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Feb
19
2011

"Let me explain the system. I coach in the 12-14 level. These gives me 3 age levels to which we give a value. The younger kids (12}will be with us for the next three years so that has added value so we give these kids 10 points. The 13's 5 points and the 14's 0 points. We give the 14's no points because the learning curve is longer than their time at this level.

We then take the speed component and weight and divide that up to get what we call "hit power ratio". This is just the kids 40 time converted to MPH multiplied by his weight then divided by 100. So a kid that runs the 40 in 5.0 seconds and is 145LB has a ratio (16.36 mph x 145lb)/100= 23.722 This can be compared to a kid that runs the 40 in 5.0 seconds and weighs 100 pounds (16.36 mph x 100)/100= 16.36

Here comes the subjective component. Talent is something we all as coaches can see by the way the kid runs, passes, catches, his aggressiveness, and his smarts. You can make your own list but you must give it a number value. Lets say that you rate them at each of the above levels with excelent=2, good=1 and unsatisfactory=0. This means that a kid with excellent as his talent level is a 10 out of 10.

In this system we have you have 3 values to be considered. The age, the hit ratio, and the talent. So in my case this kid is a 13 so he gets 5 points and a 10 in talent. The same hit ratio as above. His rating is 5 + 23.722 + 10= 38.722 This can be compared to a 14 year old that has the same speed and talent 0 +23.722 +10= 33.722. The higher the number the most benefit you get from him. "

youth drafts football

  • We then take the speed component and weight and divide that up to get what we call "hit power ratio". This is just the kids 40 time converted to MPH multiplied by his weight then divided by 100. So a kid that runs the 40 in 5.0 seconds and is 145LB has a ratio (16.36 mph x 145lb)/100= 23.722 This can be compared to a kid that runs the 40 in 5.0 seconds and weighs 100 pounds (16.36 mph x 100)/100= 16.36

Alex Gibbs, while not the architect of zone and stretch, certainly became the patriarch of the most productive run concept in the past three decades.  Since “officially” retiring with Atlanta, but doing heavy consultation work with Houston and Seattle (and we can clearly see his thumbprints there), Alex Gibbs has remained an integral part in advancing the art of the run game.

zone blocking offense line youth football coaching

A newer offense that has been developed utilizing the Pistol formation is the Ski Gun (or Skee Gun, as it was originally developed by a High School in Muskegon, Michigan).  The core idea behind this "Ski Gun" runs a version of the triple option as its base play.  From the looks of it, it is the Wing-T with the QB in the backfield.  Hence, the Pistol formation can be unitlized with almost any existing scheme.

pistol formation youth football offense coaching tips

  • The Pistol formation is a hybrid formation that utilizes strengths from both the Shotgun and single back (ace) formations. 
  • The "Pistol" formation was devised by Chris Ault at the University of Nevada and made its debut in the 2004 Wolf Pack football season.
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Aug
23
2011

Offensive linemen are looking to block zones instead of assigned men. 

understanding zone blocking youth coaching tips offense

  • What if linemen worked as a unit instead of chasing around these freaks that teams were now employing at defensive tackle?  Welcome to zone blocking; the thinking man's way to block.  Again, the entire goal is to eliminate penetration.
  • According to the father of zone running, Alex Gibbs, the man who designed the Denver Broncos running game with Terrell Davis (orchestrating one of the biggest super bowl upsets in the modern era), the entire key to the running game is to stay positive:
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Dec
9
2011

The Receivers and the Running Backs get the call from the sidelines.  The Quarterback echos the call to the Offensive Line.  For Tulsa's signals, a color will tell players whether to look at a play-call number on the board, or to look at the signal guy.  One of them is always a dummy.  Right and Left will confuse the players, so they use "Spread OVER THERE or OVER HERE" to indicate the sideline or boundary to go to.

football youth coaching no-huddle offense

We require our receivers to block in space. Quite a few years back Coach Calande helped me with stalk blocking and Jacks mirror drill is key.

We start out with our mirror drils with hands behind their backs and mirroring defenders actions while taking good angles and slowly attacking. This is non contact train the brain in open space. With their hands out of the equation they then rely on their feet...then when you allow hands and full contact they are good to go.

running blocking space football youth coaching tips drills

  • We start out with our mirror drils with hands behind their backs and mirroring defenders actions while taking good angles and slowly attacking. This is non contact train the brain in open space. With their hands out of the equation they then rely on their feet...then when you allow hands and full contact they are good to go.
  • FOLLOW THE BUTTS!!!
  • 16 more annotation(s)...

To be a complete back, a back must block. Each back will be heavily involved in run and pass blocking. One thing that sets apart a good RB from a great RB is his ability and desire to block. Run blocking is not a skill that is hard to master. Instead, it is just a matter of attitude and pride. An excellent coaching point to give players in blocking is to make contact with your hands but block with your feet.

NFL blocking tips youth football

  • layers in blocking is to make contact with your hands but block with your feet.
Oct
10
2011

Of course, the set everyone is focused on is the infamous “Diamond” formation, first used by Dana Holgorsen at Oklahoma State but now in use by about a dozen other teams. It’s a good formation: It’s a power set, keeping nine men offensively in the box; doing that should give you individual matchups on the outside; and you get most of the advantages of motion as described above. Oklahoma used it at the end of last season, as the below image shows (h/t Offensive Breakdown):

diamond formation pistol football offense coaching tips youth

Sep
15
2011

  • Minor acknowledged that football is not for everyone and quoted a study from Michigan stat stated 70 percent of youth football players will never play a down of high school football.
Sep
14
2011

SN: What’s the most critical age for development?

Paul Currie: Well, the textbook answer would be that the Golden Age of learning is between 11 and 14. That’s when you can absorb the most information.

If you think about it, you can’t really talk to most 7 or 8 year olds for more than a couple of minutes because they get easily overloaded and blank out.

So I think they are right about the Golden Age. I think U11 is when you can assimilate information a little bit easier.

And then I think the best players at U14, generally speaking, are the best players U16, and the best players U18 and the best players at U20. This is not always true but in general.

SN: So you can tell at U14 who is going to be great at U18? 

training coaching tips kids youth football Soccer paul currie

  • Paul Currie: Well, the textbook answer would be that the Golden Age of learning is between 11 and 14. That’s when you can absorb the most information.

     

    If you think about it, you can’t really talk to most 7 or 8 year olds for more than a couple of minutes because they get easily overloaded and blank out.

     

    So I think they are right about the Golden Age. I think U11 is when you can assimilate information a little bit easier.

     

    And then I think the best players at U14, generally speaking, are the best players U16, and the best players U18 and the best players at U20. This is not always true but in general.

     

    SN: So you can tell at U14 who is going to be great at U18? 

  • Paul Currie: At the end of the day, natural talent. It’s natural talent and working out, being dedicated to your craft and having a great attitude. But mostly it’s natural talent.

     

    I grew up with so many great players in England, and some super-naturally talented players wasted it because by the time they got to 16 or 17 they got involved with drinking and girls and all the rest of it, and they just stopped playing.

     

    The time to get really serious about soccer is when the players are 15 and 16 years old, and if the players are really into the game. If the parents are more into soccer than the players, then there is something wrong. It has got to come from the kids.  

     

    SN: And what makes a good coach?

Aug
29
2011

  • This is the age of the youth-sports industrial complex, where men make a living putting on tournaments for 7-year-olds, and parents subject their children to tryouts and pay good money for the right to enter into it.
  • There are buzzwords in this business, sure to coax the gullible parent. The big three terms are "elite," "select," and "travel ball." Oh, the power of those words. Waving the prospect of "travel ball" under the nose of the ambitious father of a talented 9-year-old is like wafting a steak under the nose of a sleeping dog. After all, the more you travel and the farther you go to play a sport, the better you must be at that sport, right?
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Dr. Jim Taylor, a psychology professor at the University of
San Francisco, put it best when he wrote in the Huffington Post about parents and their roles in developing or supporting a child's athletic prowess.

"If your objective is to turn them into champions, the odds are that you're wasting your money and time and your children's happiness. Sports are metaphorically littered with the scarred psyches of children whose parents tried and failed to do what Earl Woods and Richard Williams succeeded at doing. Your goals as parents are for your children to have fun, learn life skills to succeed later in life, value health and fitness, and develop a love of sports. If by some freak chance you give them world-class athletic genes, they love the sport enough to work incredibly hard, and they get the right kind of support from you, and they become professional or Olympic athletes, then
that's just icing on the cake."

football youth coaching tips sports kids

  • Dr. Jim Taylor, a psychology professor at the University of
    San Francisco, put it best when he wrote in the Huffington Post about parents and their roles in developing or supporting a child's athletic prowess.

     

    "If your objective is to turn them into champions, the odds are that you're wasting your money and time and your children's happiness. Sports are metaphorically littered with the scarred psyches of children whose parents tried and failed to do what Earl Woods and Richard Williams succeeded at doing. Your goals as parents are for your children to have fun, learn life skills to succeed later in life, value health and fitness, and develop a love of sports. If by some freak chance you give them world-class athletic genes, they love the sport enough to work incredibly hard, and they get the right kind of support from you, and they become professional or Olympic athletes, then
    that's just icing on the cake."

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