Wednesday, 28 December 2005

St. Louis Rams Shallow Cross Concepts

Posted by Emily Listiane john 18:59, under | No comments

While not as prolific as they were just a few years ago, the Rams under offensive coordinator and head coach Mike Martz were maybe the best passing offense of all time. They set a gazillion scoring and passing records, and now teams like the Chiefs and Cardinals run their offense verbatim and others like the Bengals run extremely similar schemes. The offense itself goes way back to the Don Coryell and Sid Gillman days, as interpreted by guys like...

St. Louis Rams Shallow Cross Concepts

Posted by Emily Listiane john 18:59, under | No comments

While not as prolific as they were just a few years ago, the Rams under offensive coordinator and head coach Mike Martz were maybe the best passing offense of all time. They set a gazillion scoring and passing records, and now teams like the Chiefs and Cardinals run their offense verbatim and others like the Bengals run extremely similar schemes. The offense itself goes way back to the Don Coryell and Sid Gillman days, as interpreted by guys like...

Corner Routes/3-Verticals

Posted by Emily Listiane john 17:13, under | No comments

Just wanted to mention that I watched the bowl game between Arizona St and Rutgers, and Arizona St used the 3-vertical play at least 10 if not 15 times. Rutgers runs a lot of Cover 2 (HC Schiano came from Miami where he did the same thing) and this is maybe the best play against it. They ran it from all kinds of sets, from gun, with play action, etc. ASU racked up over 600 yards of offense and I swear at least 200 or 250 and several TDs came off this one pass play. Check out this old article I did on the play he...

Corner Routes/3-Verticals

Posted by Emily Listiane john 17:13, under | No comments

Just wanted to mention that I watched the bowl game between Arizona St and Rutgers, and Arizona St used the 3-vertical play at least 10 if not 15 times. Rutgers runs a lot of Cover 2 (HC Schiano came from Miami where he did the same thing) and this is maybe the best play against it. They ran it from all kinds of sets, from gun, with play action, etc. ASU racked up over 600 yards of offense and I swear at least 200 or 250 and several TDs came off this one pass play. Check out this old article I did on the play he...

Tuesday, 6 December 2005

Norm Chow on Playcalling

Posted by Emily Listiane john 09:58, under | No comments

Grabbed this from this article here. But this was too good so it got its own article. We all like to discuss coverages, etc but this is extremely true:We are going to try to take advantage of what the other team is doing on defense. During the course of a game, with the sophistication of defenses, coverages are disguised and the use of zone blitzes and fire blitzes become very hard to beat. We’d be lying if we said we sat up in the box and knew what coverages were being run. What we try to do is take a portion of the football field, the weak flat...

Norm Chow on Playcalling

Posted by Emily Listiane john 09:58, under | No comments

Grabbed this from this article here. But this was too good so it got its own article. We all like to discuss coverages, etc but this is extremely true:We are going to try to take advantage of what the other team is doing on defense. During the course of a game, with the sophistication of defenses, coverages are disguised and the use of zone blitzes and fire blitzes become very hard to beat. We’d be lying if we said we sat up in the box and knew what coverages were being run. What we try to do is take a portion of the football field, the weak flat...

Airraid Info

Posted by Emily Listiane john 07:30, under | No comments

I'm pretty swamped the next couple of weeks, so I'll do the "lazy blogger" technique and post some links and info, this time all about the Airraid offense, in honor of the Mike Leach article that came out yesterday.If you want to learn more I suggest checking out the Valdosta St/Chris Hatcher tapes on the Airraid offense and routes for the Y receiver/tight end.Practice, Drills, Teaching:Nike Coach of the Year Clinic - Hal Mumme (1999)Nike Coach of the Year Clinic - Mike Leach (1998) - Great articleHal Mumme Practice PlanSchemes and articles:Hal...

Airraid Info

Posted by Emily Listiane john 07:30, under | No comments

I'm pretty swamped the next couple of weeks, so I'll do the "lazy blogger" technique and post some links and info, this time all about the Airraid offense, in honor of the Mike Leach article that came out yesterday.If you want to learn more I suggest checking out the Valdosta St/Chris Hatcher tapes on the Airraid offense and routes for the Y receiver/tight end.Practice, Drills, Teaching:Nike Coach of the Year Clinic - Hal Mumme (1999)Nike Coach of the Year Clinic - Mike Leach (1998) - Great articleHal Mumme Practice PlanSchemes and articles:Hal...

Sunday, 4 December 2005

Mike Leach Goes Deep

Posted by Emily Listiane john 17:14, under | No comments

Fascinating article from the New York Times magazine about Mike Leach, Texas Tech head coach. The article can be found here.The author is Michael Lewis, who wrote Moneyball (one of the best sports books around), and he gets a lot more detail than the typical bio. Leach certainly comes across as an odd character--particularly for a football coach--but it's insightful. There are also some funny comments, for example how Tech's QB Cody Hodges was shortlisted for the Maxwell Award before the season, despite not having actually started a game! Here...

Mike Leach Goes Deep

Posted by Emily Listiane john 17:14, under | No comments

Fascinating article from the New York Times magazine about Mike Leach, Texas Tech head coach. The article can be found here.The author is Michael Lewis, who wrote Moneyball (one of the best sports books around), and he gets a lot more detail than the typical bio. Leach certainly comes across as an odd character--particularly for a football coach--but it's insightful. There are also some funny comments, for example how Tech's QB Cody Hodges was shortlisted for the Maxwell Award before the season, despite not having actually started a game! Here...

Friday, 2 December 2005

Reading the "square" to determine coverage

Posted by Emily Listiane john 14:11, under | No comments

I didn't invent this, but thought I'd pass it along. Sorry that I don't have any diagrams, those would help. From what I remember a lot of this came from Lindy Infante, but it's been used by lots of great passing coaches for a long time. This deescription is close to what I've always taught:POST-SNAP READS (“READING THE SQUARE”):The most important area for determining secondary coverages is the middle of the field about 15 to 25 yards deep and about 2 yards inside of each hash. We call this area the “square”.We normally read the “square” in our...

Reading the "square" to determine coverage

Posted by Emily Listiane john 14:11, under | No comments

I didn't invent this, but thought I'd pass it along. Sorry that I don't have any diagrams, those would help. From what I remember a lot of this came from Lindy Infante, but it's been used by lots of great passing coaches for a long time. This deescription is close to what I've always taught:POST-SNAP READS (“READING THE SQUARE”):The most important area for determining secondary coverages is the middle of the field about 15 to 25 yards deep and about 2 yards inside of each hash. We call this area the “square”.We normally read the “square” in our...

Thursday, 1 December 2005

Should you be worried about avian flu?

Posted by Emily Listiane john 16:33, under | No comments

Richard Posner says yes:The world in general and the United States in particular are unprepared for a flu pandemic. Although the current strain of avian flu was discovered eight years ago, vaccine development and production are just beginning, along with stockpiling of Tamiflu. Apparently there is at present only enough vaccine for 1 percent of the U.S. population. Roche has only a limited capacity for producing Tamiflu and, as mentioned, is reluctant to license other pharmaceutical firms to produce the vaccine. The President recently announced...

Should you be worried about avian flu?

Posted by Emily Listiane john 16:33, under | No comments

Richard Posner says yes:The world in general and the United States in particular are unprepared for a flu pandemic. Although the current strain of avian flu was discovered eight years ago, vaccine development and production are just beginning, along with stockpiling of Tamiflu. Apparently there is at present only enough vaccine for 1 percent of the U.S. population. Roche has only a limited capacity for producing Tamiflu and, as mentioned, is reluctant to license other pharmaceutical firms to produce the vaccine. The President recently announced...

Pages 361234 »

Tags

Labels