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Defending the Sweep Play in Youth Football

Defending the Sweep Play in Youth Football

The sweep play is one of the most common and effective plays in youth football. It’s simple to execute, gets your fastest athlete in space, and can pick up big chunks of yardage if the defense isn’t disciplined. But with the right adjustments and preparation, your team can shut it down and force the offense into uncomfortable situations. This article we will talk about how to stop the sweep play. Defending the Sweep Play in youth football all starts with alignment and setting the edge.

Defending the Sweep Play in Youth Football

Why the Sweep Works in Youth Football

Most youth offenses rely on the sweep because:

How to Stop the Sweep Play

Set the Edge – Every Single Play

The key to stopping the sweep starts with the defensive end or outside linebacker (contain player). That player must force the play back inside — not chase the ball and get hooked inside. Teach them to:

If your edge player consistently sets the edge, the sweep gets funneled back into traffic / pursuit.

Linebacker Flow & Pursuit Angles

Linebackers need to flow to the football working their inside-out pursuit path. If the contain player does his job and sets the edge and forces the ball carrier to slow down or turn back in and there is no one there, the back will still hit a big run.

Alignment! Formation Recognition

Most of the time when a youth football defense gives up a big play it’s because of misalignment. You cannot allow the offense to outnumber or outflank you to any side. Your edge players need to understand the leverage blockers have on the them. For example, say a wing back lines up outside the defensive end, it’s very likely your DE will get cracked or sealed by that wing back. If they compress a receiver down, your DE might get cracked by the receiver.

How offensive players (backs and WRs) are align will tell you a lot of what they are trying to do. Aligning properly to unbalanced formations is critical! You can’t allow them to give you extra gaps that you aren’t accounting for.  A lot of youth teams will direct snap to their best player and run outside. Don’t get out-leveraged! Also, you need to teach your CBs how to crack replace.

Watch Film and Scout Tendencies

Most youth teams have clear tendencies. Do they always run sweep from a certain formation? Does their best athlete always motion before the sweep? Do they run sweep mostly to the wide side? Watching film or scouting live can give you the edge to prepare your defense with specific calls or alignments. Offenses are going to do what they do- go scout!

Put your Best Players to the Wide Side

Putting your best edge defenders to the wide side is a great option. In youth football, you always have to protect the field. I am not saying you don’t have to worry about the boundary, but there is a lot less field there. If the offense sweeps outside (to the boundary side) and they break contain, you can just squeeze them to the sidelines. Defend the field!

Final Thoughts

Defending the Sweep Play in youth football requires discipline, proper alignment, and physical play on the edge. It’s not about having the fastest defense — it’s about assignment football. It’s about setting the edge and running to the ball carrier- swarm! Coach your players to understand their role, maintain leverage, and pursue relentlessly. Shut down the sweep, and you force your opponent to beat you in ways they’re not as comfortable with. If you can defend the sweep play you will give up a lot less big plays defensively.

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