:: Coaching Staff
Head Coach - Marvin "Disco" Gumbs
E-mail - disco801@yahoo.com
Cellphone - 646-662-9357
Coach -
E-mail -
Cellphone -
:: Coaches Desk
The Playbook: Bulldogs Football Handbook
Tips and Drills:
Instructions
Michael Roth's Football Drills
More Tips: Knowledge Hound
Football Faxuals: Football Faxuals

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:: Coaches Corner
What is the main key to football offense? by John T. Reed
95% of the time, when an offensive play fails, it is because one or
more players did not know their assignment. Coaches think plays fail
because their guy got beat. Film study reveals that almost never
happens. Let’s say you run an off-tackle play and it is stopped for no
gain by an inside linebacker. The typical coach will conclude that his
blocker tried to block the inside linebacker, but was not up to the
task. In fact, study of the film will reveal that the guy who was
supposed to block the linebacker never made the slightest effort to do
so. Either he hopped around doing what I call “looking concerned,” or
he blocked someone else. In many cases, the reason the player does not
know whom to block is that his coach never told him. And the reason for
that is generally that the coach never thought about it.
If I came to one of your practices and put your offensive
coordinator and offensive line coach into the line as players, then set
up various defenses like the 5-3, 6-2, 4-4 and asked who blocks each
defender on a particular play, I suspect there would be some hesitance,
confusion, and disagreement among the coaches. If the coaches do not
know, instantly, exactly whom each player blocks against each possible
defense for each play in your play book, how can anyone expect the
players to know?
The fix for this problem is the fit-and-freeze drill. First diagram
the blocking for each of your plays against each of the defenses of
your upcoming opponent. You know their defenses from scouting. If you
do not scout, may God have mercy on your doomed offensive coordinator
soul. After you have diagramed the plays against those defenses, line
up your defensive scout team in one of those defensive alignments and
show each player whom he blocks and how. Then test their knowledge by
calling out a play name and saying “Go.” On “Go,” each player walks to
the guys he's supposed to block, puts his shoulder against him, and
freezes. Defense offers no resistance and stays where they started
unless told to move. Typically, you would have contain men or defenders
who are going to be trapped move across the line of scrimmage. After
the players freeze, coaches walk along and check to make sure each is
blocking the right guy and has his helmet on the correct side. In the
case of double-team blocks, check for a good seal between the hips and
shoulders of the blockers. You must do the fit-and-freeze drill for
each of your plays against each defense of the upcoming opponent and
with each string of your offense. This takes forever!
If you did not already know, you will quickly learn that it is
impossible to have more than four to 20 plays, depending upon the ages
you are coaching. Do the fit-and-freeze drill first thing every day for
each play you have put in. Do not put in a second play until all
offensive players have mastered the first play against all defenses. Do
not put in a third play until they have mastered the first two. And so
on. You will find that you are spending almost all of your initial
practice periods on the fit-and-freeze drill. So be it. There is no
point in working on how to block until your players know exactly whom
to block. A great block on the wrong defender is worthless. After they
can fit and freeze a play correctly, run it at full speed. If you have
rookies who are still learning how to hit, make it a hitting-tackling
scrimmage. If the play fails in scrimmage, find out whose man made the
tackle and check that blocker's knowledge of his assignments.
As the season progresses, if you have not put in too many plays, you
will be able to move on to the finer points of the blocks and the
timing of handoffs and such. The typical football coaching staff has
done an extremely poor job of teaching, or even deciding, blocking
assignments. They are instead wasting time on ritualistic nonsense like
hitting sleds or ramming their shoulders into blocking dummies really
hard. All you have to teach in the beginning about blocking technique
is the rules and which side to put your helmet on. In the case of a
double-team block, teach keeping shoulders and hips touching your
teammate. The combination of vast knowledge of their blocking
assignments and half-vast blocking technique will work. The opposite
will not.
95% of the failures are from not knowing assignments. Work on fixing
that first. Then, when that's squared away, you can work on the other
5%, which stem from blocking-technique errors and mismatches. I am
assuming here that your players are not afraid to be on the field. In
football, some timid players will literally step out of the way of
defenders. That has nothing to do with knowing assignments or blocking
technique skills. They are simply afraid of the opponents and do not
want to be there. These guys are like the lion in the Wizard of Oz.
They need courage. Until they get it, put them at flanker. The rest of
your players are like the scarecrow. They needs brains when it comes to
knowing whom to block. In the climactic scene of The Wizard of Oz, the
scarecrow gets his brain in the form of a diploma and demonstrates it
by reciting the Pythagorean Theorem---The square of the hypotenuse of a
right triangle is equal to the sum of the squares of the sides. Your
players need to be able to put on a similar knowledge demonstration
regarding their blocking assignments versus the 4-3, 6-2, 3-3-5, and
4-4 for your off-tackle play.
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