The Morning Journal (Lorain, OH)

Nebraska joins Wisconsin with 3-4 defense

- By Eric Olson

LINCOLN, NEB. » Nebraska’s switch to the 3-4 defense was not solely motivated by the “if you can’t beat them, join them” idiom.

It’s true the Cornhusker­s have been chasing Wisconsin in the Big Ten West for three years, and coach Mike Riley and the rest of college football have witnessed the Badgers’ defensive dominance that started when Dave Aranda brought the three-man front to Madison in 2013.

Riley said he has been intrigued for decades by the problems the 3-4 can cause for an offense, but his longtime defensive coordinato­r Mark Banker always preferred the four-man front. Riley fired Banker after the Huskers’ poor finish in 2016, and when 3-4 guru Bob Diaco became available after getting fired as Connecticu­t’s head coach, Riley went after him hard.

This season Nebraska is among a half-dozen major programs that have dumped the four-down lineman, threelineb­acker alignment in favor of the 3-4.

“We’ve got to go play a game and see how it all looks,” Riley said, “but the process has been exciting to watch.”

Wisconsin was a top-20 defense in the 4-3 in the four years before Aranda arrived as defensive coordinato­r. The Badgers were top 10 each of his three years. Aranda left for LSU last year, and the Badgers were seventh in total defense in Justin Wilcox’s only year as coordinato­r. His successor, Jim Leonhard, is expected to have one of the Big Ten’s top defenses again.

There are other 3-4 success stories. Colorado, which had one of the country’s worst defenses in 2014, made the switch under coordinato­r Jim Leavitt and ranked first in the Pac-12 two years later. Leavitt now hopes for a similar turnaround at Oregon, which had the third-worst defense in the country in 2016.

Todd Orlando has taken his 3-4 to Texas after his Houston defense ranked 13th and sacked eventual Louisville Heisman Trophy winner Lamar Jackson 11 times last year.

The 3-4, and its close relative, the 5-2, were the game’s most popular defenses for decades until Miami revolution­ized the sport in the mid-1980s with four-man fronts, smaller linebacker­s and speed all around.

Associated Press research found that 48 of the 68 powerfive conference teams and FBS independen­ts still use the fourman front as their primary alignment.

“There are some issues about the 3-4 that may make it more popular as we move forward,” said Big Ten Network analyst Gerry DiNardo, who has been a head coach at Vanderbilt, LSU and Indiana. “I think we are going to trend in that direction.”

The 3-4 helps in recruiting because linebacker­s are more plentiful than athletic defensive linemen, and Riley noted that those linebacker­s are more versatile in specialtea­ms roles. Schematica­lly, the 3-4 challenges offenses because with four linebacker­s, quarterbac­ks are left to guess from which direction the pass rush will come more so than when facing a 4-3.

The 3-4 also can be effective against run-pass option plays. On those, the offensive line blocks for a run and the quarterbac­k looks to see if the strong safety is coming up to defend the run or sitting in pass coverage. If the strong safety plays the run, the QB can hit a receiver on a slant. The advantage of the 3-4 over the 4-3 on those plays is that even if the strong safety bites on the run, there are still as many as four linebacker­s in the passing lanes.

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