Search results
Results from the WOW.Com Content Network
Some teams keep their outside linebackers on the same side of the field at all times while others define them as playing on either the "strongside" (SLB) or the "weakside" (WLB). The strongside, or "Sam", linebacker lines up on the same side as the offensive tight end and often is responsible for covering the tight end or running back on pass ...
The middle or inside linebacker (MLB or ILB), sometimes called the "Mike" or "Mac", [15] is often referred to as the "quarterback of the defense". [16] Often it is the middle linebacker who receives the defensive play calls from the sideline and relays that play to the rest of the team, and in the NFL he is usually the defensive player with the electronic sideline communicator.
American football quarterbacks, linebackers, - and increasingly, their coaches - have the ability to decide what the next play would be in many occasions during the game, thus allowing for both complex tactics displayed within individual plays and overall game-wide strategy in play calling and play selection.
Browns quarterback Dorian Thompson-Robinson eludes Baltimore Ravens outside linebacker Jadeveon Clowney on Oct. 1 in Cleveland. The question going into the first meeting between the teams centered ...
Linebacker combo: the Seattle Seahawks’ Jordyn Brooks and Baltimore Ravens’ Patrick Queen. The situation for Brooks and Queen is not a perfect 1-for-1 comparison, largely differentiating on ...
The terms became hyphenated and eventually unhyphenated single words, "quarterback" (QB), "halfback" (HB), and "fullback" (FB). The lack of quarterback in the English-Scottish nomenclature for rugby led to the position name " scrum-half " to distinguish the halfback playing close to scrimmage (renamed "scrummage" or "scrum") from another who ...
Both were selected by their respective teams at No. 7 overall — Allen the QB in the 2018 NFL draft and Allen the linebacker one year later. Same name game: QB Josh Allen vs. linebacker Josh ...
2–4–5 defense A type of nickel formation with two linemen (two defensive ends, DEs, or one DE and one defensive tackle, DT), four linebackers (two interior linebackers, ILBs, and two outer linebackers, OLBs), and five defensive backs (three cornerbacks, CBs, one free safety, FS, and one strong safety, SS).