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Post by coachbw on Jul 13, 2006 13:53:41 GMT -6
The school I am at is hosting a 4 team scrimmage and I have been given the task of putting together a schedule. We have about 2 1/2-3 hours for the scrimmage. What kind of a format do you folks use in your scrimmage? How many plays against each of the schools? Do you set aside a certain number of snaps for 1's vs. 1's and 2's vs 2's? I appreciate any input you can give me, this is all new fo me this year. Thanks for the help.
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Post by djwesp on Jul 13, 2006 14:15:05 GMT -6
The school I am at is hosting a 4 team scrimmage and I have been given the task of putting together a schedule. We have about 2 1/2-3 hours for the scrimmage. What kind of a format do you folks use in your scrimmage? How many plays against each of the schools? Do you set aside a certain number of snaps for 1's vs. 1's and 2's vs 2's? I appreciate any input you can give me, this is all new fo me this year. Thanks for the help. I'm a big fan of the 1 quarter and 2 quarter jamborees. (quarters are normal length) You can't beat a real game atmosphere. If you played a two quarter jamboree you could have team 1 against team 4 for a half, then team 2 against team 3 for a half. Then you could have team 1 against 2, and 3 against four. You could stagger it and allow 30 minutes to an hour for coaching, stretching, break, and criticism between each matchup.
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Post by brophy on Jul 13, 2006 14:37:45 GMT -6
I'd be in favor of; 10 plays + 10 plays (A team vs. B team) 10 plays + 10 plays (C team vs. D team) 10 plays + 10 plays (B team vs. C team) 10 plays + 10 plays (A team vs. D team) 10 plays + 10 plays (D team vs. C team) 10 plays + 10 plays (A team vs. D team)
or what not.....scrimmaging 2 different teams is one thing, but 4 is quite another. Good luck
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Post by djwesp on Jul 13, 2006 14:46:49 GMT -6
I'd be in favor of; 10 plays + 10 plays (A team vs. B team) 10 plays + 10 plays (C team vs. D team) 10 plays + 10 plays (B team vs. C team) 10 plays + 10 plays (A team vs. D team) 10 plays + 10 plays (D team vs. C team) 10 plays + 10 plays (A team vs. D team) or what not.....scrimmaging 2 different teams is one thing, but 4 is quite another. Good luck You ever been to that Jamboree they have at Airline brophy?
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Post by brophy on Jul 13, 2006 15:17:57 GMT -6
just got down here, brother....I'll be checking them ALL out this fall.....(namely Evangel)...already checked out Parkway. I'll have to make the rounds, bro
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ramsoc
Junior Member
Posts: 431
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Post by ramsoc on Jul 13, 2006 16:43:03 GMT -6
The only thing i gotta say is dont go by reps. Give them a set amount of time and thats it. You get those guys who take a minute in the huddle, then want to coach after each play and use 30 minutes to run 10 plays while you get up there and fire off your 10 in 5 minutes.
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Post by khalfie on Jul 13, 2006 19:25:31 GMT -6
No, no, no... that's not the way to do it...
You put one team on defense, and the other three teams alternate running plays against them, bing, bang, boom... coaches get a minute to coach up their teams after each play, while the defense gets a real good look at 3 different styles of offense. 2 teams take each of the two sidelines, while 1 team huddles in the endzone...
After the agreed upon 6 or more plays, all teams rotate clockwise... a new team becomes the defense and the other three teams alternate on offense.
Well... that's how I've seen it done... keeps everyone involved, no down time, with plenty of opportunity to coach up after each rep.
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