Drag routes are one of the most common and frustrating concepts in the game. You'll see them out of bunches, trips, tight formations, spread sets-basically every formation imaginable. If you sit in soft zone or backed-off man coverage without adjustments, your opponent can spam drags all game long, rack the catch, and consistently pick up 5-10 yards. Having enough CUT 26 Coins can be very helpful.
The good news? There are multiple reliable ways to take them away. The key is understanding your tools and knowing the trade-offs that come with each one.
Why Drugs Are So Hard to Stop
Drags attack underneath coverage. They slip under hook zones, outrun soft man coverage, and force defenders to choose between the shallow route and deeper crossers behind it. Offenses often pair a drag with a deep crosser or post, creating a high-low read that stresses your defense.
If you overcommit underneath, you give up something deep. If you play too safe over the top, the drag becomes an easy completion.
So let's break down the best ways to handle them.
Shade Your Coverage Underneath (Simple Effective)
If you're running Cover 3 or Cover 4, the simplest solution is shading your coverage underneath.
When you shade down:
Hook zones play more aggressively at around 5 yards.
Flat defenders react quicker to short throws.
Drags get contested much earlier.
This adjustment alone can shut down lazy drag spam. The quarterback may still complete the pass, but he'll take a hit or be limited to minimal yards after catch.
The Trade-Off
Shading underneath opens space behind those shallow zones. Deep crossers, posts, and intermediate routes become more dangerous. That's where your awareness-and your user defender-come into play.
If you know the drag is coming from one side, shade underneath and manually cover the deeper route yourself.
Use Your User to Mask the Weakness
Shading underneath is strong-but incomplete on its own.
If your opponent runs a drag paired with a deep crosser, you can:
Shade underneath.
Use the hook defender.
Take away the crosser yourself.
Now the offense's first two reads are gone. That forces them into longer progressions, giving your pass rush more time to get home.
The biggest defensive advantage in this game is making your opponent uncomfortable. When their first read isn't there, mistakes happen.
Custom Zone Stems (Advanced Adjustment)
If you're in Cover 2, shading underneath can create problems. Your outside corners turn into cheap CUT 26 Coins hard flats, which opens the classic Cover 2 hole shot.