if they don't score, we win
in theory it's a 50/50 split, you have offense and then you have defense
to a non football or sports fan in general they would think you're superstitious if you just busted that out on them
so what separates the two? Has anyone really thought about this?
Gotta be able to score. Offenses in college prove that a defense heavy team with no offense cannot win titles. If Bama was a one dimensional team they could not have beaten Clemson.
in theory it's a 50/50 split, you have offense and then you have defense
to a non football or sports fan in general they would think you're superstitious if you just busted that out on them
so what separates the two? Has anyone really thought about this?
in theory it's a 50/50 split, you have offense and then you have defense
to a non football or sports fan in general they would think you're superstitious if you just busted that out on them
so what separates the two? Has anyone really thought about this?
I prefer my defense to utilize a 'bend don't break' style, conceding small chunks of yardage, protecting against big plays, and hoping for red zone miscues by the opposition's offense.
When your offense gets on the field, take the play clock down to under ten seconds on every play and utilize the horizontal passing game, setting up the deep ball. The goal is the shorten the game as much as possible. This way you have a puncher's chance to win in the 4th quarter.
I prefer my defense to utilize a 'bend don't break' style, conceding small chunks of yardage, protecting against big plays, and hoping for red zone miscues by the opposition's offense.
When your offense gets on the field, take the play clock down to under ten seconds on every play and utilize the horizontal passing game, setting up the deep ball. The goal is the shorten the game as much as possible. This way you have a puncher's chance to win in the 4th quarter.
Whoop - that sounds brilliant - almost counter-intuitive - but brilliant.
Now, if we can just find a brilliant coach smart enough to try it - and stick with it. It's gotta work.
Eventually.
Right?
I prefer my defense to utilize a 'bend don't break' style, conceding small chunks of yardage, protecting against big plays, and hoping for red zone miscues by the opposition's offense.
When your offense gets on the field, take the play clock down to under ten seconds on every play and utilize the horizontal passing game, setting up the deep ball. The goal is the shorten the game as much as possible. This way you have a puncher's chance to win in the 4th quarter.
Whoop - that sounds brilliant - almost counter-intuitive - but brilliant.
Now, if we can just find a brilliant coach smart enough to try it - and stick with it. It's gotta work.
Eventually.
Right?
It's all depends on a systematic strength and conditioning program designed to add bulk to your athletes.
Hey Arch, I've got this all written down on hundreds of sheets of loose leaf paper.
If only there was some kind of over-sized folder contraption to keep all my papers together.
Any ideas?
I prefer my defense to utilize a 'bend don't break' style, conceding small chunks of yardage, protecting against big plays, and hoping for red zone miscues by the opposition's offense.
When your offense gets on the field, take the play clock down to under ten seconds on every play and utilize the horizontal passing game, setting up the deep ball. The goal is the shorten the game as much as possible. This way you have a puncher's chance to win in the 4th quarter.
Whoop - that sounds brilliant - almost counter-intuitive - but brilliant.
Now, if we can just find a brilliant coach smart enough to try it - and stick with it. It's gotta work.
Eventually.
Right?
It's all depends on a systematic strength and conditioning program designed to add bulk to your athletes.
Hey Arch, I've got this all written down on hundreds of sheets of loose leaf paper.
If only there was some kind of over-sized folder contraption to keep all my papers together.
Any ideas?
I asked around. Most replies indicated you might want to put all those papers in a binder. That sounds like a viable option!