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Post by flexbonecoach on Nov 4, 2016 7:30:17 GMT -6
For those of you that use the reward stickers, how do you use them? I've never done it before and I'm thinking about doing it next year. I was thinking about using them to reward individual stuff in practice only, this way even scout team kids can earn them. And then if we accomplish goals on gameday (eg: zero turnovers, 100% redzone eff, special teams score, etc) the whole team earns a sticker. What do you guys do?
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Post by blackknight on Nov 4, 2016 11:46:28 GMT -6
We used to hand out stickers for accomplishments out of season. If a kid had a lot of stickers, he had put in a lot of work!
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jbutch17
Freshmen Member
[F4:@JButch17]
Posts: 95
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Post by jbutch17 on Nov 4, 2016 12:16:17 GMT -6
Mostly individual. Touchdown, interception, sack, etc
All 2 Deep on O/D if weekly goals are met, get them.
Best players should have the most.
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Post by CoachHess on Nov 5, 2016 10:04:46 GMT -6
Practice Player of the Day. PPOD. Assign 2 coaches Monday through Wednesday. Each guy gets to pick one kid
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Post by freezeoption on Nov 5, 2016 10:12:53 GMT -6
someone had a good list on here one time, search that, it has been covered a lot
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Post by Chris Clement on Nov 5, 2016 13:46:30 GMT -6
I'd caution that if you think it's a good way to help turn a program around it'll be tough, because it's a very laborious job, so you'll want to make sure it's not taking away from staff time that you need elsewhere.
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Post by fantom on Nov 6, 2016 6:55:55 GMT -6
I'd caution that if you think it's a good way to help turn a program around it'll be tough, because it's a very laborious job, so you'll want to make sure it's not taking away from staff time that you need elsewhere. PITA is the way I'd put it.
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Post by flexbonecoach on Nov 7, 2016 7:09:59 GMT -6
I'd caution that if you think it's a good way to help turn a program around it'll be tough, because it's a very laborious job, so you'll want to make sure it's not taking away from staff time that you need elsewhere. PITA is the way I'd put it. I was thinking that too.
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Post by leighty on Nov 7, 2016 7:58:49 GMT -6
I'd caution that if you think it's a good way to help turn a program around it'll be tough, because it's a very laborious job, so you'll want to make sure it's not taking away from staff time that you need elsewhere. It's only as labor-intensive as you let it become. It took us five minutes to award stickers in our Sunday coaches meetings. Everybody gets a sticker for a win. Best performance at each position group gets a sticker. Offensive and defensive players of the week get a sticker. Scout O and scout D players of the week get a sticker. The coaches then awarded one sticker each to a guy based on really whatever criteria the wanted.
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Post by jtimmerman53 on Nov 7, 2016 8:35:04 GMT -6
We have team specific goals on offense, defense, and special teams that all of our starters/major players get stars on their helmets for if we reach those goals each week. The rest of the team gets half. Our offensive goals include things like: Score 28 points, 250 rush yards, 100 pass yards, no turnovers, no penalties, etc. Also each position coach has certain things they give out eagle stickers for. As an OL coach we give out eagle stickers for grading out (70%) and also for pancake/knockdown blocks.
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Post by groundchuck on Nov 7, 2016 9:39:22 GMT -6
After years of doing stickers I'm really leaning toward dropping them. I've always been an advocate of them, and we base a lot of it around team goals. But I had some kids this year steal a sheet of stickers and they put them on their own helmets. Just pissed me off so bad I may just junk the whole thing.
Sent from my iPad using Tapatalk
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Post by Chris Clement on Nov 7, 2016 10:40:31 GMT -6
A whole sheet? Dude, you gotta sneak them on one and two at a time.
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Post by groundchuck on Nov 7, 2016 11:02:59 GMT -6
1-2 at a time nobody notices. But people notice if you've missed three games for violations and now your helmet is covered in stickers.
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Post by CoachMikeJudy on Nov 7, 2016 11:20:18 GMT -6
We don't do stickers, but I played for a guy who did: Team - Everyone gets one for a win (specialty sticker...like "Family" or "Pride" - Anytime we score every kid on the field gets 1 - Big Hit
Offense (football sticker) - the player who scores (qb for a throw, wr for the catch) - RB 100yds, 150, 200 (25yd increments after that I believe) - WR 100yds, 150, 200 etc. - QB 150, 200, 250, 300 etc.
Defense (Skull stickers) - 3 tackles=1 sticker (so 8 tackles is 2 stickers, 9 tackles is 3) - Sack - TFL - SPT tackle (KO or Punt) is a sticker - Hold a team under 100yds rushing - Hold a team under 100yds passing - Turnovers - players cause/recover get 1 and WHOLE defense gets 1
It was a LOT of stickers, but as a player we enjoyed it. Probably a PITA for the coaches
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tyhpu10
Sophomore Member
Former OC & DC. Current QB coach. Twitter-@CoachTCrow
Posts: 157
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Post by tyhpu10 on Nov 7, 2016 11:31:15 GMT -6
Everyone got one for team goals being met. Other than that I rewarded blocking, defensive turnovers, and tackling. 1 sticker- for every 3 tackles - for every 3 pancakes - for every 5 cut blocks (legal in TX) on 2nd/3rd level defender - for every forced fumble, fumble recovery, or interception I figured that if my kids were good at those things, then we had a chance to be fairly decent.
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