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Texas Edge Coach LaAllan Clark - Pass Rush Games Philosophy/Design/Coaching Points & 3 Man Games Philosophy - Change from 1v1 pass rush - Keep the OL off balance - Helps improve 1v1 pass rush moves - Attack a weak offensive lineman Design - Attack offensive protection - Force a...

15,644 Aufrufe • vor 5 Monaten •via X (Twitter)

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Introducing the “Get” action in basketball to lacrosse! The “Get” is a 2man action where a player passes the ball to another player and sprints to go “Get” it back on a handoff. This action has similar concepts and reads to pick and roll, but the picker is actually the ball handler! In lacrosse, we have been experimenting with Gets because it creates so many interesting situations and reads for the players. The way we teach it in small sided games is to have one offensive player declare “I’m shut” and the defense has to face-guard him. From there we pick for the shut off player trying to spring them free for the Get. The ball handler has to engage and control their defender, anticipating the shut player trying to get open. The shut player can backdoor if being overplayed towards the get (rejecting the get), receive a flip, or continue curling around the ball getting open for a late pass. The ball handler can feed the reject, flip the ball, or fake the flip to attack the goal or make a late pass to the shut payer curling to the goal. I’ve seen examples of this run in men’s and women’s DI lacrosse at Ohio State and Northwestern, respectively and I’ve run this myself when I was coaching HS girls lacrosse. You will also see on this reel a sick application for Gets vs. a common big-little invert coverage where the short stick doesn’t go behind with his man and plays “Safety” in front of the net. Gets are fun for the players, are incredible for teaching your players 2man game on and off ball, dealing with double teams, and creativity with passing, and can be used to score goals. I hope you enjoy it! Can you think of other applications for Gets?

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Guys think Wilt had no skill and he just ran and dunked on small bigs. Reality: Wilt played 828 games against Hall of Fame centers/PFs Shaq played 224 games against Hall of Fame centers/PFs Quickest to 10k points: Wilt Chamberlain 236 games Jordan 303 games Quickest to 20k points: Wilt Chamberlain 499 games Jordan 620 games Quickest to 30k points: Wilt Chamberlain 941 games Jordan 960 games The league average height today in 30 teams is 6'7 the league average height in 1962 when Wilt averaged 50 points was 6'6 Wow, a 1 inch difference.. In 1962 there were 9 teams and every team had a big man. Every team had at least one center that was at least 6'10 except for one team here are the details: Chicago Packers, Walt Bellamy 6'11 Celtics, Bill Russell 6'10 Nationals, Swede Halbrook 7'3 Knicks, Phil Jordon 6'10, Darrall Imhoff6'10 Lakers, Ray Felix 6'11 Royals, Bevo Nordman 6'10 Pistons, Walter Duke 7'0 Hawks, Clyde Lovellette 6'9 They had No 3 point line therefore more crowded lanes. Illegal zone defense was never enforced, and one of the most physical and fastest eras had them running in chuck taylors too. Wilt had a fade away shot probably invented the fade away, finger roll, hook, and dunks. Note blocks and steals were not counted and if they were he would be the quintuple, quadruple, triple doubles king. Wilt had a game where he blocked 24 shots!!! 24!! Wilt would DOMINATE in ANY era. Put some RESPECT on the greatest big man of all time 👊 (halftime_content IG)

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6-Man Protection – X’s & O’s Diagram Style (Half-Slide Example – most commonly taught by Bobby Acosta) Basic Alignment (Shotgun Example) Offense •LT – LG – C – RG – RT •RB aligned opposite slide call •4 receivers in route Defense (example) •4 Down DL •2 Linebackers (Mike + Will) 🔄 Step 1: Declare the Mike The QB or Center identifies the Mike linebacker. That sets: •The blocking count for the offensive line •The direction of the slide Example call: “Mike 52! Slide Right!” 🔁 Step 2: The Half-Slide Rules 👉 Slide Side (Right in this example) •RG → inside gap first •RT → next inside threat •C → helps play-side A-gap They are zone-protecting gaps, not specific defenders. 👉 Backside (Man Side) •LT → Man on defensive end •LG → Man on defensive tackle They block big-on-big. Step 3: Running Back Responsibility The RB: 1.Scans inside first opposite the slide 3.Picks up first linebacker or edge blitzer 4.If no threat → check release Coaching point often emphasized: “Inside-out, most dangerous first.” 📊 How It Handles Pressure ✅ Handles 4-man rush easily ✅ Handles 5-man pressure cleanly ⚠️ Versus 6-man pressure: QB must throw hot or adjust protection. 🎯 Why This Works •Strong interior wall •Backside edge secured •Flexible vs. common blitzes •Allows deeper route concepts To request for the OC Google Doc Workbook Drive. Please Fill Out Form

𝒞𝑜𝒶𝒸𝒽 𝐵𝑜𝒷𝒷𝓎 𝒜𝒸𝑜𝓈𝓉𝒶

12,424 Aufrufe • vor 4 Monaten

Seattle Seahawks HC Mike Macdonald - Scouting Pass Protections - "You're really just trying to get what their rule is to start when they leave the huddle. What do I want to present them with because how am I going to anticipate how they're going to react based on the looks they've gotten in the past, the looks we've given them and then we can go to work." - "You definitely have to account for 7 man protection. You'll find the more you blitz, the more 7 man you're going to see. - "Those are decisions you have to make when you're building your plan. We know that we're getting this protection when they give us this formation and we got a sweet pressure that will hit them to do it, there is a spot and a time and place for that." -"There is a time & place for saying I'm not sure when they're going to go to 7 man, even if we're in 5 man rush, our dudes can get there. We're going to at least have a couple 1 on 1s that we can win. Let's not overdo it with all these checks and all this other BS so our guys can just go out there and execute the call, there is a space for that as well." -"And then there is also a space for hey we're brining two off the edge right here, they're going to have this picked up, why even run against the wall, let's check out of it and go to rush and coverage and double 2/3 guys running a route. Those are the questions you want to ask yourself throughout the week and a lot of times it comes down to whether or not you can anticipate them being in that particular thing."

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Caleb Banks, DT, Florida Age: 23.1 Height: 6'6" Weight: 335 lbs Arms: 35" Current Consensus Rank: 24th 🟨 Market Share Adjusted Production: 67th percentile 34 Games 929 Career Snaps 60 Career Pressures 7 Sacks 48 Tackles 10.5 Tackles For Loss 1 batted pass 4 penalties 🟧 Career PFF Grade: 47th Percentile 🟩 Career PFF Pass Rush Grade: 77th Percentile 10.6% Career Pass Rush Win Rate 10.7% PRWR Last 2 Seasons 🟩 Win Rate: 83rd Percentile 🟨 Career Pass Rush Grade on True Pass Sets: 66th Percentile 18.0% Career Win Rate on TPS 17.7% PRWR on TPS Last 2 Seasons 🟦 True Pass Set Win Rate: 88th Percentile 🟥 PFF Career Run Defense Grade: 25th Percentile 🟥 3.2% Career Run Stop Rate: 1st Percentile 🚩 🟥 25.5% Missed Tackle Rate: 0.7 percentile 🟥 PFF Tackling Grade: 4th Percentile 🟥 Tackles For Losses: 8th Percentile Player Analysis: Caleb Banks has flashes of a super star. He can move laterally and jump a gap at the snap in a blink or he can bull rush right through blockers with ease. The high-end plays are truly incredible. Rare to see a player of that size move so fluidly and then come back with the raw power he possesses on the next play. The flashes are what will sell teams, but Banks has a ways to go before he's that player on a consistent basis. Too often, Banks plays with poor leverage and conditioning (foot injury and weight played a factor). When he's playing too tall, his get-off and power are robbed. Then you've got inconsistent hand usage. He will swing wildly and hit nothing. Leaving his chest open and making himself easy to block. The combination of inconsistent pad level and hand usage leads to having trouble against double teams as he can be displaced and moved down the line. Banks' profile shows pass rush upside with inconsistent run defense and one of the worst tacklers we've ever seen. Banks leaves his feet and lunges or will completely stop his feet and reach for the ball carrier (around the shoulders) and both lead to big missed tackles. These misses have severely affected his overall production. Banks has never played more than 422 snaps in a season and if he's going to become a full time starter in the NFL, he's going to need to stay healthy and improve at the little things. He's a 'Home Run or Strikeout' player right now and at age 23 on Draft Night, he's one of only 4 players in the current consensus top 32 that'll be over that mark. If he pans out, it'll be easy to see why. If his highlights were the whole story, Banks would be a top 12 lock. Instead, you have to wonder if he'll ever reach those heights.

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