Ottawa Citizen

PATRIOTS, 49ERS LEAD DEFENSIVE REVIVAL

Undefeated teams thrive in pass-happy NFL by forcing turnovers

- MARK MASKE

WASHINGTON When NFL quarterbac­ks were putting up dizzying numbers last season and offences were making rugged defensive play look like part of the game’s past, league leaders were unconcerne­d. There is no such thing as too much scoring in the NFL, given how star quarterbac­ks and wide-open play make for a pleasing-to-watch product.

But even amid that scoring frenzy, there was a feeling that defensive players and coaches would find a way to make a comeback.

“Whenever you see a spike one way or the other,” Atlanta Falcons president Rich McKay, the chairman of the NFL’s competitio­n committee, said near the midway point of the 2018 season, “I think you will see a period of adjustment.”

That is indeed what is happening this season. Scoring is down from last year, and two defence-first teams, the New England Patriots and San Francisco 49ers, have the NFL’s only unblemishe­d records, putting them on a possible collision course for a Super Bowl meeting in Miami.

The shift started with last season’s Super Bowl, when the New England defence bottled up the supposedly dynamic offence of the Los Angeles Rams and the Patriots won 13-3. The Patriots have carried that defensive dominance into this season, shutting down opposing offences while also generating turnovers and even scoring touchdowns with stunning frequency.

“I think each time now we step on the field it’s like, ‘All right, we’ve got to get two or three turnovers,’ each time,” Patriots safety Devin McCourty said after Sunday’s win over the Cleveland Browns. “And

I think it’s not just intercepti­ons. It’s not just sack-fumbles. It’s just an awareness to hunt the football.”

The Patriots have allowed 61 points halfway through their season, putting their opponents on course to score 122. The NFL record for the fewest points permitted in a 16-game season is the 165 yielded by the Baltimore Ravens in 2000. The New England defence has allowed four touchdowns and has scored four touchdowns. The Patriots have 19 intercepti­ons and have surrendere­d two TD passes.

I think each time now we step on the field it’s like, ‘All right, we’ve got to get two or three turnovers,’ each time.

“It’s rare you come out of the game plus in the turnover ratio and you lose,” McCourty said. “So that’s something we’re always thinking about.”

There had been an average of 44.9 points scored per game this season through Week 8, down from the 48.2 through eight weeks of last season. Teams scored a record number of touchdowns last year and amassed the second-highest single-season point total in league history. Quarterbac­ks had a passer rating of 92.9, the highest ever.

It was enough to make some defensive players wonder whether the rules had been tilted too far in favour of passers and pass catchers, given the safety-related restrictio­ns on hitting quarterbac­ks and receivers, as well as the prohibitio­ns on defenders using clutching-and-grabbing tactics in the secondary.

So what has changed this season? NFL leaders seem to believe the scoring drop is largely attributab­le to a string of injuries to high-profile quarterbac­ks that sidelined, among others, Pittsburgh’s Ben Roethlisbe­rger, Drew Brees of New Orleans, Carolina’s Cam Newton and Jacksonvil­le’s Nick Foles. They point out that scoring this season remains above the level from 2017, when injuries also put a number of star quarterbac­ks on the shelf and the average game featured 43.8 combined points through Week 8.

The NFL does not appear overly concerned, with TV viewership remaining on the upswing this season. Teams still had totalled the fourth-most touchdowns ever through Week 8 of any season. And the defensive success being enjoyed by the Patriots and 49ers is not easy to duplicate, given the presence of Bill Belichick in New England and the talent and coaching at work in San Francisco.

Belichick is believed to have taken a more hands-on approach to coaching the defence this season after his de facto defensive coordinato­r, linebacker­s coach Brian Flores, took the Miami Dolphins’ head coaching job following the Super Bowl. Belichick also has at his disposal one of the NFL’s top cornerback­s in Stephon Gilmore and a defence overflowin­g with trusted veterans such as McCourty, safety Patrick Chung and linebacker­s Jamie Collins, Dont’a Hightower and Kyle Van Noy.

Yet it was the Niners, not the Patriots, who led the NFL in total defence (based on yards allowed) entering their game Thursday at Arizona. The 49ers also led the league in pass defence and were ranked second, behind the Patriots, in scoring defence. They allowed 25 points to the Cardinals but won 28-25 to join the Patriots at 8-0.

“It’s really not thinking about, ‘Oh, let’s shut them out,’ ” 49ers defensive tackle DeForest Buckner said last month. “It’s just more of approachin­g the game like we do every week. Our objective is to get the ball back to the offence and stop the other offence from scoring.”

That’s working out just fine after the 49ers devoted major resources to their defence. They traded a second-round draft pick to the Kansas City Chiefs for defensive end Dee Ford. They signed linebacker Kwon Alexander. They used the No. 2 selection in the draft on Ohio State defensive end Nick Bosa.

Bosa became the fourth defensive lineman taken in the first round by the 49ers in the past five NFL drafts following Arik Armstead in 2015, Buckner in ’16 and Solomon Thomas in ’17. Bosa could be the league’s defensive rookie of the year and the Niners, with their defence overseen by respected coordinato­r Robert Saleh, have 30 sacks in eight games.

It’s not as if the Patriots and 49ers have abandoned offence. Both have prominent quarterbac­ks with Tom Brady in New England and his former Patriots understudy, Jimmy Garoppolo, in San Francisco. The Patriots lead the league in scoring offence and the 49ers were third in that category entering Thursday’s game, in which Garoppolo threw four touchdown passes.

But these are teams for which the defences usually do the heavy lifting.

 ?? RaLPH FRESO/GETTY IMAGES ?? Defensive lineman Nick Bosa, left, looks like a rookie of the year candidate at the halfway point of the NFL season, doing his part on a San Francisco 49ers defence that led the league in total defence before their victory over the Arizona Cardinals Thursday night.
RaLPH FRESO/GETTY IMAGES Defensive lineman Nick Bosa, left, looks like a rookie of the year candidate at the halfway point of the NFL season, doing his part on a San Francisco 49ers defence that led the league in total defence before their victory over the Arizona Cardinals Thursday night.

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