Spinnin' Bucket wrote:
Quote:
But I always thought Tillman might work better as a free safety more than a strong safety.
In the Cover 2 system, I believe both safeties are essentially interchangeable, and the traditional models of “free” and “strong” are not very critical. The 2 safeties split the deep zone in half, with each guy responsible for his portion. The front 7 play a gap scheme while the corners seal off the outside.
FWIW here's an article from today's Trib that addresses the issue:
--------
http://chicagosports.chicagotribune.com ... columnists
Traditionally, the strong safety plays to the tight end side of the field closer to the line of scrimmage—"in the box"—and is a more physical run-stopper. The free safety is faster and has better ball skills. The two positions are becoming more interchangeable but hardly could become any more important.
(cut)
Cover-2 is simply one particular pass defense, not descriptive of the overall defensive philosophy, which Smith describes as "eight men up gap defense." It puts a double burden on safeties.
In the Cover-2 pass defense, the safeties split the field and back up the cornerbacks. On early downs, Cover-2 is rarely the defense of choice. On early downs, one safety plays up to help stop the run because the defensive linemen are penetrating gaps, concentrating more on disrupting lanes and rushing the passer than on stopping the run. The strong safety, then, becomes the fourth linebacker.
With the strong safety up, the free safety must play the deep middle, which is where Manning's speed is designed to catch up with the likes of Carolina's Steve Smith.
----------------------
So there is a difference here. With Tillman's speed and athleticism, I believe he might be a better FS whereas the better strong safeties will be the bigger hitters that play stout run defense. An Pierson says, the SS has to be ready to become almost like a fourth LB.
Tom S.