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The 33-Stack Attack FootballHelpDesk ‘Helping Coaches Helping Kids’ * Coming in March 2008 *

The 33-Stack Attack FootballHelpDesk.com ‘Helping Coaches Helping Kids’ * Coming in March 2008 *. 3 TYPES OF COACHES & PLAYERS ON THE DEFENSIVE SIDE OF THE FOOTBALL. 3 TYPES OF COACHES & PLAYERS ON THE DEFENSIVE SIDE OF THE FOOTBALL. those who make things happen .

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The 33-Stack Attack FootballHelpDesk ‘Helping Coaches Helping Kids’ * Coming in March 2008 *

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  1. The33-StackAttackFootballHelpDesk.com‘Helping Coaches Helping Kids’* Coming in March 2008 *

  2. 3 TYPES OF COACHES & PLAYERS ON THE DEFENSIVE SIDE OF THE FOOTBALL

  3. 3 TYPES OF COACHES & PLAYERS ON THE DEFENSIVE SIDE OF THE FOOTBALL those who make things happen

  4. 3 TYPES OF COACHES & PLAYERS ON THE DEFENSIVE SIDE OF THE FOOTBALL those who make things happen those who wait for things to happen

  5. 3 TYPES OF COACHES & PLAYERS ON THE DEFENSIVE SIDE OF THE FOOTBALL those who make things happen those who wait for things to happen 3. then there are those who say … “what the hell just happened?”

  6. 3 TYPES OF COACHES & PLAYERS ON THE DEFENSIVE SIDE OF THE FOOTBALL those who make things happen those who wait for things to happen 3. then there are those who say … “what the hell just happened?” We refuse to be #2 or #3 We want to be #1

  7. DEFENSIVE PHILOSOPHY The first thing any coach must do before deciding on a defense is to decide what his defensive philosophy is going to be.

  8. DEFENSIVE PHILOSOPHY The first thing any coach must do before deciding on a defense is to decide what his defensive philosophy is going to be. 2 BASIC PHILOSOPHIES OF DEFENSE:

  9. DEFENSIVE PHILOSOPHY • The first thing any coach must do before deciding on a defense is to decide what his defensive philosophy is going to be. • 2 BASIC PHILOSOPHIES OF DEFENSE: • READ & REACT - sit back and slow down the offense

  10. DEFENSIVE PHILOSOPHY • The first thing any coach must do before deciding on a defense is to decide what his defensive philosophy is going to be. • 2 BASIC PHILOSOPHIES OF DEFENSE: • READ & REACT - sit back and slow down the offense • ATTACK - ‘make something happen’

  11. DEFENSIVE PHILOSOPHY • The first thing any coach must do before deciding on a defense is to decide what his defensive philosophy is going to be. • 2 BASIC PHILOSOPHIES OF DEFENSE: • READ & REACT - sit back and slow down the offense • ATTACK - ‘make something happen’ • WE CHOOSE TO ATTACK BECAUSE IT GIVES US THE FOLLOWING:

  12. DEFENSIVE PHILOSOPHY • The first thing any coach must do before deciding on a defense is to decide what his defensive philosophy is going to be. • 2 BASIC PHILOSOPHIES OF DEFENSE: • READ & REACT - sit back and slow down the offense • ATTACK - ‘make something happen’ • WE CHOOSE TO ATTACK BECAUSE IT GIVES US THE FOLLOWING: • INCREASED AGGRESSIVENESS – Attitude reflects leadership and therefore aggressive play calling leads to aggressive play.

  13. DEFENSIVE PHILOSOPHY • The first thing any coach must do before deciding on a defense is to decide what his defensive philosophy is going to be. • 2 BASIC PHILOSOPHIES OF DEFENSE: • READ & REACT - sit back and slow down the offense • ATTACK - ‘make something happen’ • WE CHOOSE TO ATTACK BECAUSE IT GIVES US THE FOLLOWING: • INCREASED AGGRESSIVENESS – Attitude reflects leadership and therefore aggressive play calling leads to aggressive play. • HIGHER LEVEL OF CONFIDENCE - Every time we make a big play, it is positive reinforcement that increases our players’ confidence in the system, in themselves and in their teammates.

  14. DEFENSIVE PHILOSOPHY • The first thing any coach must do before deciding on a defense is to decide what his defensive philosophy is going to be. • 2 BASIC PHILOSOPHIES OF DEFENSE: • READ & REACT - sit back and slow down the offense • ATTACK - ‘make something happen’ • WE CHOOSE TO ATTACK BECAUSE IT GIVES US THE FOLLOWING: • INCREASED AGGRESSIVENESS – Attitude reflects leadership and therefore aggressive play calling leads to aggressive play. • HIGHER LEVEL OF CONFIDENCE - Every time we make a big play, it is positive reinforcement that increases our players’ confidence in the system, in themselves and in their teammates. • HAPPIER DEFENDERS – We want to attack. Our players want to attack. Our fans want to see us attack. Coaching the Double Wing Offense taught me the most important defensive lesson that I have ever learned. ‘Defensive players absolutely hate to be on the field longer than 3 or 4 plays each series’. So we bring a lot of PRESSURE. Our motto is ‘3 and out … score or give us the ball back’. Because quick strikes are almost always attributed to a busted assignment or a missed tackle. So it’s easier for our kids to recover mentally and get back out there on the next possession with confidence.

  15. VIDEO - PRESSURE

  16. 4 ACES of DEFENSE If you can get the right players, in the right place, at the right time, with the right attitude, then you wont give up very many points. And so the 33-Stack is designed with these things in mind to consistently disrupt game plans, discourage our opponents and frustrate the opposing coaches.

  17. 4 ACES of DEFENSE • If you can get the right players, in the right place, at the right time, with the right attitude, then you wont give up very many points. And so the 33-Stack is designed with these things in mind to consistently disrupt game plans, discourage our opponents and frustrate the opposing coaches. • MORE ATHLETES – This defense allows me to put my best 11 kids on the field regardless of body type.

  18. 4 ACES of DEFENSE • If you can get the right players, in the right place, at the right time, with the right attitude, then you wont give up very many points. And so the 33-Stack is designed with these things in mind to consistently disrupt game plans, discourage our opponents and frustrate the opposing coaches. • MORE ATHLETES – This defense allows me to put my best 11 kids on the field regardless of body type. • DECEPTIVE ALIGNMENT – Typically an offense reads a defense by the number of down linemen and location of the safety(s). So we appear to be an odd front defense with a minimal number of defenders in the box. In reality 6, 7 or even 8 defenders will be filling the gaps and attacking the backfield on every play.

  19. 4 ACES of DEFENSE • If you can get the right players, in the right place, at the right time, with the right attitude, then you wont give up very many points. And so the 33-Stack is designed with these things in mind to consistently disrupt game plans, discourage our opponents and frustrate the opposing coaches. • MORE ATHLETES – This defense allows me to put my best 11 kids on the field regardless of body type. • DECEPTIVE ALIGNMENT – Typically an offense reads a defense by the number of down linemen and location of the safety(s). So we appear to be an odd front defense with a minimal number of defenders in the box. In reality 6, 7 or even 8 defenders will be filling the gaps and attacking the backfield on every play. • ATTACK ANGLE ASSIGNMENTS – Our players are always running downhill on attack angles from the snap to the whistle. This affects the mindset of our players and also our opponents because moving forward is aggressive in nature. This is nothing like backpedaling or sidestepping. Those two words, and the actions they refer to, don’t even sound aggressive.

  20. 4 ACES of DEFENSE • If you can get the right players, in the right place, at the right time, with the right attitude, then you wont give up very many points. And so the 33-Stack is designed with these things in mind to consistently disrupt game plans, discourage our opponents and frustrate the opposing coaches. • MORE ATHLETES – This defense allows me to put my best 11 kids on the field regardless of body type. • DECEPTIVE ALIGNMENT – Typically an offense reads a defense by the number of down linemen and location of the safety(s). So we appear to be an odd front defense with a minimal number of defenders in the box. In reality 6, 7 or even 8 defenders will be filling the gaps and attacking the backfield on every play. • ATTACK ANGLE ASSIGNMENTS – Our players are always running downhill on attack angles from the snap to the whistle. This affects the mindset of our players and also our opponents because moving forward is aggressive in nature. This is nothing like backpedaling or sidestepping. Those two words, and the actions they refer to, don’t even sound aggressive. • AGGRESSION– Most defenses require 2-3 reads for a defender to determine his course of action. This steals aggressiveness from my players. Even a naturally aggressive kid will seem passive when he is forced to make a series of reads after the play begins. Our players have very few reads and the ones we have are being made while the player moves forward. So our players get to attack all day.

  21. 2 2 3 1 1 N T T O M O D D R C C 33 - BASE PLAYER KEY: T - Defensive Tackle - 2 Down Linemen on the outside of the STACKS. N - Nose Tackle - 1 Down Lineman in the middle of the STACKS. O - Outside Stacker - 2 Outside STACK Backers over the Def. Tackles. M - Middle Stacker- 1 Middle STACK Backer over the Nose Tackle. D - Dog Back - 2 Outside Linebacker / Safety Hybrids. C - Corner Back - 2 Cornerbacks playing inverted coverage. R - Reaper - 1 Free Safety or Rover that plays everywhere.

  22. 2 2 3 1 1 D D R C C BASE ZONES PLAYER KEY: D - Dog Back - Flat Area, Quick passes to Ends & Flare passes to Backs. C - Corner Back - Deep 1/2 of the field, keep everything in front of you. R - Reaper - Middle of the field, Quick slant passes to TEs. Like everything in this defense, all 5 of these players are moving forward at the snap of the ball. Reading on the move and they only backpedal <IF> they read pass and it isn't one of their ‘hot’ routes.

  23. STOPPING THE RUN It’s as easy as ONE, TWO, THREE …

  24. STOPPING THE RUN It’s as easy as ONE, TWO, THREE … #1 - ALL 6 interior gaps are filled full of defenders so we essentially create a wall across the front that is almost impossible to run through. But we don’t just line up up 6 players in the 6 gaps, that would require some pretty good defensive linemen and wouldn’t really confuse anyone.

  25. STOPPING THE RUN It’s as easy as ONE, TWO, THREE … #1 - ALL 6 interior gaps are filled full of defenders so we essentially create a wall across the front that is almost impossible to run through. But we don’t just line up up 6 players in the 6 gaps, that would require some pretty good defensive linemen and wouldn’t really confuse anyone. #2 - We stack 3 backers on the heels of our 3 down linemen and let them choose ‘how’ to fill the 6 gaps using a tap-n-go blitz. Offensive linemen struggle figuring out who to block on a down by down basis. This forces them to stop firing out aggressively and wait to see who they are responsible for. And once that happens, the game is half over. And we can accomplish this without using any of our stud defenders, so they can focus on the edges.

  26. STOPPING THE RUN It’s as easy as ONE, TWO, THREE … #1 - ALL 6 interior gaps are filled full of defenders so we essentially create a wall across the front that is almost impossible to run through. But we don’t just line up up 6 players in the 6 gaps, that would require some pretty good defensive linemen and wouldn’t really confuse anyone. #2 - We stack 3 backers on the heels of our 3 down linemen and let them choose ‘how’ to fill the 6 gaps using a tap-n-go blitz. Offensive linemen struggle figuring out who to block on a down by down basis. This forces them to stop firing out aggressively and wait to see who they are responsible for. And once that happens, the game is half over. And we can accomplish this without using any of our stud defenders, so they can focus on the edges. #3 - It doesn’t matter to us if the runners decide its too crowded and bounce outside or the play caller just calls outside plays; the effect is still the same. So we place some of our studs outside where they can make plays. This puts our ‘better’ players in position to stop the most dangerous plays before the ball is even snapped. If you are in a battle for ownership of a hilltop, would you rather start the battle at the top of the hill or at the bottom? This is really no different. Sweeps and Reverses are the most dangerous plays in most ‘youth’ offenses. And I would rather defend that Sweep from an outside position instead of chasing it from an inside position. SIMPLE … EFFECTIVE … DEADLY !!!

  27. VIDEO - RUN DEFENSE

  28. STOPPING THE PASS A few simple ideas that work together in perfect harmony:

  29. STOPPING THE PASS A few simple ideas that work together in perfect harmony: #1 - While we stuff the middle of the field with our front six to stop the running game, they have a second, much ‘cooler’ function to perform. SACK THE QB!!! Its not uncommon for us to have 1 or 2 unblocked stack players on every down throughout the course of a game. So QBs never have enough time to set up and throw the ball; much less actually make a read on who is open. And what is really cool is that we can accomplish this kind of pressure without using any of our better athletes.

  30. STOPPING THE PASS A few simple ideas that work together in perfect harmony: #1 - While we stuff the middle of the field with our front six to stop the running game, they have a second, much ‘cooler’ function to perform. SACK THE QB!!! Its not uncommon for us to have 1 or 2 unblocked stack players on every down throughout the course of a game. So QBs never have enough time to set up and throw the ball; much less actually make a read on who is open. And what is really cool is that we can accomplish this kind of pressure without using any of our better athletes. #2 - We use 2 basic coverage schemes but today we will be focusing on our BASE ZONE scheme. We have 5 defenders and each is responsible for a specific passing zone. And since we feel the only zone you might have time to effectively flood is the short zone that is in front of most of my better players, we are confident that our base defense will handle 99% of the passing schemes we see at the youth level.

  31. STOPPING THE PASS A few simple ideas that work together in perfect harmony: #1 - While we stuff the middle of the field with our front six to stop the running game, they have a second, much ‘cooler’ function to perform. SACK THE QB!!! Its not uncommon for us to have 1 or 2 unblocked stack players on every down throughout the course of a game. So QBs never have enough time to set up and throw the ball; much less actually make a read on who is open. And what is really cool is that we can accomplish this kind of pressure without using any of our better athletes. #2 - We use 2 basic coverage schemes but today we will be focusing on our BASE ZONE scheme. We have 5 defenders and each is responsible for a specific passing zone. And since we feel the only zone you might have time to effectively flood is the short zone that is in front of most of my better players, we are confident that our base defense will handle 99% of the passing schemes we see at the youth level. #3 - Deception is the greatest ally a defense has against a quality passing game. Our defense looks like one thing and operates like another. Pre-snap reads by a QB are generally useless because of the downhill nature of our secondary. And the depth of our alignment allows our secondary players to make quick and easy reads while moving forward and even when their read is wrong, they still have time to recover. AGGRESSIVE … DECEPTIVE … DEADLY !!!

  32. VIDEO - PASS DEFENSE

  33. PLAYCALLING Our 33-Stack Attack personnel is divided into 2 groups. Each group is taught key words to listen for in the play calls. These key words tell our players what alignment to use, what coverage to use and which blitz, stunt or shift we want to employ. Depending on the age and ability of our players, we can also install any of these calls as an automatic, based on what the offense shows (certain alignments, motion, etc.).

  34. PLAYCALLING Our 33-Stack Attack personnel is divided into 2 groups. Each group is taught key words to listen for in the play calls. These key words tell our players what alignment to use, what coverage to use and which blitz, stunt or shift we want to employ. Depending on the age and ability of our players, we can also install any of these calls as an automatic, based on what the offense shows (certain alignments, motion, etc.). The 1st part of the call is the alignment call for our Stack Players:

  35. PLAYCALLING • Our 33-Stack Attack personnel is divided into 2 groups. Each group is taught key words to listen for in the play calls. These key words tell our players what alignment to use, what coverage to use and which blitz, stunt or shift we want to employ. Depending on the age and ability of our players, we can also install any of these calls as an automatic, based on what the offense shows (certain alignments, motion, etc.). • The 1st part of the call is the alignment call for our Stack Players: • 33 - our standard alignment has our DTs head up on the OTs and our NT head up on the Center with our Stackers right on their heels.

  36. PLAYCALLING • Our 33-Stack Attack personnel is divided into 2 groups. Each group is taught key words to listen for in the play calls. These key words tell our players what alignment to use, what coverage to use and which blitz, stunt or shift we want to employ. Depending on the age and ability of our players, we can also install any of these calls as an automatic, based on what the offense shows (certain alignments, motion, etc.). • The 1st part of the call is the alignment call for our Stack Players: • 33 - our standard alignment has our DTs head up on the OTs and our NT head up on the Center with our Stackers right on their heels. • 42 - places our NT and MS on the inside shoulders of the OGs and tells them to pinch down hard through the A-gaps.

  37. PLAYCALLING • Our 33-Stack Attack personnel is divided into 2 groups. Each group is taught key words to listen for in the play calls. These key words tell our players what alignment to use, what coverage to use and which blitz, stunt or shift we want to employ. Depending on the age and ability of our players, we can also install any of these calls as an automatic, based on what the offense shows (certain alignments, motion, etc.). • The 1st part of the call is the alignment call for our Stack Players: • 33 - our standard alignment has our DTs head up on the OTs and our NT head up on the Center with our Stackers right on their heels. • 42 - places our NT and MS on the inside shoulders of the OGs and tells them to pinch down hard through the A-gaps. • 60 - places all 6 players down in four point stances in the gaps.

  38. PLAYCALLING • Our 33-Stack Attack personnel is divided into 2 groups. Each group is taught key words to listen for in the play calls. These key words tell our players what alignment to use, what coverage to use and which blitz, stunt or shift we want to employ. Depending on the age and ability of our players, we can also install any of these calls as an automatic, based on what the offense shows (certain alignments, motion, etc.). • The 1st part of the call is the alignment call for our Stack Players: • 33 - our standard alignment has our DTs head up on the OTs and our NT head up on the Center with our Stackers right on their heels. • 42 - places our NT and MS on the inside shoulders of the OGs and tells them to pinch down hard through the A-gaps. • 60 - places all 6 players down in four point stances in the gaps. • The 2nd part of the call explains alignment & coverage to the Backs:

  39. PLAYCALLING • Our 33-Stack Attack personnel is divided into 2 groups. Each group is taught key words to listen for in the play calls. These key words tell our players what alignment to use, what coverage to use and which blitz, stunt or shift we want to employ. Depending on the age and ability of our players, we can also install any of these calls as an automatic, based on what the offense shows (certain alignments, motion, etc.). • The 1st part of the call is the alignment call for our Stack Players: • 33 - our standard alignment has our DTs head up on the OTs and our NT head up on the Center with our Stackers right on their heels. • 42 - places our NT and MS on the inside shoulders of the OGs and tells them to pinch down hard through the A-gaps. • 60 - places all 6 players down in four point stances in the gaps. • The 2nd part of the call explains alignment & coverage to the Backs: • BASE - is our standard zone scheme that we use most of the time.

  40. PLAYCALLING • Our 33-Stack Attack personnel is divided into 2 groups. Each group is taught key words to listen for in the play calls. These key words tell our players what alignment to use, what coverage to use and which blitz, stunt or shift we want to employ. Depending on the age and ability of our players, we can also install any of these calls as an automatic, based on what the offense shows (certain alignments, motion, etc.). • The 1st part of the call is the alignment call for our Stack Players: • 33 - our standard alignment has our DTs head up on the OTs and our NT head up on the Center with our Stackers right on their heels. • 42 - places our NT and MS on the inside shoulders of the OGs and tells them to pinch down hard through the A-gaps. • 60 - places all 6 players down in four point stances in the gaps. • The 2nd part of the call explains alignment & coverage to the Backs: • BASE - is our standard zone scheme that we use most of the time. • GUTS - tighter, short yardage version of our ‘base’ coverage.

  41. PLAYCALLING • Our 33-Stack Attack personnel is divided into 2 groups. Each group is taught key words to listen for in the play calls. These key words tell our players what alignment to use, what coverage to use and which blitz, stunt or shift we want to employ. Depending on the age and ability of our players, we can also install any of these calls as an automatic, based on what the offense shows (certain alignments, motion, etc.). • The 1st part of the call is the alignment call for our Stack Players: • 33 - our standard alignment has our DTs head up on the OTs and our NT head up on the Center with our Stackers right on their heels. • 42 - places our NT and MS on the inside shoulders of the OGs and tells them to pinch down hard through the A-gaps. • 60 - places all 6 players down in four point stances in the gaps. • The 2nd part of the call explains alignment & coverage to the Backs: • BASE - is our standard zone scheme that we use most of the time. • GUTS - tighter, short yardage version of our ‘base’ coverage. • From here we add different calls to specify particular blitzes, slants, stunts, shifts and alignments. Our players get taught which calls affect them so when the call doesn’t refer to them, they ignore it and perform their base assignment.

  42. 2 2 3 1 1 T M T N O O D D R C C 42 - BASE PLAYER KEY: T - Defensive Tackle - 2 Down Linemen on the outside of the STACKS. N - Nose Tackle - Move to a Guards Inside Shoulder and pinch down. O - Outside Stacker - 2 Outside STACK Backers over the Def. Tackles. M - Middle Stacker- Mimic Nose Tackle with opposite Guard. We occasionally run into teams that have ‘some’ success with a stud Center pushing the N into our M allowing yardage on a QB sneak. So we go to the 42 alignment where we move over the Guards’ shoulders and pinch or even cut through the Center’s legs to shut this down.

  43. VIDEO - 42 FRONT

  44. 2 2 3 1 1 O M T O T N D D R C C 60 - BASE PLAYER KEY: T - Defensive Tackle - Move to B Gaps and get into backfield quick. N - Nose Tackle - Move to a Guards Inside Shoulder and pinch down. O - Outside Stacker - Move to C Gaps and get into backfield quick. M - Middle Stacker- Mimic Nose Tackle with opposite Guard. We use this for goal line or short yardage situations to stuff the gaps even faster. We also use this to get several of our backups into the game at the same time. We lose some pressure with this front but we can still count on creating a wall along the LOS forcing runners outside.

  45. VIDEO - 60 FRONT

  46. 2 2 3 1 1 D D C C R GUTS ZONES PLAYER KEY: D - Dog Back - Flat Area, Quick passes to Ends & Flare passes to Backs. C - Corner Back - Deep 1/2 of the field, keep everything in front of you. R - Reaper - Middle of the field, Quick slant passes to TEs. When we get into a goal line situation or we are playing a team with very little passing threat or maybe just a super powerful running game, we can shorten our BACKS alignment and their zones. The biggest change in our defense when we use GUTS is our CORNERs. They no longer move forward at the snap but instead they will read from their position and backpedal for passes or contain on wide runs. This is usually used in conjunction with our 60 Front.

  47. STACKS ASSIGNMENTS Our 33-Stack Attack personnel is divided into 2 groups. The first group is our Stack players or Pressure Group.

  48. STACKS ASSIGNMENTS • Our 33-Stack Attack personnel is divided into 2 groups. The first group is our Stack players or Pressure Group. • NT - Nose Tackle aligned head up on the Center (not snapper). • DT - Def. Tackles aligned head up on the #2 man from Center. • MS - Middle Stacker tight on the heels of the Nose Tackle. • OS - Outside Stackers tight on the heels of the Def. Tackles.

  49. STACKS ASSIGNMENTS • Our 33-Stack Attack personnel is divided into 2 groups. The first group is our Stack players or Pressure Group. • NT - Nose Tackle aligned head up on the Center (not snapper). • DT - Def. Tackles aligned head up on the #2 man from Center. • MS - Middle Stacker tight on the heels of the Nose Tackle. • OS - Outside Stackers tight on the heels of the Def. Tackles. • Everyone in this group has relatively simple job descriptions. Combined with the small areas they defend means we can use our ‘weaker’ players or ‘undisciplined’ athletes to fill these positions.

  50. STACKS ASSIGNMENTS • Our 33-Stack Attack personnel is divided into 2 groups. The first group is our Stack players or Pressure Group. • NT - Nose Tackle aligned head up on the Center (not snapper). • DT - Def. Tackles aligned head up on the #2 man from Center. • MS - Middle Stacker tight on the heels of the Nose Tackle. • OS - Outside Stackers tight on the heels of the Def. Tackles. • Everyone in this group has relatively simple job descriptions. Combined with the small areas they defend means we can use our ‘weaker’ players or ‘undisciplined’ athletes to fill these positions. • Little to no pass coverage responsibilities. • Attack the run and pressure the QB on every play. • Fill all 6 interior gaps on every play. • Take advantage of offensive strategies like pulling linemen or split out ends or even releasing the ends into pass patterns.

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