Thursday, May 31, 2012

Final Game of the Season

This weekend will be the final game of the season for the boys.  The game will be a great measuring stick, as it is against a team we had a pre-season scrimmage against.  In that scrimmage, a first live run on a lacrosse field for a good portion of our team, there was plenty of sloppiness, and running around.  This weekend, I hope to see the team show the progress they've made this year, both positionally and with their stick skills.

This week in practice, we concentrated on ground balls.  We worked 1v1 and 2v2 for 3/4 of the practice.  I saw some good boxing out in the 1v1, and some quality man/ball and communication in the 2v2.   We'll have to see if if translates to the game, as it was a real issue in our last scrimmage.

Tuesday, May 22, 2012

Moving the ball

   Since our last practice, 8 days ago, we have had a two games.  Both have gone very well.  Pretty much a continuation of the goods things the team showed last weekend.  The team is continuing to grasp and excel at the team concepts.  They are often looking to move the ball instead of trying to run through traffic.  Especially when they gain control on the defensive side of the field.  Granted, at 6 and 7 yrs. old the passes are being completed at a high rate, but at this point as long as they look to make a pass, that is a huge deal.  With only one practice and two games left, I hope it continues.

Wednesday, May 16, 2012

Switching Hands

   Had a pretty low key practice on Monday.  Started with simple line drills, but with passing instead of ground balls. 

   Then I wanted to concentrate on switching hands.  We did what I called J-drills.  Put two lines at the top of the restraining box, on either side of the cage.  Put a cone at goal line extended, even with each line.  Alternating lines, the players scooped a ground ball and ran ran the cone at goal line extended, switching hands (if necessary) so they were carrying their stick on the outside of their body (in relation to the net).  The players came around the cone, switched hands again, and went to the cage for a shot.  Then, we altered the drill.  This time instead of going around the cone, the players pivoted to the outside, switched hands and went to the cage.  We had a coach stand at the cones to simulate a defender, so the kids would understand why they were pivoting and switching hands the way they were.  Some of them needed to be slowed down and walked though the pivot, others picked it up pretty naturally.

   The rest of practice we did 1v1, offense vs. defense and fast break coverage.  For 1v1, we paired the kids up, and put them in a circle around the box.  Had them go one pair at a time 1v1, having them switch offense and defense each time.  Also having them move their starting position after each player had been on offense.  Normally for fast break we do a modified 'Genny' drill, but since we were getting tight on time, I had 2 lines of middies at mid-field (one offensive, one defensive), and rotated attack and defense players every few turns.

    All in all practice went well, and we were able to get some good practice in on switching hands as I had hoped.  We have two games before our next practice, and I am hoping the energy level from last weekend carries over today, and Saturday.

Monday, May 14, 2012

A Great Day on the Field

   This past weekend it all seemed to click for the boys.  Playing against that had handled us pretty well in a pre-season scrimmage, the team came out raring to go.  Our goalie made some big stops early, and it was great teamwork and defense from there on out.  The team was playing their positions, and there was a lot less chasing the ball around.  Ground balls looked like they should, a few players in and not a huge mass of humanity.  They hustled back on defense, and attempted to pass the ball on offense.  I actually had to talk to one kid about passing too much. 
   It was a proud day for me out on the field.  Even had one of our 2nd year players score his first goal.  It was a great day out on the field.  Every kid, parent, and coach knew WE PLAYED LIKE A TEAM, and because of that there were smiles everywhere.

Thursday, May 10, 2012

Getting back at this...

Its been 9 months since I posted here.  I am going to try to get this blog going again.

Football has long ended, and Lacrosse winter and spring seasons have taken over for me.  We practiced indoors for the winter.  I had a group of about twenty-five 4-7 year olds, almost all of them were new to the sport.  So we went over all the basic skills, inside and out for about 10 weeks.  Once the nicer weather came, and the spring season started, we broke the  group, plus some additional kids into two teams.  We have a pre-K/K team and a first grade team.  I coach the 1st grade team.  A group of 18 kids.  Of these 18, 8 had played organized lacrosse in the past, most of them with me.  With 10 kids that were either completely new or started in our winter program,  I started fresh.  Lots of scooping, passing, and shooting.  We have worked on cradling with both hands, as well.  I must say coming up to our 5th game of the season, there has been marked improvement.  We practice twice a week, and try to work in a lot of skill drills, as well as team concepts.  In the coming days and weeks, I will get into specific practice skill drills, and team work drills that we have been using to teach these kids the game of Lacrosse

Saturday, August 20, 2011

Installing the Offense

   With two practices left in our first week with helmets, I thought it would be a good time to install our offense.  This group of kids is very attentive, and seems to be able to grasp a lot of what I am throwing at them. Because of this, I decided to give them a variety of different things on Offense.  Our league runs 10 plays offense, 10 plays defense per half.  After hours of drawing up plays, I decided to script out the 10 plays would use for the first part of the season.  I decided on 5 different formations, and we will run 2 plays per formation. We will be running an I, Power I Right and Left, Wishbone, and the T.  To keep it simple, I gave them 3 hols to run through, "Dive" being between the C and G, "Blast" between the G and T, and "Sweep" around the outside.  The play calls are Formation, Runner (RB, WB, FB), and Hole.  Luckily we have two coaches on the field during the games, so we can be sure they all know where to go.

   I want to get each kid a chance at everything throughout the season.  At this point, I cam up with 6 different back field configurations, each having 4 kids (QB, FB, RB, WB).  With 12 kids, this gave each kid two chances in the backfield.  Using this configuration for at least the first 3 games.  Each configuration will run twice in that time frame, then I will change it up so they can play other positions.

Tuesday, August 16, 2011

Helmets On

The kids got their equipment last week.  We are doing on week (3 days) of practice with just helmets before moving onto full equipment.  We ran the same drills that we have been doing all along. I just want them to get used to wearing the helmet.  As previously stated, 9 out of the 12 kids are new to football and its equipment.  Some of the kids played lacrosse with us, but a football helmet is a whole other animal.  After about an hour of practice, I had a few kids starting to get upset about the feel of the helmets.  After a water break, I decided to let them finish up the last half of practice without helmets.  I guess an hour on the first night is pretty good.  Hopefully we can make it through the next 2 practices with helmets the whole time, so we can move onto full pads next week.