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Post by poweriguy on Mar 29, 2007 20:05:56 GMT -6
Old School! hehe!
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Post by coachcalande on Mar 30, 2007 6:26:17 GMT -6
not quite, but wow, thats really old school - the old "standard" formation from Heismans book? anywho...we have the playside te block down and get a double team with the tackle. also, pull the guard and tackle instead of the te. cut backside with the te. old school stuff is great though. I have a book called "practical football"...great diagrams of old school stuff with tons of "interference" for the runners...love that kind of football! more power more power more power!!!
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Post by saintrad on Mar 30, 2007 6:35:04 GMT -6
this looks like one of the plays in Otto Graham's "T-Formation football". awesome book, awesome play.
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Post by poweriguy on Mar 30, 2007 10:27:13 GMT -6
I pulled this from the book Football for player and spectator by Fielding YostI downloaded it the other night and it's got some very interesting stuff, that surprisingly, is still very relevant to today. BTW I got the book from books.google.com , just do a search for it.
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tedseay
Sophomore Member
Posts: 165
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Post by tedseay on Apr 2, 2007 7:10:57 GMT -6
I pulled this from the book Football for player and spectator by Fielding YostCoach: Unlike in Yost's day, a lineman has to turn his back completely to the LOS in order to receive a hand-off, which the LT in the Yost example doesn't do (this is under Federation rules...)
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Post by poweriguy on Apr 2, 2007 15:16:08 GMT -6
I pulled this from the book Football for player and spectator by Fielding YostCoach: Unlike in Yost's day, a lineman has to turn his back completely to the LOS in order to receive a hand-off, which the LT in the Yost example doesn't do (this is under Federation rules...) Yeah I understand that, but it's still pretty cool to see how the early innovators of the game attacked on offence.
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