7–1–2–1 defense

7-diamond, stemming from a wide tackle 6 by replacing one linebacker with a nose guard. This variation was seen from the 1940s to the 1960s. This defense is very similar to the 46 defense popularized by Buddy Ryan.

The 7121, or seven-diamond defense, used seven "down linemen", or players on the line of scrimmage at the time of the snap, one linebacker, two safeties relatively close to the line and one safety farther downfield.[1] The formation was created by Minnesota coach Henry L. Williams in 1903, reputedly to stop Michigan back Willie Heston.[2] By some accounts in the mid-1930s, the 7121 was considered "almost obsolete" due to its weakness against the forward pass, whereas the 722 was still considered viable.[3] Yet Bill Arnsparger notes the use of the seven-diamond from the 1940s into the 1960s, as a defensive adjustment to the common wide tackle 6 defenses of the time.[4] Further, the form of the 7 diamond as derived from a wide tackle 6, with a more compact line spacing than the 1930s era 7 man lines, shows a marked similarity to the 46 defense of Buddy Ryan.

Background

The 1906 football rule reforms mandated that offenses use at least seven down linemen. These players usually stood shoulder-to-shoulder before the snap, a posture defenses tended to match. The defenses of the time are considered unsophisticated by today's standards. The interior defensive linemen were expected to hold their ground against their assigned blockers, while the responsibility of disrupting the offense rested primarily with the tackles and ends, especially those lined up on the "strong" side of the opposing line.[5]

Over time, however, as new offensive formations, such as the single wing, were introduced, and increased the lateral running and passing threats, the seven man front changed in character. Box and letter drawings of the seven man front, by coaches such as Bernie Bierman and Steve Owen show a broadly spread front, with the center and two guards versus the interior five offensive linemen, defensive tackles 2-5 yards from the guards, and ends 2-5 yards outside the defensive tackles, and well outside the offensive ends.[6][7]

Improvements in offensive blocking schemes eventually made the seven-man line defenses vulnerable,[8] but it remained a common formation, particularly against opponents with an unreliable passing attack,[9] even into the 1950s. The abolition of the one-platoon system at all levels of the game by the 1960s effectively ended use of 7-man fronts except in goal-line situations; free substitution thus allowed bulkier offensive linemen to be taken out and replaced by nimbler linebackers, giving defenses more flexibility.

The 3-4 defense can be seen as a modern variant of the 7-man defensive front (specifically the 7-2-2), with the cornerbacks (ends), outside linebackers (tackles), "defensive ends" (guards) and the nose tackle (center) all lined up roughly on the line of scrimmage. The key difference is in the spacing of the line (the linebackers and defensive ends are spread much wider than in the original 7-man front) and the fact that the outside linebackers and cornerbacks usually stand upright instead of crouching into a three-point stance.

References

  1. Boys' Life, Vol. 36, No. 12, p. 27, ISSN 0006-8608, Published by Boy Scouts of America, Inc., December 1946.
  2. Arch Ward, "Remember Him? Willie Heston of Michigan, Whose Plunging Forced Opponents to Use Seven Man Line", Chicago Daily Tribune, December 28, 1936.
  3. The American Magazine, Volume 120, p. 90, Crowell-Collier Pub. Co., 1935.
  4. Arnsparger, Bill, Arnsparger's Coaching Defensive Football, St. Lucie Press, 1999, pp. 57-58.
  5. Pro Football Formations 1: In the Beginning. . ., Hickok Sports, retrieved January 22, 2011.
  6. Bierman, Bernie, Winning Football, McGraw-Hill, 1937, pp 209-216.
  7. Owen, Steve, My Kind of Football, Prentice-Hall, 1952, p. 168.
  8. The American Legion Magazine, Volumes 31-32, p. 64, The American Legion, 1941.
  9. Louis Little and Robert Harron, How to Watch Football: the Spectator's Guide, p. 51, Whittlesey house, McGraw-Hill, 1935.
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