are pretty good on defense and have been for a while). The problem isn't one of the scheme being exposed, but one of personnel becoming overstretched. There's only so many CBs that are appropriate for such a system; if all teams are going after those CBs, they will become overvalued. Repeat for all positions.