Having Fun and Being Competitive Are NOT Mutually Exclusive
First
let's start off by establishing, you can have fun, play all your kids,
teach great fundamentals and play well (win), these aren't somehow
mutually exclusive goals like some soccer moms or perennial losing
coaches would like you to believe. But I've also been challenged by
some of the win-at-all costs guys or the skeptical negative naybobs of
negativism that you can't interject fun into everything you do in youth
football. One of these cheerful guys once challenged me to make an
angle form fit and freeze tackling drill fun.
How To Interject Fun Into the Most Mundane Drill
While
this very important drill is probably one of the few drills we do every
day in practice, it can be a very vanilla and bland drill. These are
the EXACT type of drills you HAVE to make fun, otherwise the kids end
up just going through the motions on the drill instead of getting the
full benefit of it.
First, let's describe the Angle Form Fit
Tackling Drill: 2 players facing the same direction (towards the coach)
about 10-12 yards apart. The coach is about 7 -10 yards in front of the
players, he is standing in-between the 2 players 10 yard spacing. The
"defender" is in his defensive position stance, whatever that may be.
The "offensive" player is standing in a 2 point stance. On "go" each
player jogs at about 1/3 speed toward the coach, so each player is
running at about a 45 degree angle. The players converge just in front
of the coach, with the 'defender" executing a "fit" form tackle on the
offensive player. The coaching points we are looking for are: defenders
feet nearly on top of the feet of the "offensive" player, knees bent,
feet just wider than shoulder length apart, head up and in front of the
offensive player, backside shoulder making contact with the offensive
players midsection, and arms wrapped completely around the offensive
players midsection. Upon contact each player freezes and the coach
corrects any mistakes, once the coach taps the players on the head or
says "go" they can come off the "freeze" and go to the end of the line.
Pace is Key
You
can do this at a pace of 4-5 per minute; I do mine at a pace of 6-10
per minute. Do this in very small groups of 6 or 8, get several groups
going and remember to alternate which line is offense and defense so
the kids get used to tackling from both angles. This drill is part of
our dynamic warm up, where our goal is to get blood flow to the muscles
as well as teach a very important football skill. You can't accomplish
this goal if the pace is not quick and the lines are too long. The pace
should be such that the kids are breathing a bit heavier than normal,
but not winded.
To interject some "fun" into this very important
but monotonous drill is fairly simple. Divide the group into 2 teams of
3-4 players each. Team A is in line 1, team B is line 2. Alternate each
rep the line that is the designated tackler. See which team can get to
5 perfect "fits" first. A perfect "fit" is a repetition where every
coaching point is met perfectly by the tackler. As the kids get better,
move the number to 10 perfect fits. The losing team has to do 5
pushups. Another way to do this is to see how many perfect "fits" in a
row each team can do. Once a team makes a mistake they have to start
back at zero. The first team to 10 perfect fits in a row, wins, with
the losing team doing 5 pushups. Another way to do this drill is to
have a team record. Keep the teams the same every practice and see
which team can set the record of the most perfect "fits" in row.
Why it Works
Youth
football players love competition, setting records and making their
counterparts do pushups, so adding this into a drill will make them
more focused and motivated to do the drill correctly. It also exerts
some peer pressure on the players in their respective groups to stay
focused, as no one wants to be the player that breaks the streak.
Fun is Your Friend
Remember
that fun is your friend. Competition is just one component of many that
you can use to make your football practices more fun. The book covers
many more. Making your practices fun without giving up anything is just
good coaching, Not only will your players be more attentive, your
attendance and retention numbers will be off the charts.
I'm
always perplexed by coaches that e-mail me about attendance issues or
retention problems. While much of it can be solved through the
expectation setting process and player contracts detailed in the book,
a lot of the problem is solved by having great practice plans and
interjecting a fun component to each drill.
Since moving to this
practice methodology we have consistently had about 80% of the kids
with perfect practice attendance. Our drops are almost non-existent and
our retention numbers (kids who sign up again the following year) range
from 90-95%. This season we have 97.5% of the kids back from two teams
I coached last year.
Building the Emotional Bank Account
Another
thing interjecting fun into your drills and practice does for your
youth football team is it builds up your "emotional bank account" with
your parents. Steven Covey talks about an imaginary bank account we all
have with each other, where we are always making deposits and taking
withdrawals. By having interjecting fun and the enthusiasm it generates
into your football practices, you are making deposits into that
emotional bank account of your parents. When it comes time to do
something they don't like, like moving Junior from tailback to tight
end, (making a withdrawal) the parents are more apt to be accepting if
you have made a bunch of deposits along the way.
Fun is your friend; use it to make your youth football team better.
Dave
has a passion for developing youth coaches so they can in turn develop
teams that are competitive and well organized. He is a Nike "Coach of
the Year" Designate and speaks nationwide at Coaches Clinics. His book
"Winning Youth Football a Step by Step Plan" was endorsed by Tom
Osborne and Dave Rimington.
With over 15 years of hands-on
experience as a youth coach, Dave has developed a detailed systematic
approach to developing youth players and teams. His personal teams to
using this system to date have won 94% of their games in 5 Different
Leagues.