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Post by grags21 on May 23, 2009 5:40:10 GMT -6
i cant remember the link to a website that someone posted on here with a ton of offensive and defensive playbooks. anyone recall the web address? thanks
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Post by catz1 on May 23, 2009 7:06:04 GMT -6
Probably... www.fastandfuriousfootball.com/If you are looking for something specific (wing-T, jet/fly, SW, DW, spread, etc...), there are lot of guys that can help with youth implementations of these offenses.
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Post by coachdoug on May 24, 2009 1:57:02 GMT -6
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Post by grags21 on May 24, 2009 8:13:23 GMT -6
i will be coaching the 5th grade team this year. i run 95 % double wing. i wanted to throw in a series out of a wildcat formation or spread having my best athlete receive the snap. i want an inside run, outside run, counter, and play action.
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Post by bigdog2003 on May 24, 2009 8:27:55 GMT -6
Coach, go with the beast! It offers all of those things you want our of the wildcat, but it fits better with our double wing.
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Post by grags21 on May 24, 2009 8:30:47 GMT -6
where can i find this thing you call" the beast"?
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Post by bigdog2003 on May 24, 2009 8:40:31 GMT -6
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Post by bigdog2003 on May 24, 2009 8:41:48 GMT -6
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Post by bobgoodman on May 24, 2009 21:50:01 GMT -6
i will be coaching the 5th grade team this year. i run 95 % double wing. i wanted to throw in a series out of a wildcat formation or spread having my best athlete receive the snap. i want an inside run, outside run, counter, and play action. Beast is what you want if you don't mind showing it. That is, you make it clear when the formation sets, "This is beast, the snap's going to [Name Of Your Best Athlete]." OTOH if you want all your DW plays to be available at the same time, I'd recommend installing Your Best Athlete as FB and snapping to him thru the QB's legs. You'll want him a little farther back than typical sniffer position, however. The inside run looks like a toss. WB goes thru the usual motion, G pulls across (influence), but T only reach blocks down to get a stalemate, or cut blocks inside. QB fakes toss empty-handed, then traps whoever comes thru the gap left by the puller. FB sits & hides the ball (between his legs if he has to) for a count, then runs between the QB's trap block and C. I guess this counts as a counter too. If there's someone head up on the C, C should take the shoulder away from the trap block, hoping the nose slides off into the QB's trap; if the nose steps toward the direction shown by the toss action, C should put him onto that G's double team. Outside run is a FB sweep. You can pull a covered play side lineman with your QB sealing the breach. For the play action pass, do you want the player taking the snap to pass? If not, how about after the FB takes the snap, he steps as if to sweep, but then turns back and hands to the QB who's turned around and continues backward to a pocket position? These are plays I saw in Al Rose's DW.
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tedseay
Sophomore Member
Posts: 165
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Post by tedseay on May 25, 2009 4:55:55 GMT -6
i will be coaching the 5th grade team this year. i run 95 % double wing. i wanted to throw in a series out of a wildcat formation or spread having my best athlete receive the snap. i want an inside run, outside run, counter, and play action. Coach: This offense may have been made specifically for your situation: savefile.com/files/30442
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Post by grags21 on May 25, 2009 10:43:16 GMT -6
thanks...that was really what i was looking for. i wanted to keep it as close as possible to what we already run.
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Post by bobgoodman on May 25, 2009 13:18:18 GMT -6
thanks...that was really what i was looking for. i wanted to keep it as close as possible to what we already run. If you really want that, you might want something a little less spread than the SST; ask Coach Seay for a referral to the TCU spread. The SST has no back close to the snapper; TCU's is a double slot formation that still has a QB close to center who can take some of the snaps. The QB can take a short toss snap or can be even closer, angled to the C to take it hand-to-hand, as seen on Long Is. by Coaches Rose and Kopecky -- though Coach Kopecky calls Rose's QB the FB & vice versa. So you can still run most DW style plays by snapping the ball to the QB in this formation; however, the FB (Your Best Athlete) is much farther back than the sniffer position, hence doesn't have as good an angle to kick out on the off tackle toss. I was suggesting having him only slightly farther back than the usual sniffer position, staying low and able to hide the snap between the legs of a straight-ahead-under-center QB. Then you could use this as your regular formation, varying it only by whether you split your ends for a spread look. Adam Wesolowski has experience using a DW formation of this general type with young players; see video at . If you moved both of his deep backs from that formation forward by about 3 yards, you'd have about what I'm recommending. He had his up back in position to hand off on spins rather than to toss, so if you moved both backs forward the QB could still toss and the FB could still kick out on the toss.
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