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ON DEFENSE BY MATT MACKEY


Defensive Adjustments: Downfield


Downfield adjustments involve making changes along a few spectra:


INITIAL POSITIONING


Simply a change in what you’re com- municating to the offense. You can com- municate “we’re scared of the deep and will give you the under” with a shift to an all-backing D.


SPACING One adjustment might go from a couple


steps off to close and bodying. What might make the O’s job harder? Sometimes big margins are what you want–they can dis- courage any motion in the first place, and a D that takes up more space (relative to a stack) can look more imposing. Sometimes an imposing-looking D is all you need.


BITE-ABILITY How hard you chase. Do you respect


the break-side cut? (Have they been using the break side at all yet? Are you getting burned on break-side fakes followed by open-side cuts? Not all cutting directions are made equal). Do you concede the deep cut, trusting in your mark or the wind to stop the huck?


POACH-ABILITY How much you look to help or poach. If


you’re getting burned on failed poaches, a recommitment to hard man on JUST your man is in order. If they’re hosing you deep, some extra heads-uppedness on the part of your last back will give you an extra defender there to make a play. Perhaps you need to work some switches against their set play, or get those sideline defenders closer to the middle of the field, where the isos are happening. These sorts of adjustments can be made simultaneously, but it’s hard to mandate for big shifts in more than one spectrum at a time–keep in mind that these adjustments are made both in the heat of a point or game in a given matchup between defender and cutter as well as on a team-wide basis, and when you mandate the latter you necessarily hinder the former. The team defensive adjustment typically tends to be reactive to shore up your weaknesses rather than to exploit your opponent’s (e.g., you encourage players to play more physical, body D because they’re getting run past easily), but think also about how some of these adjustments can be made proactively to keep an offense off-balance or exploit a weakness (e.g., the opponent hasn’t used the IO break at all, perhaps due to your stellar marking, so you encourage downfield players to cheat an extra step or two into the lane and poach more, punishing the opponent’s reliance on the open side).


Ultimate Canada Magazine — www.canadianultimate.com As with other adjustments, making


them effectively requires preparation and practice. It’s hard to suddenly flip from honest man to poaching if there are no players on the team experienced in such; likewise for bodying up on defense. Think about the kinds of tools you want your team to have in the arsenal–you don’t have to have all of them, but you should have a couple–and refine them into effective weapons come game time. »U Share your own thought’s by heading


to Matt’s Blog and join in with your own comments: http://mmackey.blogspot.com.


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