By 11-12, defenders should be reading the offense. This drill teaches the difference between zone and man coverage by asking defenders to react to receiver movement.
Equipment needed: 6 cones, 2 balls, 3 receivers, 3 defenders.
Setup: Three receivers line up on the line of scrimmage at different widths. Three defenders line up 5 yards back, split across the field. No QB yet; a coach will throw.
How to run it:
- Coach yells “Zone” or “Man.” Receivers take off on a predetermined route (all go vertical, or spread horizontally, or cross in the middle).
- In zone, defenders shift laterally and follow the ball. Responsibility is space, not a person.
- In man, defenders turn their hips and follow one receiver. They don’t look at the ball, they look at hips.
- Coach throws to one receiver. Defenders react based on the coverage call.
- Do 4 reps of each coverage. Rotate receivers and defenders.
What to look for:
In zone, if a defender is staring at a receiver instead of feeling the ball coming, they’re playing man. In man, if a defender is peeking at the ball and losing their assignment, they break. Watch foot positioning: zone defenders have shoulders square to the field, man defenders are in a backpedal or at 45 degrees. If the offense is running picks (receivers crossing in man), man defenders should feel the traffic and switch. This teaches communication.
Variation: Add a QB. Receivers run real routes, defense calls coverage pre-snap. This forces defenders to make the coverage call stick instead of just reacting to the coach’s voice.