Search results
Results from the WOW.Com Content Network
The middle linebacker lines up in between the offensive guards. This player's main job is to stop the run; to be most effective, the middle linebacker should be the team's best tackler and be able to play from sideline to sideline. Pass coverage is a short zone on any backs coming through the middle of the line.
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.
Sometimes called the "inside linebacker" (especially in a 3–4 defense), and known colloquially as the "Mike" linebacker, the middle linebacker is often known as the "quarterback of the defense", as they are frequently the primary defensive play callers and must react to a wide variety of situations.
Here’s what Minnesota’s offensive staff is looking at as it prepares to play North Carolina in the football opener: Power Echols will start at inside linebacker for UNC. That’s a given.
The middle linebacker position becomes crucial across college football this year, with most programs using their middle linebacker as their defensive playcaller following the introduction of in ...
The middle linebacker spot was decimated by injuries last year, with veteran starter Daniel Green suffering a season-ending injury in the third game and backup Jake Clifton battling several ...
Tampa 2 is a hybrid of cover 2 and cover 3 (see below) where the deep safeties have responsibility only for the deep zone "outside the hashes," while the middle linebacker drops into the middle quarter of the field, covering deep passes between the hash marks. Cover 2 can be run from any seven-man defensive fronts such as the 3-4 and the 4-3.
The two outside or "Stud" linebackers must be effective at pressuring the offensive line and reading and reacting to the play as it develops. The middle linebacker (also known as the "Mike" linebacker) must be able to effectively move in the direction the play is going (also known as "flowing to the ball") while also being able to shed blockers ...