How Christian Parker’s Defensive Overhaul Could Reshape the NFL Draft Landscape Forever
Neither scheme is inherently or indisputably dominant, coaches and evaluators say. But 4-3 defenses, which front two defensive tackles and two defensive ends, tend to create more pressure on the quarterback and allow players to penetrate more simply in order to generate maximum pressure.
Three-four defenses, meanwhile, tend to front bigger and stronger players as the three defensive linemen are often asked to defend two gaps (two spaces between offensive linemen) each, thus requiring more size and stoutness.



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