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Post by oneplaydrive on Jul 31, 2019 18:02:14 GMT -6
Anyone have a solid, efficient process for creating your play cards each week? Looking to streamline where possible.
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Post by agap on Jul 31, 2019 18:39:27 GMT -6
Are you asking what we use? We use Hudl.
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Post by wingtol on Jul 31, 2019 20:08:15 GMT -6
I draw ours by hand on pre made card stock cars with the OL already printed on them. Feel like I can draw them faster than using program. I guess the longer you do it the easier it gets.
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Post by coachd5085 on Jul 31, 2019 21:33:58 GMT -6
I draw ours by hand on pre made card stock cars with the OL already printed on them. Feel like I can draw them faster than using program. I guess the longer you do it the easier it gets. Plus the added bonus of "mental reps". oneplaydrive I think drawing detailed scout cards following the practice script and showing the movements of all of the players involved is the single best way for your younger coaches to learn the ins and outs of your schemes.
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Post by bluboy on Aug 1, 2019 5:05:11 GMT -6
"I draw ours by hand on pre made card stock cars with the OL already printed on them. Feel like I can draw them faster than using program."
Me, too. The card I use has the inside five linemen, as well as yard-lines and #'s on it. The top of the card has a place for a number, the formation, and the play.
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Post by mdunham on Aug 1, 2019 5:53:25 GMT -6
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Post by fantom on Aug 1, 2019 6:46:55 GMT -6
We use Playmaker Pro. We made a template in a generic formation with each position named (RT, TE, etc.) against our base defense. We use size 20 text and draw the cards in Landscape. Drawing plays is just a matter of moving players into the right position and drawing in the lines. We print them out, put them in liners, and then in a binder. Each play is numbered for the scripts.
After the game we save the cards on the computer. Next year if the team has the same staff and offense, we'll make a copy of the folder and make any adjustments. Sometimes there are no adjustments needed. We used exactly the same cards fpr 10 years for one team.
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Post by bluboy on Aug 1, 2019 9:37:19 GMT -6
One thing I do that helps make things go faster is arrange the scout cards(inside run/group pass, team) in the order they appear on the script. It might take a little more time at the front end, but it is definitely worth it. On the scout card I list the personnel group, the formation, and the play. Also, the scout cards are numbered the same as the play on the script. The scout team coach doesn't have to shuffle through cards; they're already in the correct order. The scout team coach yells the number, then shows/tells the scout team what to do
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Post by bird0660 on Aug 6, 2019 8:18:06 GMT -6
We use Playmaker Pro. We made a template in a generic formation with each position named (RT, TE, etc.) against our base defense. We use size 20 text and draw the cards in Landscape. Drawing plays is just a matter of moving players into the right position and drawing in the lines. We print them out, put them in liners, and then in a binder. Each play is numbered for the scripts. After the game we save the cards on the computer. Next year if the team has the same staff and offense, we'll make a copy of the folder and make any adjustments. Sometimes there are no adjustments needed. We used exactly the same cards fpr 10 years for one team. We take this one step further. You can email it to yourself, open in the PMP app on an Ipad, and then use your Ipad for scoutcards. The bonus is you get a table of contents to go right to a specific card and no binder that gets beat to hell over the course of the week.
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Post by fantom on Aug 6, 2019 8:21:17 GMT -6
We use Playmaker Pro. We made a template in a generic formation with each position named (RT, TE, etc.) against our base defense. We use size 20 text and draw the cards in Landscape. Drawing plays is just a matter of moving players into the right position and drawing in the lines. We print them out, put them in liners, and then in a binder. Each play is numbered for the scripts. After the game we save the cards on the computer. Next year if the team has the same staff and offense, we'll make a copy of the folder and make any adjustments. Sometimes there are no adjustments needed. We used exactly the same cards fpr 10 years for one team. We take this one step further. You can email it to yourself, open in the PMP app on an Ipad, and then use your Ipad for scoutcards. The bonus is you get a table of contents to go right to a specific card and no binder that gets beat to hell over the course of the week. Hahahahahaha! I have no idea what you're talking about.
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Post by mdunham on Aug 6, 2019 8:46:56 GMT -6
We use Playmaker Pro. We made a template in a generic formation with each position named (RT, TE, etc.) against our base defense. We use size 20 text and draw the cards in Landscape. Drawing plays is just a matter of moving players into the right position and drawing in the lines. We print them out, put them in liners, and then in a binder. Each play is numbered for the scripts. After the game we save the cards on the computer. Next year if the team has the same staff and offense, we'll make a copy of the folder and make any adjustments. Sometimes there are no adjustments needed. We used exactly the same cards fpr 10 years for one team. We take this one step further. You can email it to yourself, open in the PMP app on an Ipad, and then use your Ipad for scoutcards. The bonus is you get a table of contents to go right to a specific card and no binder that gets beat to hell over the course of the week. Just got PMP this year (and an iPad). Do you send the pdf version or the pmp file itself?
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Post by bird0660 on Aug 13, 2019 4:35:00 GMT -6
We take this one step further. You can email it to yourself, open in the PMP app on an Ipad, and then use your Ipad for scoutcards. The bonus is you get a table of contents to go right to a specific card and no binder that gets beat to hell over the course of the week. Just got PMP this year (and an iPad). Do you send the pdf version or the pmp file itself? Send the PMP file. Then when you open it in the email click "open with" and the PMP app should come up. Then it will go right into the library on your IPad
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