BB: I don't know. When we were at the Giants, when I was at the Giants and I coached there for, I was there for 12 years, but most of that time it was the 3-4 defense. It's not uncommon to leave your linebackers on the field. The guy usually comes at your nose guard and a lot of times your ends go to your inside rushers and your outside linebackers are your defensive ends. That's basically what they are in a 3-4. Your two inside linebackers are your two inside linebackers. I'm not saying you couldn't sub them but I think back to when I was at the Giants, I don't think, I can't remember too many times when [Carl] Banks, [Lawrence] Taylor, Pepper [Johnson] and Harry [Carson] were standing behind me but it wasn't very often. I'm not saying it never happened, but I'd say it wasn't very often. I think when you have a 3-4 defense, that's what you have. Your outside linebackers become your defensive ends; defensive ends usually become your inside rushers then your inside linebackers, if they're capable in the passing game, they're your inside linebackers. If you have a better inside linebacker in the passing game, then you probably sub them. But I don't see that as that unusual.