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Post by coachdawhip on Dec 12, 2019 20:58:41 GMT -6
What is one thing you want to KEEP doing in your program/position/or side of the ball next year...
What is one thing you want to START doing in your program/position/or side of the ball next year.....
What is one thing you have to STOP doing in your program/position/or side of the ball next year.....
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Post by planck on Dec 12, 2019 21:53:47 GMT -6
KEEP coaching aggressively attacking keys and runs fits.
STOP coaching pattern matching in a way that makes my dbs react slowly.
START using zone pressures on passing downs.
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Post by CanyonCoach on Dec 13, 2019 15:14:24 GMT -6
I love this process and do it with our coaching staff.
Keep- practice plans that involve a majority of the athletes getting reps. 44 man drill, KO/KOR/PAT circuit
Stop- letting special teams be an after thought-
Start- assigning a coach to each special team and get rid of the STC title, each coach will be the HC of a special and have an assistant, the assistant will be the HC of the opposing spcial. For example: The HC of the KO team is the assistant the KOR coach and they will coordinate those 2 phases of the kicking game together.
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Deleted
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Posts: 0
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Post by Deleted on Dec 13, 2019 22:14:21 GMT -6
Keep emphasis and edge on special teams- We have one advantage week in week out, special teams Stop tolerating in the name of numbers- The A-hole, I am owed something has got to go. Start an exit plan. We have taken it as far we can take it. Politics are going to end our run if the boss doesnt get out.
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Post by newhope on Dec 17, 2019 9:20:20 GMT -6
I love this process and do it with our coaching staff. Keep- practice plans that involve a majority of the athletes getting reps. 44 man drill, KO/KOR/PAT circuit Stop- letting special teams be an after thought- Start- assigning a coach to each special team and get rid of the STC title, each coach will be the HC of a special and have an assistant, the assistant will be the HC of the opposing spcial. For example: The HC of the KO team is the assistant the KOR coach and they will coordinate those 2 phases of the kicking game together. A little advice: we divide our special teams up among various coaches, who then have other coaches that assist them with that team (at least 2-3 others depending on the special team). Each one of those assistants is given a specific responsibility. It works really well, keeping any one coach from being overwhelmed. It also keeps coaches involved in special teams rather than standing around during those periods and it gives more coaches ownership. HOWEVER--don't eliminate the STC position. For us, he's the guy who keeps up with who is on each team, the changes we make each weak or during the game due to injury. He "coordinates" special teams. Believe me, you will need someone to take care of that and it needs to be someone good with organization.
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Post by MICoach on Dec 18, 2019 7:45:32 GMT -6
I love this process and do it with our coaching staff. Keep- practice plans that involve a majority of the athletes getting reps. 44 man drill, KO/KOR/PAT circuit Stop- letting special teams be an after thought- Start- assigning a coach to each special team and get rid of the STC title, each coach will be the HC of a special and have an assistant, the assistant will be the HC of the opposing spcial. For example: The HC of the KO team is the assistant the KOR coach and they will coordinate those 2 phases of the kicking game together. A little advice: we divide our special teams up among various coaches, who then have other coaches that assist them with that team (at least 2-3 others depending on the special team). Each one of those assistants is given a specific responsibility. It works really well, keeping any one coach from being overwhelmed. It also keeps coaches involved in special teams rather than standing around during those periods and it gives more coaches ownership. HOWEVER--don't eliminate the STC position. For us, he's the guy who keeps up with who is on each team, the changes we make each weak or during the game due to injury. He "coordinates" special teams. Believe me, you will need someone to take care of that and it needs to be someone good with organization. Ditto to this. We have individual coaches in charge of each special team, but the "coordinator" is basically in charge of the special teams depth chart on game day and will make basic calls under the supervision of the HC. He leads the "walk through" like 2 hours before the game in the gym where we have each special team come out on and line up and confirm the lineup is set as well.
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Post by dytmook on Dec 18, 2019 7:58:41 GMT -6
I love this process and do it with our coaching staff. Keep- practice plans that involve a majority of the athletes getting reps. 44 man drill, KO/KOR/PAT circuit Stop- letting special teams be an after thought- Start- assigning a coach to each special team and get rid of the STC title, each coach will be the HC of a special and have an assistant, the assistant will be the HC of the opposing spcial. For example: The HC of the KO team is the assistant the KOR coach and they will coordinate those 2 phases of the kicking game together. A little advice: we divide our special teams up among various coaches, who then have other coaches that assist them with that team (at least 2-3 others depending on the special team). Each one of those assistants is given a specific responsibility. It works really well, keeping any one coach from being overwhelmed. It also keeps coaches involved in special teams rather than standing around during those periods and it gives more coaches ownership. HOWEVER--don't eliminate the STC position. For us, he's the guy who keeps up with who is on each team, the changes we make each weak or during the game due to injury. He "coordinates" special teams. Believe me, you will need someone to take care of that and it needs to be someone good with organization. We do this with the specials being divided up. DC keeps special team depth chart. Gives them out for the game to various coaches. I usually coordinate the KOR with one of the OC's.
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Post by fballcoachg on Dec 18, 2019 8:01:43 GMT -6
What is one thing you want to KEEP doing in your program/position/or side of the ball next year... What is one thing you want to START doing in your program/position/or side of the ball next year..... What is one thing you have to STOP doing in your program/position/or side of the ball next year..... Love this, we have exams this week so this is what I’ll be working on today!
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Post by newhope on Dec 18, 2019 9:27:45 GMT -6
A little advice: we divide our special teams up among various coaches, who then have other coaches that assist them with that team (at least 2-3 others depending on the special team). Each one of those assistants is given a specific responsibility. It works really well, keeping any one coach from being overwhelmed. It also keeps coaches involved in special teams rather than standing around during those periods and it gives more coaches ownership. HOWEVER--don't eliminate the STC position. For us, he's the guy who keeps up with who is on each team, the changes we make each weak or during the game due to injury. He "coordinates" special teams. Believe me, you will need someone to take care of that and it needs to be someone good with organization. We do this with the specials being divided up. DC keeps special team depth chart. Gives them out for the game to various coaches. I usually coordinate the KOR with one of the OC's. I like one guy with the special teams depth chart---makes it simpler on game night on injury notification to have one guy who that goes to.
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