
Since I began the French on the Bench series, I have discussed certain concepts and rules that Bud Foster follows regardless of the opponent.
- The corners flip-flop. The boundary corner goes to the short side of the field, and the field corner goes to the wide side of the field. If there is not a wide receiver to the boundary, the boundary corner aligns on the outside shoulder of the tackle or closest eligible receiver.
- In a 4-4 look, the rover aligns to the passing strength of the formation and the free safety away from the passing strength.
- In the 46 look, the backer goes to the passing strength and lines up on the line of scrimmage. The rover replaces the backer as a strong side inside linebacker. The whip stays aligned away from the passing strength.
- In the 4-2-5 with the whip in, the whip plays to the field side and the rover plays to the boundary.
- In nickel, the nickel covers the slot receiver to the wide side of the field. The rover covers the slot to the boundary side.
Coach Foster has adjusted his scheme over the years, but generally speaking it is pretty clear where the free safety, rover, boundary corner, and field corner will be on every play. He uses coverage that fits the strengths of his personnel, but he adheres to these rules almost universally, and when he hasn't, it has not had the best results. The best case of Foster breaking his rules was assigning Antone Exum to shadow Clemson tight end Dwayne Allen in the 2011 ACC Championship Game. Not only did Allen win that one-on-one matchup, but it seemed to create more confusion in his own defense, than the Clemson offense.
With Coach Foster, there have always been the rare exceptions to these rules when he has a special talent or a certain matchup which calls for an adjustment. Corey Moore usually aligned very wide and angled at 45 degrees towards the quarterback with the whip or the backer aligned inside him over the tackle. This allowed Moore to use his spectacular edge speed to disrupt offenses. On Saturday, Coach Foster used Dadi Nicolas in a similar fashion off the edge, but with Nicolas playing the role of a whip linebacker, and the defensive end moving inside to align over the tackle. But, there is one rule that I can't recall Coach Foster ever breaking. Foster became the sole defensive coordinator of the Hokies in 1996, and regardless of matchups, personnel, or alignment, I have never seen him align the starting boundary corner on the field side. Instead, Foster slides his coverage over, often with safeties, the whip, or in some cases an inside linebacker covering talented tight ends and slot receivers, while the boundary corner was ostensibly left shadowing a lowly fullback or a tight end max protecting on the other side. Against very talented teams, too often I saw terrific receivers for teams like Florida State line up wide in coverage against a game, but outmatched, linebacker like Ben Taylor rather than flexing a corner across or using a nickel package. (Note Taylor on the bottom of the screen covering FSU speedster Ron Dugans one-on-one on an out route.)
00:27:55–00:28:03
To the best of my knowledge, even after adopting a nickel scheme, the boundary and field stayed put, until this Saturday.
Finally, Foster designated his boundary corner to cross the formation to prevent a mismatch against a top receiver. Several times last Saturday, Pitt aligned with twins to the field side and a tight end to the boundary, with All-ACC caliber receivers Devin Street and Tyler Boyd as the twin receivers. Rather than abandon his five man front with Nicolas or the 4-4 look with Trimble and avoid forcing Detrick Bonner to cover Boyd or Street in the slot, Foster moved Kyle Fuller over to the field side on the slot receiver. This put the Hokies two best man coverage corners one-on-one (sometimes with a deep safety for help) and left the other defenders to focus on stopping Pitt's power running game and rushing the passer.
Here's an example from late in the first half. Pitt goes with a trips formation to the field side, featuring Tyler Boyd in the slot and Devin Street on the hash. Kyle Fuller has flexed over to the field side to cover Boyd, with Edwards now taking outside responsibility and Jack Tyler inside responsibility on the tight end. Bonner and Jarrett play two deep safeties against the two minute offense.

Out of the picture is Brandon Facyson matched up with the third Pitt receiver to the bottom of the screen.
Seeing the alignment, Pitt runs a "four verticals" concept with Pitt's twins receivers each running deep routes along with the tight end. Savage identifies man coverage on Boyd and Street with Bonner as help over the top.
00:09:50–00:09:56
He looks instead to pick on Edwards and Tyler against the tight end, but they have the tight end bracketed. By the time Savage checks to see if Boyd or Street can get inside leverage on the Fullers, Nicolas is there for the sack. Nicolas is quick, but if Savage perhaps looks quick slant to Boyd against Kyle Fuller playing outside leverage, there could be a good gain. But, instead of Bonner being the cover guy, Savage sees where he is supposed to go, and there is the Hokies best cover man. RED ALERT goes off in Savage's head, and the extra second of indecision gives Nicolas that split second to hit Savage before the second progression.
Foster used this formula several times with Street and Boyd both aligned to the wide side. Here is Kyle manned on an outside slot, with Bonner on the 3rd WR to the inside and Nicolas coming off the edge as the whip, but as a whip ON THE BOUNDARY SIDE.
00:16:02–00:16:07
The only unsuccessful effort was a quick WR screen where Kendall was taken to the ground and Tyler Boyd picked up a gain on 10 yards just prior to the deep pass that set up the first Pitt field goal. Savage not only took a pounding, but some of these changes that completely went against past Hokie tendencies clearly confused him, and that extra moment resulted in several sacks and quarterback pressures. Nicolas playing at whip, Kyle Fuller crossing to the field side, and even Josh Trimble aligning as a whip on the boundary in the base 4-2-5 all goes against Foster's normal rules and presents offensive coordinators with even more challenges.

He is getting his playmakers in positions to make plays, and he is taking players who may be limited and maximizes their attributes while hiding their flaws. We saw a smattering of it last year when he moved Tweedy to whip and started playing Jarrett in the box and Bruce Taylor on the edge. Now, he is getting Dadi, Trimble, and the Fullers into position to make plays.
Foster continues to astound me. Watching the film, it looks like every possible offensive option is accounted for on every play, and all over the field the Hokie defenders are winning their individual matchups. As talented, intelligent, and disciplined as each player is, Foster is doing a masterful job of putting each in position to be successful.
Duke presents a new challenge. Both Duke quarterbacks are stalwarts at running read option, and Duke will look to run the ball from the spread more than any other Hokie opponent so far this season. It will be interesting to see what rules Foster alters against the meat of the ACC schedule from here forward.

Comments
I haven't even read the article yet, but I have to give you props on the title. +1,000,000 turkey legs!
It is a great title, but an even better article. Overall a great job!
Great read, Bud is one of the best in the biz for good reason.
Thank you for giving me the opportunity to avoid work

If not for the obvious copyright infringement, this could be a best selling T Shirt
What's my name!
- Heisen-Bud
I'd like to amend my survey answer re: the next t-shirt. I think I'd go for a Breaking Bud or a What's my name, or a Bud Heisenberg.
So far this year Bud has put on film basically every player lining up in every possible position (minus #MANBEARPIG at DB) AND just showed he broke his few golden rules. How can you not be amazed by this man's genius. I also love how he was getting pissed on Saturday when they missed a sack. If you are an OC what do you possibly try to scheme up?
I'm starting to wonder if we might face a team that will kneel 3 times and then punt. If our defense can't force turnovers, our offense has worse field position. Also, they will lose fewer yards by doing that as well.
a.k.a. the "Waterboy" defense.
You know, at one point last Saturday I started looking for indications we were about to see a quick kick on 3rd down.
Ah, but both Hopkins and Maddy have dropped into coverages on zone blitzes. Billdozer has Maddy deflecting a pass as he drops into short middle on his highlights from the Pitt game.
My apologies, so Bud has shown everyone doing everything. Can you imagine if Dadi could do pass coverage too? The fear you have to feel as a QB with him Gayle, Collins all on the field with #MANBEARPIG and Big Lu coming up the middle is one that I never hope to feel.
I CAN imagine Dadi in pass coverage after the GIFs of him running all over the field. At least seems like he has the speed to hang. I'm loving the defense this year more and more!
Can you also see him intercepting a ball in the flat? With his speed I can almost guarantee you he wouldn't be caught from behind.
I believe Dadi dropped into pass coverage on least 3 plays in the Pitt game. His technique leaves something to be desired, but he did it.
If he is used dropping into zones when the Hokies blitz someone else, technique doesn't matter much. Every so often, the QB goes to a hot read and throws to a spot. I doubt an OC will gameplan for a defensive end to be sitting on a route. Now, will he be man to man with a slot receiver? No, but Bud has not done that with most of his whips (RVD would have been the exception I think.)
Bud has done this with DEs before. Several have had INTs because the QB wasn't expecting this coverage.
There was one during '38-0, bro' also. Don't remember who (Collins, possibly?...), but it almost went for 6.
HOKIE HAIKU
Bud Foster has rules.
But tendency is boring.
Rules are made to break.
(The things I do for French, Smh)
Dang! It REALLY pisses me off that I can't up-vote the OP!!
nice touch on the time/network
The details, like whoa.
Missing one...Element 119, Buderium (Bu), as yet unknown chemical properties, but highly reactive.
This is obviously an awesome picture already, but my single comment would be to place only the 'B' from 'Bud' in the chemical element box, as that would represent Boron (atomic number 5).
Yeah totally forgot that I overlayed the original box with a new gradient so it covered everything up. I slipped there.
I've become so much more knowledgable as a football fan since I started coming to this site and reading your articles. Thanks French!
This is a first class explanation and helps me understand why the quarterback has that "look" like "really, now what am I supposed to do"! French, Excellent article as usual. Keep up the good work.
French, how susceptible are we (with us playing wide and thin for extra QB pressure) to a good interior O-line and a RB that wants to slash up the gut? Question came up the other day when a friend was discussing Miami.
I'm no french but I suspect that Derrick and Luther would go along ways towards snuffing that out as they did with the ramblin wreck's dive.
I am still not quite convinced about how good Miami's offense is. Florida (who is the only good defense they have played so far) contained Johnson but their offense gift wrapped turnover after turnover and the U took advantage of the short field. The Hokies handled Alabama's zone plays, and I think Yeldon is very comparable to Johnson. And, don't be shocked if you see Dadi playing some whip versus Miami.
If he can be effective in dropping into a zone from the Whip, the sheer threat of him on the field opens up so many other options.
I'd take for my QB Logan on his worst day, to Driskel on his best, any game.
I certainly hope so; he is killing UNC up the middle right now.