Big 12 Football News
You've scored tickets on the
fifty yard line for your favorite team, and you're excited to go, when it hits
you: who's going to drive? You have to get to the stadium somehow, but what
about tailgating? What about celebrating the win afterwards? You can't drink
and drive, so what can you do? Why not hired a limousine to take you and your
friends to the big game without worrying about how you are getting down there?
Limousines can be a great way to take an entire group to a football game and
still be able to enjoy the evening.
Many of you probably watched that
incredible Texas Tech-Texas game Saturday evening like I did. The sheer
entertainment value of the game alone was worth the time investment, with
Michael Crabtree scoring the winning touchdown on a thrilling play with just 1
second left on the clock. Mike Leach is a story unto itself, definitely a man
that follows the beat of a different drummer. On the Texas side of the ball,
athletes abound and Mack Brown is a true gentleman, a modern statesman of the game. sports chat place college football
As youth football coaches what
can we learn from Coach Leach? First let's look for a moment at Coach Leach's
background. With the exception of one year of sitting on the bench of his High
School football team as a Junior, he never played organized football. He got
his Bachelors at BYU and then his Law Degree from Pepperdine. At age 25,
married, with his second child on the way he decides he wants to be a College
Football coach. Yeah right, After stops at College of the Desert, Cal Poly,
Iowa Wesleyan, Valdosta State, Finland and Kentucky he is now the head coach of
Texas Tech, Not bad for a self described "Christian with serious obedience
issues". He seems to look at things from a slightly different perspective,
maybe even a sort of an "outsiders" viewpoint.
Leach does it with quarterbacks
no one else wants, 6 foot kids with offers to just Tech and maybe a mid major
school. He has started a number of quarterbacks for just one season, many being
fifth year seniors like BJ Symons, who passed for 52 touchdowns in his only
year as a starter. The following season Symons was replaced by another fifth
year senior, Sonny Cumbie, who passed for 4.742 yards, the sixth best in NCAA
history. This season Cody Hodges a fifth year senior with four years of bench sitting
experience is leading Tech's quest for it's first ever Big 12 Title and even a
shot at the National Championship. college sports forums
A torn ACL put linebacker Orie
Lemon on the sideline last season but he is fully recovered and primed to be
one of the best in the nation. The rest of the Cowboy defense is going to be a
little rough around the edges, linebackers James Thomas and Justin Gent each
had less than 30 tackles last season. Strong safety Markelle Martin is the only
returning starter in the defensive backfield, Malcolm Murry will replace
Parrish Fox who was the best defensive back last season. Defensive end Ugo
Chinasa had 6' sacks last season but no other player on the defensive line
managed more than 3 sacks. Richetti Jones was highly touted coming out of high school
but has yet to produce on the college level, it's about time he does.
When coaching youth football does
this mean you should commit to throwing the ball 60 times a game and widening
your splits to 6-9 feet with your football team? No, not at all. In youth
football, we don't get to practice 6 days a week nearly year round or cut
anyone (most teams), Texas Tech doesn't have to worry about getting every
player into the game regardless of game circumstances or have squad sizes of 25
instead of 150. Your kids aren't going to be able to widen splits out to 9
feet, when you are starting an nonathletic future computer nerd at one
offensive line spot and the future tuba player of the marching band at another.
Those kind of kids can't fill a 2 foot gap let alone a 6-9 foot gap. Most youth
football teams aren't going to have 2-3 good well trained backup quarterbacks
waiting in the wings for when the starter gets hurt or is sick. Even your best
quarterback attending every QB camp known to man isn't going to throw to a
streaking wideout and hit him with pinpoint accuracy on the outside tip of his
sideline shoulder on a 25 yard sideline streak route like Tech consistently
does ( impossible to defend). But what we youth football coaches can learn from
Leach is to compete, you don't have the biggest and most athletic team in your
league, but you have to be different. You don't have to have 60 football plays
in your playbook, but what you do need are complementary plays that you execute
to absolute perfection. That's why my teams run the Single Wing offense and why
we have a limited number of 100% complementary play series we perfect every
season.
Visit Here - big 12 basketball standings
Comments
Post a Comment