Grid Iron
08-27-2003, 01:36 PM
<h2>Defensive Success in FOF2</h2>
<h3>An analysis of the Nebraska Blizzards’ “Snow Storm” defense</h2>
This article was originally posted in my Nebraska Blizzards Dynasty Review (http://dynamic2.gamespy.com/~fof/forums/showthread.php?s=&threadid=13235) in the Dynasty Reports section. Since it does contain some information that may be of general interest to FOF2 players (as few as there might be), I decided to post it here, too.
<b>Overview</b>
I’ll be the first to admit that the Nebraska Blizzards incredible success was due to the use of the “Snow Storm” defense which began in 2021. In nine seasons of using the Snow Storm defense from 2021 to 2029, the Blizzards compiled a 131-32 record (80.4%), never missed the playoffs, clinched eight AFC Championships, and won seven Super Bowls, despite playing under somewhat rigorous house rules.
<b>Implementation</b>
The Snow Storm defense, consisting of four linemen (2 DE, 2 DT), one linebacker, four cornerbacks and two safeties, started as an experiment. After becoming bored with the regular 4-3 and 3-4 schemes in FOF2, and experiencing difficulty in sustaining Super Bowl quality success over a long period of time, I decided to implement an extreme defensive game plan.
I began by creating a defense that would utilize the most talented players on my team as often as possible. Since FOF2 always has a glut of great cornerbacks available in the draft as late at the fifth or sixth round, I decided to run a defense that used the <b>dime formation exclusively</b>. This allowed me to use all of the fantastic players in my secondary, and hide the weakness of my linebacker corps.
The difficulty in using a dime formation all the time was that the AI won’t do it—even if the “dime formation frequency” setting is 100. So, I had to manually call every single play on defense for the Blizzards.
I began every defensive play call by going <b>all out against the pass</b> to increase my chances for an interception. Then, I always chose <b>dime formation</b> to utilize all of my great cornerbacks. Next, I selected <b>bumb and run</b> coverage in an attempt to disrupt receiver routes. Last, I almost <b>never blitzed</b> because I wanted my great interceptors to stay back to pick off the ball rather than come at the quarterback and risk the big play.
I knew I was on to something special after the first game I used it. In a 34-3 victory at Indianapolis in Week 9 of the 2021 season, the Blizzards held the Colts to just 197 total yards (38 rush, 149 rec) and single field goal. The rest, as the say, is history.
In the nine years in which Nebraska used the Snow Storm defense, the team allowed an average of 16.23 points in the regular season.
Moreover, the Blizzards defense regularly led the NFL in several defensive categories. The team finished first in fewest points allowed six times, ranked first or second in fewest passing yards allowed eight times, and led the league in interceptions six times. The team also recorded 239 regular-season interceptions over the nine-year span, an average of 1.7 per game.
Perhaps one of the best examples of how well the Snow Storm Defense worked was the performance of <b>CB Everett Blackwood</b> in 2024, who played in 16 games but was <b>third</b> on the cornerback depth chart. Everett, who was drafted in 2021 by the Blizzards in the fifth round out of Arizona, finished that season with an amazing 10 interceptions, two of which he returned for touchdowns, and earned All-League First Team honors. His stat line for the season, however, shows that he never “started” a game, as he played behind two other great cornerbacks.
Blackwood’s success truly underscores the fact that, in FOF2 at least, the incredible surplus of talented cornerbacks is severely underutilized in AI defensive playcalling.
Interestingly, I also found that the Snow Storm defense performed very well at the goaline. While I haven’t gone back to conduct a statistical analysis, my anecdotal experience has been that the Snow Storm defense works well under all conditions.
<b>Conclusion</b>
As my experience with the Blizzards has shown me, the Snow Storm defense works well for FOF2. As for other versions of Front Office Football, I don’t know. I haven’t tried it out. Perhaps someone will be inspired after reading this, try it out, and let me know.
In closing, I just want everyone to remember this: if by some chance an NFL team starts using the dime formation on every down and wins the Super Bowl, you heard it here first.
<h3>An analysis of the Nebraska Blizzards’ “Snow Storm” defense</h2>
This article was originally posted in my Nebraska Blizzards Dynasty Review (http://dynamic2.gamespy.com/~fof/forums/showthread.php?s=&threadid=13235) in the Dynasty Reports section. Since it does contain some information that may be of general interest to FOF2 players (as few as there might be), I decided to post it here, too.
<b>Overview</b>
I’ll be the first to admit that the Nebraska Blizzards incredible success was due to the use of the “Snow Storm” defense which began in 2021. In nine seasons of using the Snow Storm defense from 2021 to 2029, the Blizzards compiled a 131-32 record (80.4%), never missed the playoffs, clinched eight AFC Championships, and won seven Super Bowls, despite playing under somewhat rigorous house rules.
<b>Implementation</b>
The Snow Storm defense, consisting of four linemen (2 DE, 2 DT), one linebacker, four cornerbacks and two safeties, started as an experiment. After becoming bored with the regular 4-3 and 3-4 schemes in FOF2, and experiencing difficulty in sustaining Super Bowl quality success over a long period of time, I decided to implement an extreme defensive game plan.
I began by creating a defense that would utilize the most talented players on my team as often as possible. Since FOF2 always has a glut of great cornerbacks available in the draft as late at the fifth or sixth round, I decided to run a defense that used the <b>dime formation exclusively</b>. This allowed me to use all of the fantastic players in my secondary, and hide the weakness of my linebacker corps.
The difficulty in using a dime formation all the time was that the AI won’t do it—even if the “dime formation frequency” setting is 100. So, I had to manually call every single play on defense for the Blizzards.
I began every defensive play call by going <b>all out against the pass</b> to increase my chances for an interception. Then, I always chose <b>dime formation</b> to utilize all of my great cornerbacks. Next, I selected <b>bumb and run</b> coverage in an attempt to disrupt receiver routes. Last, I almost <b>never blitzed</b> because I wanted my great interceptors to stay back to pick off the ball rather than come at the quarterback and risk the big play.
I knew I was on to something special after the first game I used it. In a 34-3 victory at Indianapolis in Week 9 of the 2021 season, the Blizzards held the Colts to just 197 total yards (38 rush, 149 rec) and single field goal. The rest, as the say, is history.
In the nine years in which Nebraska used the Snow Storm defense, the team allowed an average of 16.23 points in the regular season.
Moreover, the Blizzards defense regularly led the NFL in several defensive categories. The team finished first in fewest points allowed six times, ranked first or second in fewest passing yards allowed eight times, and led the league in interceptions six times. The team also recorded 239 regular-season interceptions over the nine-year span, an average of 1.7 per game.
Perhaps one of the best examples of how well the Snow Storm Defense worked was the performance of <b>CB Everett Blackwood</b> in 2024, who played in 16 games but was <b>third</b> on the cornerback depth chart. Everett, who was drafted in 2021 by the Blizzards in the fifth round out of Arizona, finished that season with an amazing 10 interceptions, two of which he returned for touchdowns, and earned All-League First Team honors. His stat line for the season, however, shows that he never “started” a game, as he played behind two other great cornerbacks.
Blackwood’s success truly underscores the fact that, in FOF2 at least, the incredible surplus of talented cornerbacks is severely underutilized in AI defensive playcalling.
Interestingly, I also found that the Snow Storm defense performed very well at the goaline. While I haven’t gone back to conduct a statistical analysis, my anecdotal experience has been that the Snow Storm defense works well under all conditions.
<b>Conclusion</b>
As my experience with the Blizzards has shown me, the Snow Storm defense works well for FOF2. As for other versions of Front Office Football, I don’t know. I haven’t tried it out. Perhaps someone will be inspired after reading this, try it out, and let me know.
In closing, I just want everyone to remember this: if by some chance an NFL team starts using the dime formation on every down and wins the Super Bowl, you heard it here first.