Traditional position labels are dying in Columbus. Matt Patricia doesn’t talk about safeties and linebackers in conventional terms. Instead, he talks about versatile chess pieces who can execute multiple roles, creating confusion for offenses and matchup nightmares that traditional game-planning can’t solve.
This is the era of positionless defense in college football, and Matt Patricia is leading the revolution.
When Matt Patricia arrived from the NFL in February 2025, he brought more than three Super Bowl rings and two decades of professional experience. He brought a philosophy refined through years of facing the NFL’s most sophisticated offenses—a belief that the best defenses aren’t built around rigid position designations, but around players who can execute multiple responsibilities within a single game. This approach has found its perfect college application at Ohio State, where elite talent meets sophisticated scheme to create something college football rarely sees: a defense that can transform identities play-to-play without substituting personnel.
Caleb Downs: The Ultimate Hybrid
If there’s one player who embodies Patricia’s positionless philosophy, it’s Caleb Downs.
The former Alabama transfer plays safety. He also plays linebacker. He covers slot receivers. He blitzes from the edge. He rotates to deep middle coverage. He fills gaps in run support.
In a single game, Downs might align in six different positions and execute a dozen different responsibilities. Offensive coordinators can’t game-plan against him because they never know where he’ll be.
At Alabama in 2023, Downs became the first freshman to lead the team in tackles with 107 stops. Patricia recognized immediately that Downs represented the ideal piece for his positionless system—a player with the range of a free safety, the physicality of a strong safety, and the instincts of a linebacker. During his introductory press conference, Patricia couldn’t contain his enthusiasm: “He is an unbelievable, amazing player, very versatile. You look at a guy like that and you think, we’re going to be able to do some really fun things with him.”
Sonny Styles: Redefining the Linebacker Position
At 6’5″ and 243 pounds, Sonny Styles represents everything Patricia values in a positionless defender.
Styles began his Ohio State career as a safety. Patricia moved him to linebacker during spring practice. But even that designation doesn’t capture his full role.
In Patricia’s defense, Styles plays WILL linebacker on base downs, SAM linebacker against heavy formations, slot coverage against passing formations, and blitzer from multiple angles.
His size gives Patricia flexibility to match up against tight ends without sacrificing run support. His athleticism allows him to drop into coverage without creating obvious tells.
With 58 total tackles, 32 solo tackles, 1 forced fumble, and 1 interception, Styles has become a matchup eraser.
Arvell Reese: The Hybrid Edge Threat
Arvell Reese’s emergence under Patricia showcases how positionless defense creates mismatches offenses can’t solve.
Reese plays linebacker. He also rushes from the edge. He drops into coverage. He blitzes from the A-gap. He covers running backs out of the backfield.
With 6.5 sacks and 58 total tackles, Reese has thrived in Patricia’s penny front system—often lining up on the edge while maintaining linebacker responsibilities.
Offensive coordinators face impossible preparation challenges because they never know where Reese will align or what responsibility he’ll carry. The uncertainty forces offensive coordinators to prepare for multiple scenarios simultaneously, diluting their practice time and creating hesitation in real-time adjustments during games.
Multiple Packages, Same Players
Patricia’s positionless approach extends beyond individuals to entire defensive packages.
Ohio State might show a 4-2-5 one play, then shift to a 3-3-5 the next, then deploy a penny front on third down—all without substituting personnel. The same eleven players execute different roles depending on the situation.
This creates several advantages: no substitution tells for offenses, faster communication among defenders, depth preservation through role variation, and scheme flexibility without waiting for substitutions.
Why the Numbers Support This Approach
Ohio State’s defense leads the nation in scoring defense (7.5 PPG), total defense (212.6 YPG), and red zone defense (57.9%). Those numbers stem directly from a scheme that confuses offenses while empowering defenders.
The positionless approach also creates recruiting advantages. Elite defensive prospects recognize they won’t be pigeonholed into traditional roles under Matt Patricia. Instead, they’ll be developed as complete defenders capable of impacting games from multiple alignments—precisely the versatility that NFL scouts value most. This player development philosophy, combined with Ohio State’s championship pedigree, gives Patricia a compelling pitch to the nation’s top defensive recruits.
The era of positionless defense has arrived at Ohio State, and Matt Patricia is the architect. His system doesn’t care about traditional labels—it cares about maximizing player abilities across multiple roles.







