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Joe Feyas

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Joe Feyas last won the day on September 22 2012

Joe Feyas had the most liked content!

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About Joe Feyas

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  • Birthday 12/05/1968

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    http://www.parentscoachingkids.blogspot.com/

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    New Jersey
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    football
  1. Good advice from Thrawn87, exactly what I was thinking as soon as read the original post. Get on top of the line of scrimmage and watch for the hand-off, then get to him before he can really get going. You also want your player to ignore the pass and just go for the flags. Let your other defenders play pass protection.
  2. Hmm thats a tough one. I know sometimes when I get a player who is underperfoming it feels like 4-on-5 flag football. I usually stick to the 3-2 and put my best safety behind my worst corner. I've read of people who put the worst at LB, but I prefer a fast LB who can stuff the run without much help.
  3. I don't have any 7-on-7 handy, but if I were creating some I would start with the formations you want to line up in the work on some routes out of those formations. I always try to draw my plyas using a few key concepts: Every play can be run or pass. Every play has a "hot route" to throw if the QB see a blitzer (quick slants, button hooks, ins/outs) Include plays that make use of fake hand-off then pass (play-action) or pump-fake then hand-off (draw) Overload one part of the field, Isolate the other Also for misdirection theres always crossing routes. I could see myself lining up 1wr left, Te, C, Te, 1wr right then having the wr's run In's 5yd and the Te's run out 3yd. C down the middle of the field, back runs to the flat
  4. I broke down and bought wrist bands. They are working well for our team. They also help keep the team organised, because my players know if they are wearing a wristband they are on offense.
  5. Good post from Coach Rob and I agree on all points especially play-action and setting up the deep ball with runs or short passing game. I think how "credible" your deep plays are depends on many factors like how good your QB, how aggressive/disciplined the defense is, what defense you are facing etc... Some Ideas that worked for me: Against aggressive D - I had good success with and end around or HB option. The Safety would pullup as soon as he saw the hand-off, leaving someone open deep down the sideline. Against Zone - Just a basic over load. Use trips and send 2 deep, 1 short. 2 deep routes should split the safety and short should lock CB Against Slow Defender/mismatch - Just fly Good luck
  6. I generally run 3-4 formations with 4-5 plays out of each formation or a total of 16-20 unique plays. Of course each play can have multiple options like run or play action pass, line up left/right but I don't count these as additonal plays. The problem I have now is that I haven't been able to fit more then 9 plays in our wristbands.
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