tag:blogger.com,1999:blog-60820426577586749762024-03-23T03:14:50.248-07:00Coach B Dud's BlogThis blog is dedicated to sharing knowledge. Knowledge unshared is knowledge wasted.Anonymoushttp://www.blogger.com/profile/13830721910180999148noreply@blogger.comBlogger107125tag:blogger.com,1999:blog-6082042657758674976.post-33674685613235703222015-12-23T16:22:00.004-08:002015-12-23T16:22:47.604-08:00Check out the New Site!I wanted to drop the .blogspot portion out of my website<br />
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so I have moved every thing from this blog over to my new site<br />
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<a href="http://www.coachbdud.com/">CoachBDud.com</a><br />
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Go check it out and put it in your bookmarks<br />
New material will be coming very soon!<br />
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I really want to build this new site up and put more things out than this blog.Anonymoushttp://www.blogger.com/profile/13830721910180999148noreply@blogger.com8tag:blogger.com,1999:blog-6082042657758674976.post-72121152746026173202015-08-04T21:59:00.000-07:002015-08-09T22:00:36.176-07:00Work Smarter, Not HarderIf you are anything like me, the football season can be a grind. Lots of long 12+ hour days at the school, plus time at home watching film, writing notes, and planning out both your game plan and practice plan.<br />
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I just stumbled upon the best way to save yourself hours of time in your game plan and practice plan preparation each week.<br />
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I hate scripting plays, it takes a while to write down the exact formation, motion, and play you want, over and over for all of your team/inside run/7on7 reps for each practice. Half the time I end up just "shooting from the hip" and call plays off the top of my head. The problem with this is I end up leaving out plays I knew I wanted to get to, or I do not give plays enough reps during the week to feel good about calling them Friday Nights.<br />
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I have worked with Coach Grabowski and his company Coaches Edge before and think they do a great job integrating technology and coaching.<br />
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<a href="http://thecoachesedge.com/" target="_blank">Coaches Edge</a> has put out a new game planning and practice planning software meant to do a lot of the work for you and save you hours of time every weekend. <br />
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You can see their new product here...<br />
<a href="http://thecoachesedge.com/store/2-way-player-youth-football-game-planner/" target="_blank">Coaches Edge Game Planner</a><br />
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What is it exactly?<br />
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It is an excel file, with formulas plugged in to automatically<br />
-script your plays for each practice<br />
-create play calling sheets based off of what YOU want in each situation<br />
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What does it look like, and how does it work?<br />
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You start with the "Game Plan Board". This is what makes it all work. Here you have assigned cells to enter in all of the specific plays you want for the week. Fill this in with your staff and you are ready to go. It separates the plays out by hash. You enter your terminology for personnel, formation, motion, and play. You enter the top plays you and your staff have decided on for that opponent in the given situation. There are spots for your top inside runs, coming out runs, red zone and goal line, quick passes, screens, and dropbacks. You can enter different plays, double up on core plays, or run them from different formations or different window dressing if you want. Once you have filled in all of the cells, that is it, your work is done.<br />
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You can even enter different defensive looks (fronts and coverages) you want to see in each practice.<br />
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Once you are done the next 3 tabs look like this.<br />
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<a href="https://blogger.googleusercontent.com/img/b/R29vZ2xl/AVvXsEjcF2Cg09tkdZ1nJaJydRfVBYdAErTyHb03IPDdRT4c58nPq7uZZb6Z0jrlZSMOxGFqcz-CeB6LwfqSYgOQx1tU2psac_fFUJ1LV2CsIhxjCaSlAkT2TukiVEsB237-PXOA3ADHNDMypDY/s1600/Screen+Shot+2015-08-04+at+9.51.29+AM.png" imageanchor="1" style="margin-left: 1em; margin-right: 1em;"><img border="0" height="200" src="https://blogger.googleusercontent.com/img/b/R29vZ2xl/AVvXsEjcF2Cg09tkdZ1nJaJydRfVBYdAErTyHb03IPDdRT4c58nPq7uZZb6Z0jrlZSMOxGFqcz-CeB6LwfqSYgOQx1tU2psac_fFUJ1LV2CsIhxjCaSlAkT2TukiVEsB237-PXOA3ADHNDMypDY/s320/Screen+Shot+2015-08-04+at+9.51.29+AM.png" width="320" /></a></div>
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Your inside run, 7on7, GL/Redzone and team time is scripted for the entire week. Each play you entered into the "Game plan board" will be repped a set number of times throughout the week, insuring that your players got an adequate amount of practice reps to execute it on Friday night.</div>
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This is the biggest advantage for me, my scripts for the week are done, and I am focusing on more specific game situations than I ever had when planning in the past. I just began using this tool over the weekend, in preparation for a scrimmage. After watching film and consulting with my QB/Pass game coordinator, it took less than 30 minutes to fill out our game plan board for our scrimmage opponent. 30 minutes, hours of work/planning done. </div>
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The practice planning/scripts are just the beginning. There are other tabs, with plays pulled directly from your "game plan board".</div>
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Other tabs include</div>
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<li> <b><u>Base Play wristband:</u></b> the base 30 plays you entered into the sheet. A quick reference of your top plays for this week</li>
<li><b><u>Base Call sheet</u></b>: A playcalling sheet, split up from Left hash plays to right hash plays. Your top inside runs, perimeter runs, quicks/screens, dropbacks. This is another thing that really makes this worthwhile to me. I hate taking the time to make up a call sheet. I now have my call sheet ready, and I love that it is split up by hash mark. In HS football, we are almost always on a hash, makes it easy to get the correct play in quickly. Has already helped us with our tempo.</li>
<li><b><u>3rd down wristband:</u></b> a wristband of the playcalls you entered for 3rd down situations. Quick reference to go to on 3rd down when you need to get the play in fast.</li>
<li><b><u>3rd down calls</u></b> - call sheet version of the wristband, again laid out by hash mark, and distance to go</li>
<li><b><u>Situational Calls:</u></b> call sheet, separated by hash, and split up by situation. Coming out, 4 minute O, different red zone areas, 2 point plays. Can I just say again how much I hate making call sheets, and how much easier this is!</li>
<li><b><u>Game Plan worksheet:</u></b> Just like the "game plan board" but larger blank cells. Ideal for printing out, and filling in during staff meetings as you decide on what specific plays/formation/tags will be best for you.</li>
<li><b><u>Openers:</u></b> template for you to script your opening plays, separated by hash</li>
<li><b><u>Post game report:</u></b> Has your exact plays from practice, with the number of reps each play got in practice. There is then a spot for you to record how many times you actually ran that play in the game. This is made for you to self evaluate and make sure you are calling the plays in the game that you are spending your time/reps on in practice. If you rep a certain play 6 times, but you didn't run it once, you are wasting your time in practice.</li>
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This game and practice planning software is selling at <a href="http://thecoachesedge.com/store/2-way-player-youth-football-game-planner/" target="_blank">Coaches Edge</a> for just 49.99</div>
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If you enter coupon code "CoachBDud" during checkout, you save $5</div>
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so for $44.99 you are getting something that saves you hours of times, and helps you be more efficient with your practice reps. </div>
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For the hours of time it will save you each weekend I think it is well worth it. Once you have it, you can continue to use it over and over again, every week, every season. </div>
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I highly recommend this. I have been raving about it to my friends in the coaching community. Work smarter, give this a shot, and see how much easier it is on you in your preparation for practice and games.</div>
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<br />Anonymoushttp://www.blogger.com/profile/13830721910180999148noreply@blogger.com6tag:blogger.com,1999:blog-6082042657758674976.post-55685622347304877502015-02-16T13:01:00.000-08:002015-02-16T13:01:29.482-08:00Get BigPutting size on to players is a difficult but crucial part of off season development as well as in season maintenance. I have coached at 2 schools are the lowest end of the socioeconomic spectrum. Most of the kids struggle to get enough calories in their bodies to just maintain while working out, let alone add on size. <br />
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I have always heard stories of teams giving protein supplements to their players but legally this is a huge NO NO, and i highly advise against that. I want to share some perfectly legal things I have done, to help my players eat more calories throughout the day, to help them put on some size and strength.<br />
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<b><u>After School Program</u></b><br />
We have a pretty robust After School Program here with a number of academic and enrichment activities. Our off season weight lifting operates along with the "FIT Club". Any student who participates is given a free snack, and a free dinner. This is a great resource to have and I know we are lucky to have it. This is the easiest one for me, because it is completely free to our students and myself. I just have to take attendance everyday, and the students who come and stay for the duration of our workouts get a snack from me on their way out the door, and can go to the cafeteria for a dinner after that. <br />
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<b><u>Financing Your Food</u></b><br />
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<li>The rest of the ideas all come with a cost. Someone has to pay for more food beyond the after school program. Some options include</li>
<li>A booster Club/touchdown club fundraising</li>
<li>Parents donating groceries</li>
<li>Seeking player/parent donations to purchase food</li>
<li>Food donations</li>
<li>Coach(es) buying the food</li>
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I personally buy all of the extra food out of my own pocket. I keep my receipts, and document the cost of my donations on an excel sheet. <br />
The ideas I am going to share below are calorie dense, and relatively cheap. Teacher's obviously don't make a whole lot so I try to get the most bang for my buck in terms of calories per dollar. I also take what they like and some variety in to account. The kids have to WANT to eat in order to get big. Every kid says "I eat a lot"... no they do not, otherwise they would have no problem putting on weight. <br />
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There are plenty of apps that can calculate basal caloric needs (at least ballpark range) based on age, height, weight, and activity level.<br />
You need to add 500 calories to that amount, every single day just to gain weight at a rate of 1lb per week. If a kid is really active, add more.<br />
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Before I share the foods I buy weekly, please keep the hippie comments to yourself. I do not want to hear about "junk food", at the end of the day I personally believe they need more calories overall. I try to pick out foods that are also high in protein, since i can't give them protein supplements. So if you have something negative to say, drive your Prius to your local CrossFit gym and leave me alone :)<br />
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<b><u>PB&J</u></b></div>
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<a href="https://blogger.googleusercontent.com/img/b/R29vZ2xl/AVvXsEh1V05gwWskjbjD6SJrYb2-VipDxobZe7e72ER6DBDHXESyy8BTPp0iPer8ldCk4XhnAP3cPyeXSuK5KhoB6J58RgS30XjTodPgLBZQ0pXpF_f4AKL4O9KSGBmPNCpCO_RrfU_GVW1UKkY/s1600/IMG_2730.JPG" imageanchor="1" style="margin-left: 1em; margin-right: 1em;"><img border="0" src="https://blogger.googleusercontent.com/img/b/R29vZ2xl/AVvXsEh1V05gwWskjbjD6SJrYb2-VipDxobZe7e72ER6DBDHXESyy8BTPp0iPer8ldCk4XhnAP3cPyeXSuK5KhoB6J58RgS30XjTodPgLBZQ0pXpF_f4AKL4O9KSGBmPNCpCO_RrfU_GVW1UKkY/s1600/IMG_2730.JPG" height="240" width="320" /></a></div>
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<a href="https://blogger.googleusercontent.com/img/b/R29vZ2xl/AVvXsEiUIwAXldmRgGvgPo7i-y1g8EzeXpMmbizZnF0LfBktgUGsz9e_Axv6qgpodGOASzNFwTaY1AjN-JTJq7tnkbsNPJJXPCBaY-AaiiWQEIQpyOSG98Eikt7ywICIPRhzSwBI676wqsrdmNg/s1600/IMG_2729.JPG" imageanchor="1" style="margin-left: 1em; margin-right: 1em;"><img border="0" src="https://blogger.googleusercontent.com/img/b/R29vZ2xl/AVvXsEiUIwAXldmRgGvgPo7i-y1g8EzeXpMmbizZnF0LfBktgUGsz9e_Axv6qgpodGOASzNFwTaY1AjN-JTJq7tnkbsNPJJXPCBaY-AaiiWQEIQpyOSG98Eikt7ywICIPRhzSwBI676wqsrdmNg/s1600/IMG_2729.JPG" height="240" width="320" /></a></div>
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I have a large table in the back of my classroom. I keep it stocked with Peanut Butter, Jelly, and Bread. PB and Jelly I have found is usually cheapest in double packs at Costco or Sam's Club. I usually get the bread from a local discount grocery store, they are under $1 a loaf. This is a really easy way to add calories, kids can come in any time, make a sandwich or two in about 30 seconds and head to their next class. I have a big group of kids who come in and make one every day before school otherwise they would never eat breakfast. I keep plates, napkins, wipes, and plastic ware all on the back table so they can clean up and make their sandwiches without having to bug me. Probably the best bang for my buck and can feed a lot of kids for cheap.</div>
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<b><u>Frozen Dinners</u></b></div>
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<a href="https://blogger.googleusercontent.com/img/b/R29vZ2xl/AVvXsEg3ZzB7WMcPzoRX4O-IQ8Bz7uESH6M4iuq1tZcB_HyxDZyvQt31K4_f5AZ8-0xwaHIvbGgr5vxnkKfM_PocQM7ImcEd0R9_98HtG3uBa9_OBILSqcM32zCKWxFHMr8B3w4cJ9_j0vi-pUI/s1600/IMG_2726.JPG" imageanchor="1" style="margin-left: 1em; margin-right: 1em;"><img border="0" src="https://blogger.googleusercontent.com/img/b/R29vZ2xl/AVvXsEg3ZzB7WMcPzoRX4O-IQ8Bz7uESH6M4iuq1tZcB_HyxDZyvQt31K4_f5AZ8-0xwaHIvbGgr5vxnkKfM_PocQM7ImcEd0R9_98HtG3uBa9_OBILSqcM32zCKWxFHMr8B3w4cJ9_j0vi-pUI/s1600/IMG_2726.JPG" height="256" width="320" /></a></div>
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<a href="https://blogger.googleusercontent.com/img/b/R29vZ2xl/AVvXsEjRX2eWa_5Oq87DUyxh1j1NuuzGqU3S-g3kasTEZq5cIuw0_qYKd366UWFF7OGbUlOJ1o2FCi7F181I2zdfDXVV82QtbHKask_6nZtQrYIqFP3xsehIYsId2K_N_B7Tf_V7S3elXvoKyYs/s1600/IMG_2727.JPG" imageanchor="1" style="margin-left: 1em; margin-right: 1em;"><img border="0" src="https://blogger.googleusercontent.com/img/b/R29vZ2xl/AVvXsEjRX2eWa_5Oq87DUyxh1j1NuuzGqU3S-g3kasTEZq5cIuw0_qYKd366UWFF7OGbUlOJ1o2FCi7F181I2zdfDXVV82QtbHKask_6nZtQrYIqFP3xsehIYsId2K_N_B7Tf_V7S3elXvoKyYs/s1600/IMG_2727.JPG" height="234" width="320" /></a></div>
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<a href="https://blogger.googleusercontent.com/img/b/R29vZ2xl/AVvXsEh4XEawJuMDsYMgXtF_qzS6uVNMdWG24tIzToFSKLIoa_ZN_Dy780oWHlGESv2EYieRYdtQPUH3j6YJe_l6lEYcdwbCAzYaIhyq6sr-nUgEEg5k6txOOX8-e19coVTr8olF3r9gcCDKRkg/s1600/IMG_2728.JPG" imageanchor="1" style="margin-left: 1em; margin-right: 1em;"><img border="0" src="https://blogger.googleusercontent.com/img/b/R29vZ2xl/AVvXsEh4XEawJuMDsYMgXtF_qzS6uVNMdWG24tIzToFSKLIoa_ZN_Dy780oWHlGESv2EYieRYdtQPUH3j6YJe_l6lEYcdwbCAzYaIhyq6sr-nUgEEg5k6txOOX8-e19coVTr8olF3r9gcCDKRkg/s1600/IMG_2728.JPG" height="320" width="318" /></a></div>
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These are great. I use these for a few specific kids I am really trying to bulk up with extra calories. Each of these 3 items cost less than $1, and the kids love them. Yes there is a lot of carbs and fat, but there is also a good amount of protein. They just need calories. The cheesburger Mac is every kid's favorite, they absolutely love it. The Totino's pizza is a great value, only a dollar, and it is 680 calories if a kid eats the whole thing. </div>
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I have a full size fridge/freezer next to the PB&J station and I keep the freezer stocked up with these items.</div>
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<b><u>Pop-Tarts</u></b></div>
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<a href="https://blogger.googleusercontent.com/img/b/R29vZ2xl/AVvXsEhPH8z5Sl1pL1cua23k-r_ZPBpncrqDlOiEC1Oshhs4caPFRIyPEh9dgsrCNbLulRzlft0O8Ie1IRtWRmLH1LcR8zhJS6zxuVOTZUJwXK2qlmxHqLG6Qf2hcFnmDaoPsyC0_AoB4x_LueY/s1600/pop+tarts.jpeg" imageanchor="1" style="margin-left: 1em; margin-right: 1em;"><img border="0" src="https://blogger.googleusercontent.com/img/b/R29vZ2xl/AVvXsEhPH8z5Sl1pL1cua23k-r_ZPBpncrqDlOiEC1Oshhs4caPFRIyPEh9dgsrCNbLulRzlft0O8Ie1IRtWRmLH1LcR8zhJS6zxuVOTZUJwXK2qlmxHqLG6Qf2hcFnmDaoPsyC0_AoB4x_LueY/s1600/pop+tarts.jpeg" /></a></div>
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Pop Tarts are great. They are cheap and pretty calorie dense. The 2 pastries that come in each foil pack are usually at least 400 calories total. I can get 4 packs for under $2. That is less than 50 cents for 400 calories. It is pretty much all Carbs but I have found them to be really convenient when a kid doesn't have time to make a sandwich, or I want to give him something he can put in his backpack, and eat later in the day for a snack.</div>
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<br />Anonymoushttp://www.blogger.com/profile/13830721910180999148noreply@blogger.com1tag:blogger.com,1999:blog-6082042657758674976.post-47076545971248529122015-02-09T14:02:00.002-08:002015-02-09T14:02:57.053-08:00Getting WRs involved in the Run GameWRs by nature are usually the guy(s) you want with the ball in their hands. Speed, moves, and the ability to break a long play any time they get their hands on the ball. The problem, is that it can be difficult to get them the ball consistently in the passing game. You see this even at the NFL and College level where a stud WR gets held to a rather pedestrian day. I am a big believer in using WRs in the run game for a few reasons<br />
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<li>It guarantees they are getting the ball in their hands, more touches = more chances to pop an explosive play</li>
<li>Gives the ball to someone else so teams can't just attack the tail back</li>
<li>Adds a level of deception to our offense, which many coaches feel you lack being in the gun/pistol (we will run these WR plays as well as fake to them )</li>
<li>Motion or a unique formation presents one more element for the defense to prepare for</li>
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The 2 concepts I will talk about today are </div>
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Jet Sweep</div>
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WR sweep</div>
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In the Jet sweep, we are bringing a WR in motion, timing the snap to hit him close to full speed and trying to get to the edge. We use OZ blocking with the OL, and we use the FB and RB to kick out force and lead up for the Jet WR. </div>
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The first 2 clips below show our regular motion jet sweep. The final clip shows a no motion jet sweep, where we experimented with a quick touch pass to the WR (no risk of fumble, technically a pass). Up front I am fine with a little bit of penetration as long as we can get our hips around to seal off the box. We need to improve how we coach our FB and RB to kick out force and lead through, but we felt we got a lot of bang for our buck, in terms of production vs practice time invested.</div>
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<iframe width="320" height="266" class="YOUTUBE-iframe-video" data-thumbnail-src="https://i.ytimg.com/vi/bPYBETSl6iE/0.jpg" src="http://www.youtube.com/embed/bPYBETSl6iE?feature=player_embedded" frameborder="0" allowfullscreen></iframe></div>
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In the WR sweep, I wanted another way to get our WR the ball, that didn't use motion. As we started having success using jet sweeps, defenses started attacking the motion hard. We used a Wing position to bring our WR closer to the ball. You could accomplish this by using a slow motion or orbit motion as well.</div>
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The WR sweep differs from the Jet in a few ways</div>
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<li>We block it using pin and pull </li>
<li>We fake to our RB first and he blocks backside like traditional bucksweep</li>
<li>Because of the blocking scheme, and the time it takes for the mesh, the play will typically get cut up into the alley, rather than attack the perimeter fast like jet</li>
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A great way to pair this if you wanted to keep the motion, would be to use a motion crack and run the ball, then motion, snap the ball with same timing, fake the run to the crack side, and have motion man bend around QB to get the WR sweep. </div>
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Using these WR sweeps is a great way to get your playmakers the ball.</div>
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Anonymoushttp://www.blogger.com/profile/13830721910180999148noreply@blogger.com2tag:blogger.com,1999:blog-6082042657758674976.post-6253561834920540602015-02-09T13:10:00.000-08:002015-02-09T13:18:24.584-08:00Power Pass!One of the best ways to help protect Power is to use the POWER PASS<br />
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or as Coach Gruden calls it, "Spider 2 Y Banana"<br />
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This is a great answer as teams load the box, or crash down hard in an attempt to take away Power. This play gets better and better with the more players the defense aligns on the LOS. More guys on LOS, less guys who can cover. We even got some teams into an alignment where their end man had to take on FB as well as cover him man to man... that is like stealing, if he can stuff our FB he can't cover him, if he can cover him, we are getting easy kick outs. Either way we win.</div>
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The route concept is a standard flood play. WR clearing out. a TE (or slot to twins side) running the medium route in the flood, and the FB chipping the DE on his way to the flat.</div>
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You can read this deep to short, or short to deep. I have done it, and seen it done both ways successfully.</div>
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In my opinion what really makes it work is making it look identical to power. So we block it the same as Power. Playside down blocks, BSG pulls. BST protects b gap.</div>
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The only difference is our pulling BSG needs to attack the C gap, rather than work up to a LB. I need to do a better job coaching this up next season.</div>
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Our biggest problems came from back side pressure, usually frontside pressure meant the TE or FB was wide open and we hit it quickly.</div>
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One adjustment I have seen and will use int he future is to have the Rb cut back immediately after the mesh, to pick up the backside C gap.</div>
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You can use backside WRs to run backside drags, or attach another TE to help secure the backside.</div>
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I can't stress enough how helpful the OL play is on selling play action. We do not pretend to block power, we full on block power, we just don't drive anyone past 2 yards down field.</div>
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Below are 2 clips of power pass, one hitting the TE, one hitting the FB.</div>
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This is just our base power pass that we install in spring ball. We can run a variety of concepts off of power action. The play stays consistent for the players in the box. </div>
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Power pass action works great to throw double posts, post/dig, verticals, or whatever dropback you hang your hat on. We would release our TE/FB into routes as well as keep them in for max protection on certain concepts.</div>
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Power pass is a the perfect constraint when defenses start cheating. I should have called it more times last season and it will continue to grow into bigger weapon in our arsenal.</div>
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<br />Anonymoushttp://www.blogger.com/profile/13830721910180999148noreply@blogger.com23tag:blogger.com,1999:blog-6082042657758674976.post-53208920736825166192015-01-11T21:02:00.001-08:002015-01-11T21:02:51.456-08:00Tracking Off-Season Attendance3 years ago I started an "off-season points program" for our kids. Players are expected to earn a minimum number of points either by playing other sports or lifting with me after school.<br />
There are a lot of kids, and since our off season program runs from January - May, a lot of days to take attendance.<br />
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This isn't rocket science but below I share how I take roll every day, and am able to track every member of our football program, using excel.<br />
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<br />Anonymoushttp://www.blogger.com/profile/13830721910180999148noreply@blogger.com0tag:blogger.com,1999:blog-6082042657758674976.post-48855342480629769332014-12-28T17:28:00.000-08:002014-12-28T17:28:02.570-08:00COUNTER - The Ying to Power's YangI can not imagine running Power without running Counter. The two plays go together very well and the cutback action of counter will hurt defenses who flow very fast to the RB's initial path. It is also a great answer to teams who want to load up to your FB or strong side in an effort to shut down Power.<br />
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We run multiple variations of Counter. The core of the play is down blocks and/or double teams play side, just like Power. This is why I think counter is a must have in your arsenal if you run power, because there is so much carry over between the schemes. In counter, our Backside Guard (BSG) is the kick out man, now rather than skip pull he will take a very tight inside path to kick out the first color that shows, which is usually the play side DE. <br />
This is all the same in every Counter we run. Our variations come from who our 2nd puller is and who secures the back side. Our 2nd puller is also called the "wrapper" because they will wrap inside of the guards kick out block to lead up on the play side LB. If the opposing DE steps down to wrong arm our guard will drive this, logging the DE, and our 2nd puller and Rb have to read this and bounce around it.<br />
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Counter FB<br />
We will use the FB as our second puller, this tells the BST to stay home and secure the back side.<br />
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Double Tight Counter<br />
This is very similar to counter FB, but we run it from double tight, we use our BS TE as our 2nd puller since we don't have a FB in the game. This was a great play for us, the extra gap in double tight was great for us because it isn't something you see much with so many teams spreading out on Offense. Being in this balanced look up front also helped to stop teams from loading up one side to shut down Power. We could line up the same and call the play either direction. We miss a down block in this clip but it is a great example of our 2nd puller working down the field to spring us for a huge TD.<br />
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Super Counter<br />
I didn't run this scheme often but it had serious big play potential because we are aligned in a heavy formation to the strong side, but then pull 3 players to the weak side. In super counter, we have 2 wrappers. We pull both the FB, and the TE up through the hole to lead for the RB.<br />
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QB Counter<br />
The last type of counter I want to describe is often called GT. The T represents the BST acting as the 2nd puller and wrapping up to LB. If we ran GT to our RB we would either block the BSDE with the FB, or have to read him. In this example (my favorite play if you have an athletic QB) we use the RB to block back side and have the QB keep the ball. This maximizes our blocking while being spread because we use the back as a blocker, and it provides some misdirection by faking to the back and going the other way.<br />
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In most cases if the defense is shutting down power, counter is wide open.Anonymoushttp://www.blogger.com/profile/13830721910180999148noreply@blogger.com2tag:blogger.com,1999:blog-6082042657758674976.post-89580368762165463552014-12-27T11:10:00.000-08:002014-12-27T11:10:03.658-08:00Power Variations #6 - Overload PowerOne of my favorite ways to run our 2 back power is using unbalanced/overload formations. <br />
We are stilling running our same 2 back power scheme, but we overload the defense by lining up unbalanced and getting an extra hat play side. Most teams who use unbalanced bring a tackle over to where the TE usually plays. This past season my TE was my best down blocker so we just covered him up. I liked this because we still had 2 wide forcing the defense to walk someone out over the slot, but we were still running 2 back power to the TE side. <br />
We had a few overload sets but the diagram below was the main one.<br />
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We had a lot of success using this formation running power. In the clips below, both were done near the end of the game where we had to run the clock out to finish off the game, the type of situation where everyone knows you are running the ball. The first clip is from a series where we ran overload 2 back power 5 consecutive plays, to march down the field, while running the clock out, and eventually scoring to end the game and beat our cross town rival. They never adjusted to our overload and we kept pounding the ball.<br />
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Yes it sets us up in a very heavy formation to the strong side but i feel it makes play calling easy, it all comes back to numbers and seeing how they adjust. We used this formation for some play action shots and if I felt they were loading up to the overload side, we could run power to the weak side. The clip below is an example of weak side power away from the overload, it isn't blocked great, we miss a down block, but we are able to punch it in.</div>
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The last example I am going to share of an overload set we used on the first play of the game in our 1st round playoff match up. We still covered up the TE, but we removed our slot WR, and replaced him with our usual starting TE (best blocker) and lined him up in a wing position. We are still running power but you will see him work inside and we get both him and our BSG through the hole. 70+ yards untouched is a great way to open the game.</div>
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Small adjustments like this are great wrinkles to mix in through out the season. It just expands a base play by using another formation. This can be difficult for a defense to line up to, especially if they haven't seen it on film to prepare for it. My only caution is to have something ready in the play action game, and back to the weak side, so you can take advantage when they over adjust to stop that strong side run.</div>
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<br />Anonymoushttp://www.blogger.com/profile/13830721910180999148noreply@blogger.com1tag:blogger.com,1999:blog-6082042657758674976.post-87963631603827804222014-12-26T11:31:00.000-08:002014-12-26T11:31:42.540-08:00Power Variations #5 - Super 1 backToday's power variation is simply combining two concepts I have already discussed.<br />
From our double tight formation we would run 1 back power (because we don't have a FB in, we are in 1 back) and I would add our super tag on to tell the back side TE to also pull.<br />
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Another way we can run super 1 back power, is to call our 1 back power scheme, but from 21 personnel. Since our TE is the kick out guy in our 1 back power, the Fb is used as another insert player along with the back side pulling guard.</div>
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Here is a clip of the play, we get good base blocks from our RT and TE, and a very good down block from our RG to open up the B gap. Now we lead our FB and LG through the hole and our RB can get downhill behind them.</div>
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Tomorrow will be my final post in the Power Variations series, it will also be my 100th Post!</div>
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Tomorrow I will focus not a a new power scheme, but running power from unbalanced formations.</div>
Anonymoushttp://www.blogger.com/profile/13830721910180999148noreply@blogger.com0tag:blogger.com,1999:blog-6082042657758674976.post-15437994722868045952014-12-25T13:27:00.000-08:002014-12-25T13:27:56.668-08:00Power Variations #4 - Power ArcAny well coached defense is going to have answers to try and shut down your base plays. Most teams will try to stop POWER by coaching up their DEs to squeeze the down block and blow up the FB.<br />
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Power Arc is a great way to handle well coached DEs who do a great job with block down step down.<br />
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This is the simplest tweak we have in my opinion. "Arc" simply tells our end man (could be the TE or the OT to the weakside) to Arc release instead of their usual down block. They will open up wide, trying to clear the DE, and block the defenses force (OLB/SS depending on defense).<br />
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So while we are running power, that DE is seeing a reach block, the better coached the DE is the more effective this tag is.<br />
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<a href="https://blogger.googleusercontent.com/img/b/R29vZ2xl/AVvXsEin3Wygc8ePXJ61YUqUE4HkKe-IN7eX4hvRTfJE8Zlfx6ErIMZA8AqNpvTZUzqc-czObRMv6EX72nfHrvpBDG2_H8-nN-AlQg67Xv25xOnNa_6CA8qYY-WJF0cShyv9OgJHy5SP_YM-mz0/s1600/Power+arc.jpg" imageanchor="1" style="margin-left: 1em; margin-right: 1em;"><img border="0" src="https://blogger.googleusercontent.com/img/b/R29vZ2xl/AVvXsEin3Wygc8ePXJ61YUqUE4HkKe-IN7eX4hvRTfJE8Zlfx6ErIMZA8AqNpvTZUzqc-czObRMv6EX72nfHrvpBDG2_H8-nN-AlQg67Xv25xOnNa_6CA8qYY-WJF0cShyv9OgJHy5SP_YM-mz0/s1600/Power+arc.jpg" height="240" width="320" /></a></div>
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In the clip below, the DE we are going against (#59) is an All Everything DE headed to BYU next year. He is very well coached, and very difficult to run power against. In this clip we use the Arc tag, he expands with our TE because the block looks like reach. This gives our FB a much easier kick out block, and helps us run Power right at one of the best defensive players in Northern California.<br />
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<iframe allowfullscreen='allowfullscreen' webkitallowfullscreen='webkitallowfullscreen' mozallowfullscreen='mozallowfullscreen' width='320' height='266' src='https://www.blogger.com/video.g?token=AD6v5dyPrKibnnfpKTQBerK3Z1Gn_BoBnbhHFLB5tShWW_MtiC3le6e_aGr1fB3kOC2xK-bV6yYA82OWUpRr-_epKA' class='b-hbp-video b-uploaded' frameborder='0'></iframe></div>
<br />Anonymoushttp://www.blogger.com/profile/13830721910180999148noreply@blogger.com3tag:blogger.com,1999:blog-6082042657758674976.post-23118309911401061902014-12-24T09:34:00.000-08:002014-12-24T09:34:59.942-08:00Power Variations #3 - 1 Back PowerStandard power is a great play, BUT it requires you have a lead blocking back in the game. I knew early on that POWER would be our best play, but wanted to be able to do it from different formations and not rely on HAVING to have our FB in the game.<br />
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So after we had some solid experience using our regular 2 back power (first half of summer worth of practice) I installed our 1 back power. We call it power base. In power base, since we have no FB in, we use our TE to be the "kick out" guy. The "base" tag tells our TE and play side tackle they will base/kick out on anyone head up or outside of them.<br />
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EVEN:<br />
I include the play side Tackle in understanding this base tag. If he doesn't have a base block to execute he does his usual down block like every other time we run power. Against a 4 man front, we often see a 3 tech (b gap DT) on the TE side, so our tackle would down block as usual. <br />
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<a href="https://blogger.googleusercontent.com/img/b/R29vZ2xl/AVvXsEjjei_CcLe4yIFuuHJmyWgjUS8L0OofugfDLV6i7xmbrFBGlBdq0nmZmPdPduHzopUDS9nrdC_sABAbGdk6se4fPxopGVmbc4r0YYt-zFCmrNnJWX5LPcd_SJ-ehgdB5rf81ENivr25-Y0/s1600/Power+base+even.jpg" imageanchor="1" style="margin-left: 1em; margin-right: 1em;"><img border="0" src="https://blogger.googleusercontent.com/img/b/R29vZ2xl/AVvXsEjjei_CcLe4yIFuuHJmyWgjUS8L0OofugfDLV6i7xmbrFBGlBdq0nmZmPdPduHzopUDS9nrdC_sABAbGdk6se4fPxopGVmbc4r0YYt-zFCmrNnJWX5LPcd_SJ-ehgdB5rf81ENivr25-Y0/s1600/Power+base+even.jpg" height="240" width="320" /></a></div>
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ODD:<br />
Against an odd front we most often see the play side DT lined up head up to outside of our OT so he would base block. We just about always see a defender lined up head up or outside of our TE and this is the player our TE will base block.<br />
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<a href="https://blogger.googleusercontent.com/img/b/R29vZ2xl/AVvXsEhKcvokPqO4u-X-2kIPDjKbifLuw3z3ZBjGDoAizcHxZ0gJQEVTdQ-5-MYM-dmZNtEo_gEenI_3-taqo-bVpOSQccjqBE6Qw8nJMMaCHw7QaMQAOwFQWEIkeY_XbQtbQuP3HmLrYgilxfY/s1600/Power+base+odd.jpg" imageanchor="1" style="margin-left: 1em; margin-right: 1em;"><img border="0" src="https://blogger.googleusercontent.com/img/b/R29vZ2xl/AVvXsEhKcvokPqO4u-X-2kIPDjKbifLuw3z3ZBjGDoAizcHxZ0gJQEVTdQ-5-MYM-dmZNtEo_gEenI_3-taqo-bVpOSQccjqBE6Qw8nJMMaCHw7QaMQAOwFQWEIkeY_XbQtbQuP3HmLrYgilxfY/s1600/Power+base+odd.jpg" height="240" width="320" /></a></div>
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By simply adding the word "base" to the play call we are running our bread and butter power scheme and only changing the TE's block, and the OT's block against an odd front.<br />
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Here are a few clips of us running 1 back power.<br />
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<br />Anonymoushttp://www.blogger.com/profile/13830721910180999148noreply@blogger.com3tag:blogger.com,1999:blog-6082042657758674976.post-76919619906621813072014-12-23T13:19:00.001-08:002014-12-23T13:19:55.184-08:00Power Variations #2 - Super PowerThe bread and butter of any Double Wing(DW) attack is Super Power. Traditional Super Power is the same as the standard power I described yesterday (play side down blocks, with a FB kick out, and a back side guard wrap) but the SUPER in super power comes from adding an additional puller/wrapper. Now usually, DW teams use guard and tackle as pullers and have TE cut block to stop backside pursuit of the play.<br />
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We pull on super power a little bit differently, we pull the backside TE as the second puller/wrapper. This gives us a few advantages, we are pulling a faster, more athletic kid who can get to the hole quicker and has better feet to be able to redirect to pick up a LB. It also lets us keep our back side tackle home with his usual protect b gap and hinge. This means no new teaching for our back side tackle, in fact ours has no idea what the difference is between power and super power. Keeping the backside tackle at home and upright is a more powerful block and I feel does a better job at sealing off the back side than the TE cut block.<br />
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It is key for the BS TE to get depth on his pull, and re enter the LOS square. Ideally, when the guard gets through the hole he looks head up to outside, and the TE looks head up to inside.<br />
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Now we didn't do this from a DW set, we did it from our base 21 personnel pro pistol set.<br />
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<a href="https://blogger.googleusercontent.com/img/b/R29vZ2xl/AVvXsEjsfcvthgY4dgRoZBcCWoitvcH6eBgxW9fQi6jx64-njp9dGTYzLJMcLs0Pyaxe4R5Cw9yhMlmz2pxX6KZXy3xyM79_8lKR2YuRXE2oeR6c2tmbRjDQPy6G8CO3UaH8u-BfOl8LvLyQ7p0/s1600/I+Twins+Right+super+power.jpg" imageanchor="1" style="margin-left: 1em; margin-right: 1em;"><img border="0" src="https://blogger.googleusercontent.com/img/b/R29vZ2xl/AVvXsEjsfcvthgY4dgRoZBcCWoitvcH6eBgxW9fQi6jx64-njp9dGTYzLJMcLs0Pyaxe4R5Cw9yhMlmz2pxX6KZXy3xyM79_8lKR2YuRXE2oeR6c2tmbRjDQPy6G8CO3UaH8u-BfOl8LvLyQ7p0/s1600/I+Twins+Right+super+power.jpg" height="180" width="320" /></a></div>
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Here is some video of us running super power. Please excuse 2 of the clips, our camera guy started a little bit late so you miss the very beginning but you can see us pull both BSG and BSTE through the hole.<br />
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Coming tomorrow, 1 back power!Anonymoushttp://www.blogger.com/profile/13830721910180999148noreply@blogger.com5tag:blogger.com,1999:blog-6082042657758674976.post-81294080896741377632014-12-22T19:53:00.003-08:002014-12-22T19:53:35.060-08:00POWER Variations Series Now that the season is over, I can get back to some real writing.<br />
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Power is my favorite scheme in football. I am a huge fan of the standard play side down blocks, with a backside guard pull up to LB.<br />
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I am also a big fan of some variations a coach can use to help the run Power scheme in different ways.<br />
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This post will be the first in a series of some of the different ways I have taken Power and made slight tweaks to get a TON of mileage out of one play.<br />
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Today I will focus on your standard 2 back Power.<br />
2 Back Power is what we install first, and requires a FB or H back to be the "kick out" guy.<br />
The play side OL all block their inside gap (we can work doubles if the defensive front allows it).<br />
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Our FB is our kick out guy and is responsible for getting his head inside of the EMLOS.<br />
Our back side guard will execute a "Skip pull" and work through the first open hole he sees play side to attack the play side inside LB.<br />
The back side tackle executes a B gap hinge, stepping to secure B gap pressure, then working back to stop backside chase.<br />
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Here are a few examples of our standard 2 back power.<br />
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You can read a very in depth article of my blocking rules, how I teach the blocks, and videos of drill work for the Power Scheme as part of <a href="https://itunes.apple.com/us/book/coaching-arsenal-volume-1/id947558183?mt=11" target="_blank">A Coaching Arsenal</a>.</div>
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My entire chapter focuses on OL play in the Power Scheme.</div>
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Some more information on this iBook is available <a href="http://coachbdud.blogspot.com/2014/12/great-new-ibook.html" target="_blank">here</a> and <a href="https://coachgrabowski.wordpress.com/2014/12/03/a-coaching-arsenal-exclusive-strategies-from-top-coaches-on-implementing-the-pistol-offense/" target="_blank">here</a>.</div>
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More Power Variations to come later this week!</div>
Anonymoushttp://www.blogger.com/profile/13830721910180999148noreply@blogger.com3tag:blogger.com,1999:blog-6082042657758674976.post-82945952868418662262014-12-21T22:52:00.000-08:002015-02-09T17:25:39.360-08:00Taking Advantage of Sideline TechnologyBefore the 2013 season, NFHS lifted it's ban on using technology on the sidelines. Since the 2013 season, we are all allowed to use any sideline technology we want (we just can't take it past the numbers or beyond the 25s).<br />
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I began taking advantage of lifting the technology ban this season. I had seen a few different companies that offered replay systems and ended up emailing <a href="https://www.myskycoach.com/" target="_blank">SkyCoach</a>, and asked for a trial.<br />
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<a href="https://blogger.googleusercontent.com/img/b/R29vZ2xl/AVvXsEizJ23L60xUk23kznAavVGgDq5YLL14tGq8nuTXrMVSnU-GcKra458mYBHyxiyRVxrdE9Oydpa5I8A6hugiWVX6k8OsWCYHX0IrrNDdOWgA2-CdIdO8dV6EbcBMloczf__IjJecfBwOcig/s1600/skycoach+logo.png" imageanchor="1" style="margin-left: 1em; margin-right: 1em;"><img border="0" src="https://blogger.googleusercontent.com/img/b/R29vZ2xl/AVvXsEizJ23L60xUk23kznAavVGgDq5YLL14tGq8nuTXrMVSnU-GcKra458mYBHyxiyRVxrdE9Oydpa5I8A6hugiWVX6k8OsWCYHX0IrrNDdOWgA2-CdIdO8dV6EbcBMloczf__IjJecfBwOcig/s1600/skycoach+logo.png" height="89" width="320" /></a></div>
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I was intrigued by SkyCoach because it had less equipment than other systems I had seen. Their system relies on iPhones to film with, and your cell signal to upload and download the clips. I am a big apple fan (iPhone, iPad, and MacBook user) and I know that most of our kids have iPhones. Some coaches have concerns over cell signal strength and upload/download speed. I didn't have any connection issues in any of the stadiums we played at. You can use a free app called Ookla to test download and upload speed. Pretty much anywhere is going to have fast enough download speed, just need to make sure upload speed is at least 1.0 MBPS. Every stadium on our schedule was well over this number.<br />
A case with a magnifying lens attaches to one iPhone to get a tighter view of the play. I would have my TA film the games from the press box, and I would auto download them onto my iPhone in my pocket on the sideline.<br />
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You could have infinite iPads or cell phones logged in looking at the clips (clips are easy to sort and filter by O/D/ST, by series, by play type etc.). What I chose to do was pick up a TV, and have my players and myself watch in between drives.<br />
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You can find generic brand flat screen TVs for really cheap, and I got some adapters (iPhone 5/6 to HDMI) that you can find at any electronic store to connect the iPhone to the TV. <br />
If you have power in the stadium you can run an extension cord, or use a car battery, or buy a portable battery pack like I did.<br />
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My game day sideline set up looked like this.<br />
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I would review the film each drive and have any of my kids not in on defense reviewing with me. I found this to be a tremendous resource for me as an OC. It definitely helped with play calling, making adjustments, and fixing our mistakes. I think this is a more valuable tool than talking to a coach up in the booth. The guy in the booth can only spot one thing at a time, with this I can rewind the play as many times as I need to in order to see every position on the field. I can also pause it at the snap and see the exact alignment of every defensive player to each of our formations.</div>
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I am not a SkyCoach employee, but I got to use this technology this year and I absolutely loved it. I have shown this technology to a few schools in my area since our season ended and they have seen what an advantage it can be. </div>
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One knock on SkyCoach was the price ($1500 this season) but the 2015 pricing is down to $1095. That is a good chunk of money but this is a resource that can add a few wins to your season, and I think having easy instant replay on the sideline seconds after the play is worth one or two extra summer car washes to raise the funds. </div>
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Definitely check out their website and give it a trial, I am confident you will enjoy it. Tell them Coach B Dud sent you by using my referral code</div>
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"Dudley2015"</div>
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You can still use your Glazier discount code in promo code while using Dudley2015 in the referral code</div>
<br />Anonymoushttp://www.blogger.com/profile/13830721910180999148noreply@blogger.com1tag:blogger.com,1999:blog-6082042657758674976.post-22383498245500306882014-12-17T21:07:00.000-08:002014-12-17T21:07:57.152-08:00Great New iBook!Sorry I have not been around in a while, it was a busy football season.<div>
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I want to share with all of you a great new resource brought to you by Coach Grabowski.</div>
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<a href="https://coachgrabowski.wordpress.com/2014/12/03/a-coaching-arsenal-exclusive-strategies-from-top-coaches-on-implementing-the-pistol-offense/" target="_blank">A Coaching Arsenal: Exclusive Strategies From Top Coaches on Implementing the Pistol Offense</a></div>
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It can be found <a href="https://itunes.apple.com/us/book/coaching-arsenal-volume-1/id947558183?mt=11" target="_blank">HERE></a></div>
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Coach Grabowski reached out to coaches from all over the country to contribute a chapter to this iBook and it does not disappoint. I have been reading it all week. For those who have missed out on my past blog post about iBooks, they are a remarkable resource. Embedded within the chapters of the ibook are slideshows of drills, diagrams, and video. This makes it a great teaching tool that makes the content more digestible and more helpful than a standard coaching book or coaching DVD.</div>
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I am one of the contributors to this Pistol "Anthology".</div>
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My chapter is titled "Offensive Line Play in the Power Scheme".</div>
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Mid 2013 we transitioned from a 4 wide spread system to a Pro Style Pistol Offense.</div>
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Power is the core of our offense. My chapter focuses on how I teach the Power scheme both schematically, and with individual drills. It includes written description, diagrams, and multiple video clips of some of my players executing the basic skills and drills needed to run Power. </div>
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This year, with power being the focal point of our offense, we broke every single individual and team school rushing record (school has been around since the 1920s).</div>
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We rushed for over 3500 yards this year!</div>
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This iBook is an excellent resource for all things Pistol. I highly suggest you all check it out!</div>
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<div style="background-color: white; border: 0px; color: #373737; font-family: 'Helvetica Neue', Helvetica, Arial, sans-serif; font-size: 15px; line-height: 24.375px; margin-bottom: 1.625em; outline: 0px; padding: 0px; vertical-align: baseline;">
Volume 1 includes:</div>
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Chris Ault – Foreword</div>
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Larry Beckish Reflections on an Idea: East</div>
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Tom Kaczkowski – How Did the Pistol Start?</div>
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Chris Klenakis – Interview on the Innovation of the Pistol Formation</div>
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Jim Mastro – Pistol is a Formation; video chalk talk on “Zone Slice”</div>
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Scott Baumgartner – Innovation of the Pistol; video chalk talk on “53 Pass”</div>
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Robbie Owens – Systematic Approach to Building an Offensive System</div>
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Dave Brown (former GA at Nevada) – The Bubble as a Pre Snap and Post Snap Answer</div>
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Anthony Pratley – The Sweeper Method of Zone Read</div>
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Justin Iske – Something to Hand Your Hat On: Inside Zone</div>
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Ty Rogers – Using the H-Back to Leverage Defenses in the Pistol</div>
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Zach Tinker – Using the Diamond Pistol in the Red Zone</div>
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Tim Kilgore – Run the Horn</div>
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Brett Dudley – Offensive Line Play in the Power</div>
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Keith Grabowski – Setting Up Effective Play Action</div>
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Anonymoushttp://www.blogger.com/profile/13830721910180999148noreply@blogger.com2tag:blogger.com,1999:blog-6082042657758674976.post-3655599207682346402014-05-25T13:41:00.002-07:002014-05-25T13:41:50.576-07:00Coach Grabowski does it againLast off season I stumbled across the coolest coaching resource I had ever seen. Coach Grabowski's <a href="https://itunes.apple.com/us/book/101+-pro-style-pistol-offense/id611588645?mt=11" target="_blank">Pistol iBook</a>. I had never seen this type of technology. It was a book created for the iPad and Mac, that had diagrams, presentations, and movie clips built right in to it. It became a constant resource that I revisited and took ideas from throughout last season.<br />
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I wrote a review of it last march that can be found <a href="http://coachbdud.blogspot.com/2013/03/the-coolest-book-ive-ever-read-must-buy.html" target="_blank">here</a>.<br />
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In an attempt to out do his first masterpiece, Coach Grabowski's latest project is available for download. I spent spring break reading, watching, and experiencing his second major iBook. <br />
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The Zone Offense<br />
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Coach Grabowski has created an encyclopedia worth of knowledge on running a zone based offense.<br />
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The entire iBook can be purchased <a href="https://itunes.apple.com/us/book/zone-offense-create-structured/id852333378?mt=11" target="_blank">here.</a><br />
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The iBook can also be purchased in sections, a la carte style.<br />
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<a href="https://itunes.apple.com/us/book/zone-offense-define-system/id862053487?mt=11" target="_blank">1. Define the system and build the foundation</a><br />
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<a href="https://itunes.apple.com/us/book/zone-offense-define-system/id862053487?mt=11" target="_blank">2. Structure a starting point and develop coaching methods</a><br />
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<a href="https://itunes.apple.com/us/book/zone-offense-develop-fundamentals/id862477794?mt=11" target="_blank">3. Develop the fundamentals</a><br />
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Each volume comes with a wealth of information and TONS of video from practice and games. <br />
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The iBook contains 51 minutes of video and 75 interactives. <br />
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Here's a blog post from Coach Grabowski about his latest <a href="http://coachgrabowski.wordpress.com/2014/04/09/new-ibook-the-zone-offense-create-a-structured-system/" target="_blank">iBook.</a><br />
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Be on the lookout for future projects coming from Coach Grabowski, including one that I helped contribute to. It will be a another interactive iBook on the Pistol featuring articles, diagrams, and video from various coaches throughout the country.<br />
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I contributed a section on OL play in the Power Scheme.Anonymoushttp://www.blogger.com/profile/13830721910180999148noreply@blogger.com0tag:blogger.com,1999:blog-6082042657758674976.post-36642746216107767062014-03-10T19:40:00.002-07:002014-03-10T19:40:21.900-07:00Reno Glazier ClinicI attended the Reno Glazier this past weekend.<br />
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Here are my clinic notes, hope you can pick up something useful from them.<br />
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A couple things... Noel Mazzone was awesome to listen to. He is a great speaker, entertaining, and his system is everything I want our offense to be. Sadly he had to live earlier than expected to so his 5 sessions got cut in half, but still got some useful information from him.<br />
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Click for Mazzone notes <a href="https://www.dropbox.com/sh/5dayy14jx3ei8mn/LKH_klklNu" target="_blank">Here</a>.<br />
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A highlight was probably meeting Jerry Campbell. He is great to hear at a clinic, he is energetic, and demands the audiences respect and attention. There's no coming in late or sleeping in the back. He made some great points about stimulus response and was a captivating speaker.<br />
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Notes from Paul Golla and Jerry Campbell are <a href="https://www.dropbox.com/sh/wxhb3ej7lpf3vt7/wUIZmlNotZ" target="_blank">here</a>.Anonymoushttp://www.blogger.com/profile/13830721910180999148noreply@blogger.com1tag:blogger.com,1999:blog-6082042657758674976.post-28328732629377733432014-02-09T13:24:00.002-08:002014-02-09T13:25:11.588-08:00San Francisco Glazier Clinic NotesThis weekend I went to the San Francisco (Concord really) Glazier Clinic.<br />
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Rather than take notes on paper and never be able to read them again, I now take notes on my iPad using an app called Paper Desk.<br />
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This app is only a couple bucks, works well and I can sync everything to my dropbox automatically. This app allows me to type text, as well as freehand draw in different colors.<br />
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Below is a dropbox link to my notes from this year's clinic. I generally try to stick with one speaker for all 3 topics rather than bounce around from speaker to speaker. I've found most speakers reference their earlier lectures and you get a better overall experience listening to one speaker for all of their sessions.<br />
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Please excuse the sloppiness of some of the diagrams, I lost my stylus after the first session and my ability to draw via finger tip is not as good as with a stylus. <br />
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There were many speakers from out of state. Each shared something "special" that they do not normally share when speaking in their own state for fear of it getting back to their opponents. Out of respect for these speakers', I deleted these "special points" from the notes, so they don't end up in the wrong hands.<br />
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<a href="https://www.dropbox.com/sh/xorxjyrm54m05je/JG0huRrb32" target="_blank">Clinic Notes</a><br />Anonymoushttp://www.blogger.com/profile/13830721910180999148noreply@blogger.com1tag:blogger.com,1999:blog-6082042657758674976.post-46420207668216600692014-01-27T19:17:00.000-08:002014-01-27T19:17:23.469-08:00Naked ConceptI want to share an awesome play action concept that was one of our best plays this past season.<br />
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Our Naked Bootleg Concept<br />
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I've run bootlegs before. We did some last season from a 100% 4 wide environment. At my alma mater we ran a lot of bootleg off of our criss cross action. This year I would say the Naked concept was cleaned up some because of the great work of Coach Grabowski..<br />
If you haven't picked up his ibook yet, do yourself a favor and get it. There's a ton of information there that heavily influenced what we did offensively this year. We only scratched the surface this year, I plan to include more of his concepts this upcoming season.<br />
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The core components of the Naked concept<br />
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A vertical play side route... We used both the "K Route" (an inside stemmed corner) and a Go route. The K route is great because that inside stem helps sell the run action better to the Corner, thus opening up space behind him. We ended up going to a Go route at the end of the season because our K routes were getting sloppy and we weren't getting deep enough.<br />
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A deep drag or out route... from a slot or a TE.<br />
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A backside post with a hard inside stem to not out run QB's arm<br />
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A flat/DE control route - this route is the most important in my opinion. It is his job to control that back side DE... it is "Naked" meaning OL is full run flow the other way. He has to take an angle at the DE so DE thinks he will be blocked. This flat route runner can't be in a hurry to get out on his route. If the DE is up the field, he will lose his route and block the DE so the QB can set up and throw elsewhere. This was something we struggled with. We need to do a better job of picking this DE up to avoid costly sacks.<br />
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The flat route can come from anywhere. Same side, across the formation, from an H back... even a TE.<br />
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From the 21 personnel offset pistol we used last year it would look like this<br />
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Naked to the TE side. TE in this case would run the deep out. We are trying to get 15 yards deep.<br />
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Here we have Naked going away from the TE. He now has the drag, trying to get behind LBs and be at the other hash at 15.<br />
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Here's some film with my horrible voice over. Only thing holding back my rap career is the fact that my voice isn't deep enough.<br />
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<iframe allowfullscreen="" frameborder="0" height="344" src="//www.youtube.com/embed/lMA9rLnzrdg" width="459"></iframe><br />
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One thing you will notice from the pistol is the mesh mechanics we used. I got this from Coach Grabowski as well. It is a reverse pivot, followed by 2 steps vertical, looking back at the RB, with open hand extended. This he feels, is the best way to sell the play action. We fooled a lot of defenses, and quite often our own coaching staff (if they didn't hear the play call). <br />
I am contemplating whether or not I want to keep the reverse out next season. I agree it sells the play action better, hides the ball well, but I felt at times, especially if it wasn't a great snap, it slowed the RB and the timing of the play down a little bit. <br />
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I want to leave you with one last concept off of naked. I put this in late in the year, I really thought we would hit it for a big play but never did. It is a wheel concept. It's drawn up below from Twins, with the TE and FB still doing the same assignments. The major difference is that I have the X running a deep post with the Z running a wheel route. I hoped the Corner would follow the Post, opening up a home run to our wheel route but the corners stayed very disciplined. <br />
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I am thinking it might be better to send X on a GO route to remove him from the picture, and hit the wheel route trailing him.<br />
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I think it definitely had big play potential, and I will continue to play with what route configuration works best for us on it. <br />
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<br />Anonymoushttp://www.blogger.com/profile/13830721910180999148noreply@blogger.com0tag:blogger.com,1999:blog-6082042657758674976.post-21759650950310304832014-01-24T19:18:00.000-08:002014-01-24T23:29:02.167-08:00Meal Prep For CoachesRecently I have really gotten in to fitness and nutrition. I don't plan on being a body builder or anything, but I value looking and feeling good. I have done any polling or research into our profession, but just from staring at teams' sidelines... there is a large percentage of football coaches who are overweight.<br />
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When I was 21 I made some big changes in my life and I dropped a total of 90 lbs from my biggest down to my smallest. I wrote about that <a href="http://coachbdud.blogspot.com/2011/01/how-coaches-can-lose-weight-may-save.html" target="_blank">here.</a> I no longer care about the number on the scale, I only care about how I look from working out.<br />
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I want to share some pieces of advice, simple things that you can do to help yourself lose weight. We are still in January, the month where everyone vows to drop those extra pounds. However most people that start a new years weight loss plan, give up within a month or two.<br />
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I won't get into working out... do something you like... do it often. Burn Calories. For me, I enjoy lifting. I hate cardio. If I want cardio, I will lift weights faster. But that is just me, do whatever makes you happy. <br />
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I wont to focus on what I feel is the most important part of losing weight...<br />
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<b>Meal Prep</b><br />
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We spend hours of time every week breaking down film, preparing for opponents, and organizing our team. We can spare an hour per week for meal prep.<br />
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I typically do all of my cooking for the week on Sunday night. I am an extremely picky eater but when I find something I like, I am able to eat it on a daily basis. I do not want to get too much into the actual foods because everyone has different tastes and favorites. But if you are curious here are some things I eat almost every day...<br />
A lot of chicken (I genuinely like chicken more than beef and it has less fat/calories)<br />
Tuna fish (I prefer pouch over can because I hate draining and I don't need to bring can opener with me)<br />
Ground turkey (I sub this in for any recipe with ground beef)<br />
Eggs/Egg whites with turkey sausage<br />
Whole grain Pasta (With a little low calorie alfredo sauce)<br />
White Rice (most will tell you to use Brown Rice... I just think white rice tastes much better)<br />
I have a whey protein shake every day post workout as well.<br />
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I have other snacks at times, or I will switch a meal up... but these foods are fairly constant in my day to day eating.<br />
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The are multiple benefits in mass preparing all your foods. <br />
-Saves time. It is actually quicker to do all of your cooking at once for the week than making each meal<br />
-Less prone to cheating and over eating. The meals are already done<br />
-Convenient, quick, Can eat on the run<br />
-save you money, avoid eating out and fast food<br />
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<b><u>What you will need</u></b><br />
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A digital food scale. I picked one up a couple years ago. You can get them for $20 or less on amazon, walmart, or target. <br />
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A Calorie counting App - The best in my opinion is "My Fitness Pal". I have tried others, but this one is the best. You just type in the food and it has everything you can think of in it. You just adjust the serving size to enter how much you ate. It even has a scanner function. You just hold it up to the bar code of any food and it will automatically input the food's data. I've seen it work on dollar store brand items. it has everything programmed in there. Using the app is where the food scale comes in handy. It allows you to measure what you are eating so you can enter the data into your phone. You can't expect to get solid weight loss results until you begin tracking your calories (and macronutrients). What some people might think is a serving of a particular food might actually be 2-3 servings. The app is awesome because you can enter in some info about yourself and it tells you how many calories to consume in order to reach your goal. When I want to lose fat I choose the 1 lb per week goal, which will give a 500 calorie deficit per day.<br />
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TupperWare to store your food in. I bought most of mine from the dollar store. I have no idea what size they are but they are big enough to fit each meal, stackable, easy to clean and reuse, and they were cheap. Buy a decent amount of them, since you will be prepping probably 3-4 meals per day for 5-6 days at a time.<br />
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<b><u>Cooking Tips</u></b><br />
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Multitask!<br />
I am able to get my cooking done quickly because I do it all at once. A typical Sunday evening looks like this. BBQ or oven cooking chicken, boiling pasta on stove, while cooking eggs/turkey sausage on another burner, while my rice cooker is doing its thing making rice for the week. <br />
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Once all of the food is cooked I use the scale and Tupperware to divide the food out evenly into packaged meals and stack the meals up by which day I will eat them.<br />
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Add Flavor without adding Calories/Sodium<br />
I try to add as much flavor to my food without adding extra calories, recently I have shifted away from eating anything with sodium in it as well. A lot of what I eat is high in sodium so it is important for me to not add any.<br />
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Since you other coaches are like family to me I will let you in on my secret recipes.<br />
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I add spices to almost everything... they are zero calorie, and have zero sodium... literally if you look at the nutrition facts they all say 0 for every category.<br />
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These are my go to seasonings. I got all of these at Sam's Club (just like Costco for anyone who isn't familiar with the warehouse store). I love the taste of pepper. I love anything spicy and feel the crushed red pepper helps to give otherwise bland egg whites some needed flavor. My mom used garlic salt on everything growing up so garlic powder is my no calorie/sodium way of replicating that taste in my food. If I could only pick one seasoning it would be Mrs. Dash. Mrs. Dash has a wide range of flavors and the good thing is that now ALL of their products are salt free. I recently purchased the chipotle version and I like that as well. It tastes good on everything.<br />
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PAM<br />
I can't imagine cooking without PAM. Makes clean up much easier because food doesn't stick. No need to cook food in oil or butter when you can use PAM and add ZERO calories to your meals.<br />
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Zero Calorie Foods<br />
Hippies will tell you they are bad for you and aren't natural. However there a number of zero calorie foods you can experiment with.<br />
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Walden Farms produces nothing but zero calorie foods.<br />
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One that I have not tried but have heard is amazing is "I can't believe it's not butter" Spray<br />
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ZERO (that's 0) calories and I have heard it tastes just like butter. Ideal for putting on potatoes/toast/ anything else you might like without adding all of the fat and calories of butter or margarine. <br />
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<b><u>Closing</u></b><br />
Give it a shot. You do not have to eat any of the foods I mentioned above. However I promise you, give meal prep a try for a month and you will see results. It seems like a lot of work to do up front but I assure you it saves time compared to cooking food each day of the week. <br />
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If you get bored with food easily pick out a few breakfast meals, a few lunches, a few snacks, a few dinners and this way you can change it up.<br />
Monday: breakfast A, lunch A, dinner A<br />
Tuesday: breakfast B, lunch B, dinner B<br />
Wednesday: breakfast c lunch c dinner c<br />
Thursday: start the pattern over<br />
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Give this a shot. We all want kids that are in shape and take care of their bodies... don't they deserve a coach who does the same?Anonymoushttp://www.blogger.com/profile/13830721910180999148noreply@blogger.com2tag:blogger.com,1999:blog-6082042657758674976.post-75471907433324876582013-12-09T21:58:00.001-08:002013-12-09T21:58:13.915-08:00POWER game film<div class="separator" style="clear: both; text-align: left;">
I have been an all 4 wide coach my entire time at my current school. A number of factors contributed to us needing to make a change midway through the year. We became a 21 personnel "pro style" offense. A major play for us was the standard "Power" play. Just wanted to share a few clips of us running power that I felt we executed decently. You will notice the guards skip pulling, it is a technique I understand in clinic talks but I am not 100% sold on it. They entered the hole square, which is the whole idea behind it. However I feel most kids can get to the hole quicker, and with more speed (and therefore momentum) with a standard pull. I think I will experiment with both through spring ball and summer next year.</div>
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Well, enjoy a handful of POWER clips</div>
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<br />Anonymoushttp://www.blogger.com/profile/13830721910180999148noreply@blogger.com2tag:blogger.com,1999:blog-6082042657758674976.post-86172258464301655072013-07-02T15:30:00.001-07:002013-07-02T15:30:53.272-07:00Planning an entire week of offensive practiceI consider myself to my a minimalist. I want to run a few things but be very good at them. Even with my minimalist approach when I began planning our Summer practices I couldn't help but feel stressed for time and reps.<br />
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We made a major program wide decision to make our lifting/conditioning the primary focus of our summer practices. In the past we put too much emphasis on running plays.<br />
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When we began breaking down practice times for offense and defense after our lifting/conditioning sessions I quickly realized I didn't have that much time to schedule for offensive practice. I knew I needed to restructure how we were practicing because there was no way to practice all of the techniques and plays we have in one day.<br />
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I came up with the following format...<br />
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I remembered the <a href="http://coachbdud.blogspot.com/2012/07/installpractice-plan.html" target="_blank">3 day install plan</a> I used a year ago for Spring Ball, and thought to myself, "Hey I can do something similar to structure a focus for each offensive practice. I also wanted something that would be easy to transition into the season and mirror how a typical week in season looks.<br />
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I started, like any teacher does, at the end. Fridays would act as our final assessment. In the season the game friday night is the ultimate test, for our summer practices Friday we will run only team offense and throw everything at the kids, we can grade through film and see how well they are understanding the plays and their assignments.<br />
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Monday would act as our learning day. Typically in season this is a day we watch a lot of film, break down the opponent and the game plan. Monday is also our heaviest lift day and conditioning day. To save their bodies after their intense lift/running we bring them into the classroom and will show them film, review things on the whiteboard, any new installation, and give them a focus or main thing we are trying to improve on for the week. <br />
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Tuesday, Wednesday, and Thursday are where we really get our work in.<br />
I split our entire offense up into a 3 day plan, each day focusing on specific plays so that all of our individual, group, and team periods can focus on these plays.<br />
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I essentially broke down the offense like this...<br />
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We have 3 core run plays: IZ, OZ, Counter<br />
We have 3 core spring outs: Curl/Flat, Flood, what we call Wide<br />
We have 6 core pass concepts: verts, snag, Boot, stick, smash, spacing,<br />
We have 3 core screens: Solid, Jail, RB<br />
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I took these plays and divided things up so that each of those 3 "work days" every drill, and every segment on our practice plan will be focused on<br />
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1 run<br />
1 sprint out<br />
2 passes<br />
1 screen<br />
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It made planning practices much easier for me because I can keep the rough schedule pretty similar and just change certain parts of drills depending on the plays we will work that day.<br />
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Some of our other schemes, Draw, 2 in 1 plays, rocket toss can be sprinkled in because while in the playbook aren't the things that we absolutely have to be perfect at to move the football. They are necessary side dishes but this summer is all about getting better at the main course.<br />
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This practice format has especially helped my OL because I can tailor all of our INDY time to the skills needed for 1 specific play and we rep that play to death. <br />
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<br />Anonymoushttp://www.blogger.com/profile/13830721910180999148noreply@blogger.com0tag:blogger.com,1999:blog-6082042657758674976.post-39945950755849608972013-06-25T23:33:00.002-07:002013-06-25T23:33:44.653-07:00Improving effort and tempo in the weight roomImproving our participation was the biggest priority of this past off season. I wrote a prior article about <a href="http://coachbdud.blogspot.com/2013/02/creating-off-season-competition.html" target="_blank">Creating Off Season Competition</a>. The numbers went up, and this trickled through to our spring ball and now into our summer practices. <br />
We essentially were able to weed out the non committed kids and our attendance is better than it has ever been in my 4 years here. We finally had kids showing up every single day but then came the next hurdle.<br />
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I looked at what our kids were doing in the weight room and I wasn't happy with all of them. They were there in the weight room but some left not sweating and I saw them milling around far too much. I knew I needed to make a change to make sure each kid was WORKING during hour lifting sessions.<br />
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I then recalled a phone conversation/interview I had with CAL S&C coach Mike Blasquez. Since CAL has no made the change to no huddle spread, I asked how it has impact his weight room philosophy, especially in regard to their tempo and rest in the weight room. He said they had to change how they rested and now all of their rest times are sped up. They try to mirror the frantic pace of a Tony Franklin style practice within their weight room.<br />
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I decided with our equipment limitations I wouldn't be able to go quite as fast as what a D-1 college might do in their weight room, but I knew that the days of just writing the workout on a whiteboard and letting the kids free lift were OVER for our program.<br />
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I decided that from now on, EVERYTHING is going to be timed. We use a segment timer in practice every day, why not in the weight room as well.<br />
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First I analyzed our weight room, the equipment we had, and the number of players we had at each level.<br />
we typically have in the low 40s per level. For some reason everything in our weight room comes in 3s... 3 squat racks, 3 bench presses, 3 adjustable benches.<br />
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Using that information I came up with the following guidelines for our weight room.<br />
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<ul>
<li>We will always workout in groups of 3, no groups of 4 are allowed because it will destroy our tempo</li>
<li>We will have 5 lifts/exercises per day</li>
<li>Each of the selected lifts has 3 locations (rack, bench, pull up bar, location outside)</li>
<li>Each "station" will have 9 minutes, then we rotate</li>
<li>This totals out to 45 minutes to complete our workout</li>
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We typically do between 3-4 sets of each lift... 9 minutes doesn't give the kids much time to screw around. To complete their lifts they basically have to do their set, rack it up, change weights, and the next person is lifting right away. Kids can't hide out like they used to, I know where I started each of them so I know what lift they are supposed to be doing at a given time.</div>
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To keep the kids on schedule I use a timer app on my phone. Since the rotations happen every 9 minutes, I just keep restarting the 9 minute timer after we rotate from each station.</div>
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I see our working harder and getting more done than ever before.</div>
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Our school is months away from an entire reconstruction, which includes a new weight room. This process will be even easier when we have a more state of the art weight room that has nothing but racks in it. </div>
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If you have a set up with many racks and free weight your players never have to move... each rotation simply means changing to a new lift. This way is even better because you can better control the lift order of each student for maximal gains.</div>
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The next step I am going to make is to create a CD with music that has the 9 minute intervals built in to it.</div>
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I got this software for doing so and it is my new weekend project.</div>
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<a href="http://audacity.sourceforge.net/">http://audacity.sourceforge.net/</a></div>
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<br />Anonymoushttp://www.blogger.com/profile/13830721910180999148noreply@blogger.com4tag:blogger.com,1999:blog-6082042657758674976.post-87541668550318743502013-06-03T21:20:00.000-07:002013-06-03T21:20:00.204-07:00Teaching Vertical SetI get messages at least once a day asking me something football related. This off season I would say the number 1 thing has been asking how to teach vertical setting. I have written articles in the past on vertical setting and drills for pass pro but I want to use this article to tie it all together.<br />
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This is the order I would go about teaching things.<br />
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<b><u>Find a scheme</u></b><br />
Vertical setting can and will work in any type of pass protection scheme. I have used it and seen it used at the HS and College level in BOB, half slide, and full slide protections. Pick a scheme (maybe have a 2nd as a change up or adjustment) and beat your rules in to your kids head. Vertical setting is great, the best thing since sliced bread, but if you flat out don't attempt to block a defender because you're kids don't know who to block, or more importantly, where their eyes need to be, it won't matter if you back hand spring set... you're QB is dead.<br />
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<b><u>Decide your ideal depth</u></b><br />
Colleges and vertical set purists have been using a 4 step vertical step approach )inside out inside out) as far as I know since it's invention. My original <a href="http://coachbdud.blogspot.com/2011/02/vertical-set.html" target="_blank">Vertical Set</a> post explains this. Middle of 2 seasons ago I adjusted ours to a 2 step approach. 4 steps was getting us too close to the QB's face and he felt uncomfortable and I felt we could still do our job with 2 steps of depth. I dubbed this technique <a href="http://coachbdud.blogspot.com/2012/04/vertical-set-20.html" target="_blank">Vertical Set 2.0</a> because it was the new edition and used 2 steps. You need to decide what is best for your kids. If I was brand new to it I would work 4 steps initially and see how the OL and QB felt with it and then adjust it to 2 steps from there.<br />
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<b><u>Over exaggerate the set</u></b><br />
I believe, in the beginning it is best to have the kids flying backwards. I like to have them go for more yardage or steps than I would ask in a game when we first teach it. My thought is similar to track coaches who train their 100m kids by running 200's. After doing all those 200's, the 100 seems easy. Same thing with setting, after working back for 5 yards, or 6 steps, doing our 2 step vertical set is faster, and feels more comfortable to them.<br />
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Below is a video of my kids setting for depth (6 steps) followed by our wave drill. Sorry the video starts a half second too late.<br />
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<b><u>Wave Drill</u></b><br />
The next thing I would get really good at is wave drill. You can work a ton of kids at once. You can burn some muscle memory in to them. You are teaching the kids how to step to cut off an inside rush move or a move to their outside. I refer to them as Power Step and Slide Step. The Power step is a hard step, 45 degrees up field and inside with a powerful inside hand punch to cut off a defender. The Slide Step is a pretty traditional kick slide backwards and out at a 45 degree angle to continue getting depth and widening a defender should rush your edge.<br />
This drill is great for checking kids pass pro posture, hands, body position, stagger, and their footwork. This clip below shows the kids after a squat day (you will see their signs of leg fatigue). Here I have them all working one side (same stagger and stance), once we get rolling and kids know what position they will be playing the most and where they will be getting most of their reps we will just line the kids up and they will use the stagger of their position. I just point to a side and for half of them it would simulate an outside rush more while it is an inside rush to the other half of them. <br />
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<b><u>Mirror</u></b><br />
Next I introduce our mirror drill. This helps them reinforce keeping good body posture and moving their feet laterally to "mirror" their defender. Here is a <a href="http://coachbdud.blogspot.com/2012/03/mirror-drill.html" target="_blank">LINK</a> to a post I did a while back on the mirror drill.<br />
We eventually progress to working mirror, and then I yell HIT, on HIT the defender rushes and the OL has to execute a punch.<br />
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<b><u>Partner Sets</u></b><br />
The next drill I use is what I call "Partner Sets". We get a lot of good reps in this drill if the kids will work each other. We partner up and designate one guy as the OL, one as the defender. On the OL movement the defender will rush and pick a side working 1 move. The OL has to Set, incorporate part of wave and mirror drill to stay head up with the defender, punch the defender, and work his feet to cancel this first move.<br />
As the kids improve at this drill I then allow the defender to work a first move followed by a counter. This can be a great time to work kids on the moves you see most from an opponent, or a specific defender's best move and counter move.<br />
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<b><u>Live 1 on 1s</u></b><br />
By this point we are pretty close to letting them go full out and put it all together. We will work live 1 on 1s next. I think of this as the test of how well I have taught them. They will need to use things they've learned doing all of the above drills to be successful.<br />
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<b><u>Blitz Pick Up</u></b><br />
As long as you have been chalking, walking through, and teaching your specific pass pro scheme(s) your kids should be able to execute the blocks now. You can include the RB and QB if you like, or just keep your OL by themselves, whatever works best for you. Now you will use a full defense to bring pressure (combining the 1 on 1's into a 5 on 5 situation for your OL, or 6 on 6 if you add the back). You are evaluating where their eyes are and the blocks they are making. <br />
My biggest piece of advice with this drill is to have your fronts/stunts/blitzes pre printed out on cards. This is something given to you in TFS but it could be made in PPT in an hour or with HUDL in probably even less time. Make a card for everything you even think you could possibly see. Make a copy for each of your lower level coaches as well. Put them in a binder, keep it in the ball bag, your trunk, your briefcase... whatever. It makes going through and getting the reps so much easier when you can hold it up rather than talk to the defense and see where to go. If you are fortunate enough to have an assistant helping your OL or an injured kid they can be holding up the card for the defense while you are coaching up/correcting/praising your OL in the drill. <br />
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Here are some other drills from a post a did a couple of years ago.<br />
<a href="http://coachbdud.blogspot.com/2011/05/drill-videos-are-here.html" target="_blank">Drill Videos</a><br />
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<br />Anonymoushttp://www.blogger.com/profile/13830721910180999148noreply@blogger.com1tag:blogger.com,1999:blog-6082042657758674976.post-90818680348744434542013-05-28T21:33:00.003-07:002013-05-28T21:33:51.930-07:00R4 in Spring BallWell we are nearly done with Spring Ball. We have 1 practice left tomorrow and then we are off for Finals.<br />
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I talked about R4 installation with my kids in the <a href="http://coachbdud.blogspot.com/2013/04/installing-r4-for-first-time.html" target="_blank">past.</a> Now that we have some of our base concepts in and I have had a chance to look back and reflect on things the QB who is distancing himself from the pack is the one who understands R4 the best.<br />
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All 3 are struggling with their mechanics at times, but that is too be expected... they just haven't thrown the football that many times.<br />
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QB1 has really started to think in terms of R4 non stop. Our final practice last week he really began to hit some rhythm throws he was missing in the past because he was finally relying on post snap confirmation while looking into his vertical tube. He hit 2 perfect corner passes in a row on our snag concept (when tried to pre snap cap, and then fly up to jump the flat route, thus uncapping the Corner Route). You could see the light bulb go on in our QB's head. When I saw him this morning at school he told me he had been thinking about that play and R4 all weekend and that he really felt like he had it now. <br />
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My other 2 QBs are still a little bit behind in their mental R4 processing but I have some extra chalk/film sessions lined up with them once we are out of school. <br />
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I just wanted to share with all of you who are still curious about R4 or installing it for the first time as well, the power is real. We are hitting more vertical routes (Corner, Seams, Posts, Go's) than ever before. <br />
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<br />Anonymoushttp://www.blogger.com/profile/13830721910180999148noreply@blogger.com5