‘Why shift Whitner closer to center field? Giving him the chance to rove is appealing and could lead to him doling out bigger collisions, but the tradeoff is that, with more room to range, he’ll also start off farther away. It would be best to let a player with Whitner’s nose for action and direction keep on creeping up to the snap, at least as much as this defense permits. Stick with what works, namely by leaving Whitner alone so he can traumatize offenses in the same way he has in his first seasons.’