I have a level 21 SS who has circa 50 speed. However, after watching every play this season I am starting to question how much speed is actually needed at this position.
At CB, you often find yourself in a basic footrace with a fast WR and so if you come up short on speed it is easy to get burned deep. However, this doesn't seem to happen at Safety. You usually have a 7 or 8 yard cushion on anybody running at you (which are usually slower TEs anyway) and anybody on the outside you have a good angle at them and are not in a straight up race. Despite the fact my speed is a lot lower than many Safeties at my level, I haven't been burned deep once all season. It seems the only reason I need to be even this fast (let alone faster) is to maybe stuff run plays slightly quicker.
So I'm asking the experts on this forum how important is speed for a SS (or a FS) and why is it important? Can anybody show me some plays where a safety has benefitted from 80 speed (as I have seen on some) or get hurt by 40 speed (which seems to be 'OMG too slow!!!') because right now I am not seeing it.
At CB, you often find yourself in a basic footrace with a fast WR and so if you come up short on speed it is easy to get burned deep. However, this doesn't seem to happen at Safety. You usually have a 7 or 8 yard cushion on anybody running at you (which are usually slower TEs anyway) and anybody on the outside you have a good angle at them and are not in a straight up race. Despite the fact my speed is a lot lower than many Safeties at my level, I haven't been burned deep once all season. It seems the only reason I need to be even this fast (let alone faster) is to maybe stuff run plays slightly quicker.
So I'm asking the experts on this forum how important is speed for a SS (or a FS) and why is it important? Can anybody show me some plays where a safety has benefitted from 80 speed (as I have seen on some) or get hurt by 40 speed (which seems to be 'OMG too slow!!!') because right now I am not seeing it.
Last edited Sep 6, 2008 03:41:13






























