Showing posts with label LSU. Show all posts
Showing posts with label LSU. Show all posts

Thursday, February 21, 2013

More Resources: Pelini

 
 Video breakdown for installation of Pelini's system  
 Fall install plan (Days 1 -7)

Entire folder of this coaching study is available here >
https://docs.google.com/folder/d/0B3p5wkumv513N2QwZDhkYjUtMzhiZi00ZWIyLTk3YjEtYjkzZTA5YWE4NzVm/edit?usp=sharing

Thursday, November 29, 2012

Under Defense - Pete Jenkins



The ultimate front against 2-back offenses.
 Learn Saban's method of using Under by the one and only Pete Jenkins.


For more great resources on Under, check out Coach Jerry Gordon's book 

Sunday, December 4, 2011

NC: Rematch Bama vs LSU


DSC_1633


Well, its set.....the SEC rematch between #1 LSU and #2 Alabama.  While it may not be technically "fair" from an LSU perspective to have to face off against a team it already defeated on the road in regular season, I feel from a football perspective, these truly are the two best teams in the country.  

As a fan of matchups, I really didn't want to see LSU play Oklahoma State (though it would be entertaining), as I don't feel the Cowboys really had enough dimension to take on this LSU team.  We've included a concise recap of the first meeting this season below (more analysis likely to come).  For what its worth, it should be noted that the majority of LSU's starters (with the exception of QB & 2 LBs) are all underclassmen, so barring a lot of early declarations for the NFL draft, you have a team poised for a run in 2012, too.  Alabama, too, starts a good majority of underclassmen (meaning, this is really about recruiting supremacy more than schemes and strategy).

Poetically enough (for this blog), TCU squares off against Louisiana Tech in the Poinsettia Bowl, in what should be an exciting matchup.  On a personal note, I'll likely be treated to the surprise switch of teams for the Jewella Slumdog, otherwise known as the Independence Bowl, featuring Mizzou and John Shoop's North Carolina Tarheels.



food for thought (and possibly more later)

Saturday, September 24, 2011

Greg Studrawa: Zone from the Gun

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LSU’s current Offensive Coordinator, Greg Studrawa, provides a clinic of zone philosophy from the gun (circa 2006).

Friday, May 13, 2011

film study


have at it….[UPDATED 2013]
2010 Auburn O vs Oregon D
2010 Auburn O vs LSU D – 1st Half


2010 Auburn O vs LSU D – 2nd Half
2010 Texas A&M O vs La Tech D
2011 Baylor O vs TCU D
2009 Houston O – 1st Practice

2011 Baylor O vs TAMU D 2009 Alabama O vs LSU D

Monday, June 7, 2010

Important Practice Principles - Pete Jenkins

DL NFL/NCAA Coaching legend, Pete Jenkins (Philadelphia Eagles DL), sharing fundamental principles to be successful with practice.

Important Practice Principles
1. Coaching with purpose: Players and Coaches should be on the same page
2. Practice every day with toughness, speed, and intensity
3. Practice what’s important to be successful
4. Simulation is the key
5. Consistency regardless of the opponent
6. Have an advanced plan (weather, school, schedule, etc)
7. Practice unusual schemes early and often (don’t wait until the end of the week)
8. Practice the obvious situations over and again
9. Stress and emphasize the kicking game
10. The questions we all share: what to teach, how to teach, how long and how often

Identify and define positional needs within your scheme of offense and defense



Components of the Pell Method of Teaching Football
The skill – football skills both mental and physical relative to positional needs and successful execution

The drill – the teaching process designed to help your player understand and become physically proficient at skills and techniques needed to play winning football

The time – based on two factors:


1. How well or how poorly players are executing
  • Good execution – polish the skill
  • Poor execution – coach and rep skill
2. In season, the specific nature of the opponents offense or defense




Monday, November 2, 2009

SEC: LSU @ Bama

One thing this game will teach us, is that;

Tigers HATE Cinnamon.........

Bama will win this game by no less than 10, doing nothing fancy, and will be rather bland in their football seasoning.

While both teams have their issues with offensive production this year, each has a peculiar ailment. Bama struggles with inconsistency and lack of play-making ability/decisions with Greg McElroy, they have absolutely no problems running the ball. While LSU struggles with consistently moving the chains and distributing the ball, Jordan Jefferson is providing competent play-making ability.

The matchup to watch will be Bama sitting in two-high defenses between the 30’s, forcing (daring) LSU to try to run the ball (hoping to bottle up any big play potential of LaFell and Tolliver). The problem they’ll face is the matchup of Terrence Cody vs T-Bob Hebert. Herbert will be owned by both Cody and his relief hitter, Lorenzo Washington, as the Tigers will struggle at the line of scrimmage, leaving all-world linebackers McClain and Hightower fast-flowing and free to handle screens and crossers.

While Chad Jones has been having a phenomenal season following up on the fire he started on the field last year, containing Julio Jones may be a task too tall for the Junior. Expect a heavy dose of Ingram and Grant as the Tide rises quietly to a comfortable lead and rides it to the end of regulation.

........but they LOVE pepper!

For LSU to remain competitive and put the Tide on the defensive, they will require Les Miles’ patented Cajun seasoning of gimmicks (“wild tiger”), misdirection (play-action/reverses), and voodoo (4th downs & special teams fakes).

These teams meeting is always intriguing as it usually sets the tone for recruiting wars in the Gulf South. For the second year straight, I don’t see the Tigers coming out of Tuscaloosa on the happy end of a beat down.

Sunday, July 19, 2009

Last 7 on 7 Competition of the Summer

While the end result wasn't pretty (1-3), there were some positives to come away with the competition this weekend. We had incredibly consistent play from our corner and free safety, and our LBs were hammered on fundamentals of pass drops and route-reading (apparently neglected from Spring ball to this weekend), and 2 underclassmen showing up and battling on offense (one freshman and one sophomore) with contributions, and two key offensive linemen getting extensive drill work accomplished (instead of just standing around for 7 on 7).

It is what it is.

Many "issues" were a result of complete neglect and a lack of preseverance ('mental toughness') that cannot be short-cut (see off-season weight room).



(FS) J.Robertson & (CB) K.Pitre

Wednesday, July 18, 2007

Best Quarterback Instruction................EVER!

Okay....so we're drawing near August.

Obviously, it signals the time for a new football season.

After going the last 7 weeks or so of off-and-on practices and 7-on-7 matchups, the kids are receiving a week break of organized activities.

In the first year of a new (spread / 5-wide) offense, and with marginal development in our quarterbacks....it was decided early in the summer that we were sending our quarterback to the Peyton Manning Passing Camp or the Darin Slack Quarterback Academy in July.

We were blessed to have a new player arrive via basketball in early June who showed considerable promise, so we moved #1 QB to defense where he would make the greater impact and solidify a key position.

As the date grew closer, we had two candidates that were going to go. Two weeks out, we had yet another promising candidate arrive (freshman) with loads of potential.


I was supposed to be helping out at the Les Miles Youth Camp Tuesday night, but committed an hour before (asked) to take the quarterbacks down to the Slack camp.

Probably the best decision I've made in a while (can't remember the last GOOD decision I made).

I started making arrangements to take our promising young athletes to the camp, got a great deal into the planning, then realized that I had lost my wallet two weeks earlier......kinda hard to check into a hotel without your ID or drivers license. This now helped pull in the services of our offensive coordinator, who was supposed to be attending the Louisiana High School Coaches Clinic in Baton Rouge during this time. It was probably best that things worked out the way they did, though.

Day OF, as the 11th hour approached, our Freshman phenom was no where to be found and his parents were talking of moving to another school. Plan B! Go with the former QB who is now playing well on defense....well, lets just take him instead - we'll make a good backup better. Calls to his parents reveal he is planning on moving out of the state!

Cripes! Get back to fundamentals.

We ended up taking our starting quarterback who had a shoulder injury for more than 3 weeks, and his #1 receiver (who would now be our #2 QB in a pinch).
The conversation at 20 minutes to departure went something along the lines of, "Good morning.....Get up.....you're going to Lafayette for two days .......we're picking you up in 15 minutes!"

Two good student-athletes that were able to receive top notch quality instruction at the hands of unequivocally THE BEST football instructor in the world, Darin Slack.

My friend and I were greeted by a enthusiastic Coach Slack, who knew exactly who we were (from submitting video of our QBs prior for analysis), and let us know that this was the beginning of a partnership / relationship in the development of young men....who happen to be quarterbacks.

The first 45 minutes of introduction were the most passionate arguments for athletic and character development I have ever heard. The kids were pumped and steered in the proper path to achieve greatness.

The next 24 hours would be filled with hands-on instruction and correction of the proper mechanics and thought-process for quarterbacks. All the quarterbacks had to be stripped of their ineffecient and sometimes dangerous throwing habits. Not only were they taught how to correctly throw, they were taught WHY this was an efficient method for throwing - as well as being able to pinpoint when and where errant throws happen.







Of course, one cannot travel on I-10 without taking in some of the finest cajun cuisine.......


For a more complete write-up of our encounter with Coach Slack in Lafayette, check out;
http://coachhuey.proboards.com/index.cgi?action=display&board=general&thread=7895&page=1



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