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From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia

The Adams State Grizzlies in a dime defense against the Texas A&M–Commerce Lions in 2015
A dime defense (4 cornerbacks), lined up against 4 wide receivers on offense. A conventional dime formation would have 4 linemen and only one linebacker.

In American football, the dime defense is a defensive alignment that uses six defensive backs.[1] It is usually employed in obvious passing situations. The formation usually consists of six defensive backs, usually two safeties and four cornerbacks, and has either four down linemen and one linebacker, or three down linemen and two linebackers. This formation is used to prevent the offense from completing a medium- to long-range pass play. This may be because the offense's running game is inefficient, time is an issue, or they need a long pass for a first down. It is also used against teams whose pass-to-run ratio predominantly favors pass. The formation, however, is vulnerable to running plays as the formation is missing two linebackers, or a linebacker and a down lineman.

A dime defense differs from the nickel defense – from which it derives its name – in that it adds a sixth defensive back to the secondary. This sixth defensive back is called a "dimeback" (D).[2] The defense gets its name because a dime, worth ten cents, is the next step up in United States coin currency from a nickel, which is worth 5 cents.[citation needed]

There are also "quarter" and "half-dollar" formations, each protecting against progressively deeper and more likely pass attempts.[3] In 2010, the New York Giants consistently added an extra safety instead of an extra cornerback, resulting in three safeties and three cornerbacks. This has been called a "giant dime".[citation needed]


YouTube Encyclopedic

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  • Football Breakdown: Nickel and Dime Defense
  • Belichick/Flores Dime "5-0 Package" - Part 1: 5-Man Pressure (Odd Mac 0)
  • 2Q dime defense

Transcription

References

  1. ^ "ESPN.com: NCF - Football 101: Defensive substitution packages". A.espncdn.com. 2002-11-16. Retrieved 2022-08-19.
  2. ^ "Difference between nickel and dime positions on defense?". Chicago Tribune.
  3. ^ "How the Chargers shut down Lamar Jackson and the Ravens".
This page was last edited on 11 March 2024, at 11:14
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