Monday night was a great college football game. For whatever
reason, I enjoy college ball so much more than the NFL version. Normally I root
for teams that I either feel an allegiance to (SDSU, Texas A&M) or to
coaches who have helped me out over the years (changes as jobs change). I don’t
particularly like either Nick Saban or Lane Kiffin, but I certainly respect
Coach Saban’s process, not to mention his results. So last night, I went purely
SEC rooting.
Last week I picked Alabama in a close one, mostly due to
their Big Game experience and Coach Saban. I was glad to see that special teams
played a huge part in the outcome, with one of the best-executed onside kicks
I’ve seen, and a nice kickoff return for a score.
Special teams matter! I
thought that overall, Clemson outplayed Alabama…I mean, the things that Deshaun
Watson did to that formidable Tide front seven….and the even worse abuse of
‘Bama’s offensive line (their poor RT must be having nightmares still). But in
the end, the Tide can smile because fortunately for them, football is a whole
team game.
***
Looking at the NFL playoffs, again you saw an instance of where special teams matter (Minnesota/Seattle). I have no idea how much the laces affected the kick, I don’t know how much the wind did, and I don’t know if the kicker simply shanked it. In any case, I’m not sure there’s another example in all of sports where you go from almost certain joy to deepest despair in such a short amount of time as you do when a kicker misses a chip shot field goal. I mean, on a Hail Mary type of pass you have hope that it’ll work, but I’m not sure you really “expect” it to, you know? On a 25-yard field goal, you pretty much expect it to go.
Looking at the NFL playoffs, again you saw an instance of where special teams matter (Minnesota/Seattle). I have no idea how much the laces affected the kick, I don’t know how much the wind did, and I don’t know if the kicker simply shanked it. In any case, I’m not sure there’s another example in all of sports where you go from almost certain joy to deepest despair in such a short amount of time as you do when a kicker misses a chip shot field goal. I mean, on a Hail Mary type of pass you have hope that it’ll work, but I’m not sure you really “expect” it to, you know? On a 25-yard field goal, you pretty much expect it to go.
And don’t let anyone tell you that character doesn’t matter
in football either. We probably all saw the Bengals absolute implosion Saturday
night. Right now, I’m thinking that players who show a history of undisciplined
behavior aren’t the ones you want to lean on when the pressure builds – they
don’t know how to handle it. I see that all the time at my level of coaching.
Guys that have a ton of talent but can’t control themselves on or off the
field, and wonder why they never got a shot at a higher level of play.
I try and tell young guys that the “talent pyramid” gets
narrower and narrower the higher you go, and there’s not room for everyone.
Guys fall outside the pyramid for all sorts of different reasons. Your job as a
player is to make sure that the only reason you fall outside is lack of talent.
You can improve your technique, you can have a perfect attitude, you can be the
best student of the game (or have the best grades in school) ever….but at some
point, you’re probably not fast enough, not big enough or just not athletic
enough – all genetic things out of your control. If you let yourself fall
outside the pyramid for things you can control, then it’s on you, and you
alone. Deal with it, learn from it and move on.
***
Finally, my men’s team, the San Diego Nighthawks, picked up a new coach that might just change everything for us this year. Our new Passing Game Coordinator is former Texas A&M, former Viking and former Panther WR/QB Jason Carter. Coach Carter was most recently the head coach at La Jolla High.
Finally, my men’s team, the San Diego Nighthawks, picked up a new coach that might just change everything for us this year. Our new Passing Game Coordinator is former Texas A&M, former Viking and former Panther WR/QB Jason Carter. Coach Carter was most recently the head coach at La Jolla High.
His hiring points to a couple of things: First, it ensures
that our WR’s and QB’s will get as much detailed coaching as our OL
traditionally has. That just wasn’t something that I was able to provide the
skinny guys. Right there, we’ve gotten better!
Second, and most importantly to
me, is that I’ll now have a living, breathing example of how exactly to install
and implement a true no huddle, up tempo approach. I’ve never been on a staff
where anyone else has actually done that. I’ve read books, I’ve gone to
lectures, I’ve asked other coaches how to do it, but I think until you actually
experience it for yourself, you’re not quite sure of how it’ll all go down. So
even if we have Coach temporarily (I hope it’ll be at least a couple of
seasons), I plan on learning as much from him as possible.
And that’s part of the key to success…..divest yourself of
your ego, coaches, and don’t be afraid to hire people who may be better than
you at some phase of the game. I gave up some control I didn’t have to as the
OC in order to get better, and make our team better. Whether you do that for a
season, or for a weekend mini-camp, the end result is that you and your team
will be better for it.
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