2022 Rookie Tackle
2022 Rookie Tackle
2022 Rookie Tackle
Rookie Tackle
Goals
1. To allow 5th and 6th graders to develop a connection to Bomber football.
2. To develop and encourage leadership, teamwork, giving our best effort.
3. To increase participation numbers in 5th and 6th grade football.
4. To develop and maintain an in-house tackle football program at the 5th and 6th grade level.
5. To teach the fundamentals of tackle football with an emphasis on safety, having fun and
learning the game.
6. To introduce Bomber football formations, techniques, and plays.
Monday August 29th, 2022 – Equipment Handout at Keith Meyers office 108 4 th Street North, Cannon
Falls
City Parking lot
Red Team 5:45 to 6:15 - White Team 6:15 to 6:45
Grey Team 6:45 to 7:15 - Black Team 7:15 to 7:45
Rookie Tackle Coaches Meeting Thursday August 25 th, 2022 7:00 – Keith Meyers office 108 4th
Street North, Cannon Falls
Equipment List
– shoulder pads – helmet (inflate to proper amount – put name on front) – jersey (write jersey
number on clipboard) - pants (make sure all pads are in pants knee, thigh, hip, tail)-
mouthguard
All practices and games are behind the high school unless otherwise noted. Practice times will be
adjusted as we lose daylight. Please be aware that the coach will call practice as it becomes unsafe to play due to
darkness. Those times will vary based on sunset times and cloud cover, etc… Make note so you know if you may have
to be a bit early to pick up after practice. Thank you-
Monday September 19th – Practice 5:45 – 7:30 Practice Plan #4 White Team Coach Lead
Thursday September 22nd - Practice 5:45 – 7:30 Practice Plan #5 Grey Team Coach Lead
FRIDAY September 23rd- We play at Halftime at Bombers game. Meet in north end zone before the game to leave
equipment there and with 4 minutes left in the 2nd quarter to get stretched.
Monday September 26th – Practice 5:45 – 7:20 Practice Plan #6 Black Team Coach Lead
Thursday September 29th - Practice 5:45 – 7:20 Practice Plan #7 Red Team Coach Lead
Monday October 3rd– Practice 5:45 – 7:15 Practice Plan #8 White Team Coach Lead
Thursday October 6th - Practice 5:45 – 7:15 Practice Plan #9 Grey Team Coach Lead
Tie Breaker is head to head 2nd tie breaker is point differential 3rd tiebreaker is tug of war head to head
Monday October 10th– Practice 5:45 – 7:10 Practice Plan #10 Black Team Coach Lead
Thursday October 13th - Practice 5:45 – 7:10 Practice Plan #11 Red Team Coach Lead
TBD. Halftime of the Bombers game! Game starts at 7:00 @ JBP. We will play at halftime against the team we played
the prior week. 5 plays and the switch offense and defense. Then we’ll line up and greet the Bombers as they run back
on to the field
Scoring
- Touchdown- 6 points
- Extra point from the 5 yard line- 1 point
- Extra point from the 10 yard line- 2 points
- There will be no place kicks.
Penalties
- Penalties: Blatant movement before the snap shall be penalized. (steps forward, contact,
moving across the LOS) Subtle movement will not be penalized. (turning head, leaning
forward, or flinching)
- Penalties that put player safety at risk (spearing, late hits, targeting, etc) will be penalized fully.
Players with two personal fouls will be ejected from the game
- Holding- 10 yards
- Offensive Procedure/Delay of Game- 5 yards
- Pass interference- spot of foul (no more than 15 yards)
- Illegal forward pass- 5 yards and loss of down
- Unsportsmanlike Conduct/Personal Foul - 10 yards
Two by one player in a game is an automatic ejection.
Overtime
- Coin flip determines offense at the beginning of each overtime, and have alternating
possessions.
- Offense starts at the 15 yard line and has four downs to score. Upon scoring a touchdown the
team MUST go for two points on the extra point.
Rules
● The game will consist of two 20 minute halves. We will play with running time during the entire
game. The clock only stops during a called timeout or a referee timeout. Each team is
allowed one (1) timeout in the first half and two (2) timeouts in the second half. Timeouts will
be one (1) minute at which time the play clock will start. The ball must be snapped within 30
seconds after the ball is set to avoid a delay of game penalty.
● The field will be 40 yards long (plus 10 yard end zone) and sideline to far hash line.
● Because of the all players, all positions, all skills philosophy, there are no restrictions on jersey
numbers or player positions.
● A turnover or turnover on downs brings the ball back to the 40-yard line, and the teams switch
sides from offense to defense, defense to offense.
● Turnovers on interceptions or fumbles are blown dead immediately. No returns are allowed
● No penalty on the offense can take the ball behind the 40-yard line.
● Penalties on the offense that are called and accepted on or behind the 40-yard line result in a
loss of down.
● Penalties on the offense called between the 40-yard line and the end zone in which yardage is
lost, even if limited in enforcement by the 40-yard line, are enforced as written in terms of down
lost or replayed.
● Tackles behind the 40-yard line are respotted at the 40-yard and will not count as a safety.
● All personal foul penalties include an immediate substitution from the field for a minimum of
one play to allow coaches to address misconduct and promote good sportsmanship. We call
this a cooling off period. A second personal foul by any player will result in ejection.
Special teams:
There are no special teams. There are no kickoff or punts. Each possession starts with the ball on
the 40-yard line, regardless of whether there is a score, turnover or turnover on downs. There are no
extra points by a kick.
Offensive adjustments:
● Each play must include two offensive linemen – a center and a right guard. These players are
ineligible for first touch as the receiver of a pass regardless of the numbers on their jerseys,
and may not cross the neutral zone on pass plays. Player rotations may result with traditional
non-lineman numbers at these positions for the purpose of fundamental skill development.
The distance between the guard and center may not exceed three feet (1 yard) but may be
closer.
● Quarterback runs must be outside the Ends. (No QB sneak)
● The offense must have four players on the line of scrimmage.
● Motion and shifts are not allowed.
● All blocks below the waist, in any situation, are illegal.
Defensive Adjustments
The defense is allowed to put three men on the line of scrimmage. The defenders on the line of
scrimmage may not rush the A gaps. All other players must be at 4 yards or deeper. No blitzing or
stunting is allowed.
Bomber League: Defensive Positions and Assignments
Safety: Align at 7 yards over the guard. Read the offensive line for run or pass. Vs. Pass - cover the deep middle of field. Vs. Run -
attack the football from inside to outside.
Corners: Align at 5 yards outside the Tight ends. Read the offensive line for run or pass. Vs. Pass - cover deep outside third of field.
Vs. Run - Contain: attack the football from outside. Don’t allow the ball to get outside you.
Middle Linebacker: Align over weakside shoulder of center at 4 yards. Read the center for run/pass. Vs. Pass: drop to weakside
curl/flat. Vs. Run - Attack the football from inside to outside.
Defensive Ends: Align on outside shoulder of Tight Ends. Explode forward on snap and key the foot of TE. Food to = break through.
Foot away = bend into the play.
Defensive Tackle: Align on outside shoulder of guard. Same keys as Ends.
BSTE: Safety
Center: Block backside.
Guard: First man inside (backer).
PSTE: First man inside (Tackle)
2 back: “J” block end (block him out)
3 back: run tight to QB’s foot to get handoff. Explode upfield just outside of TE’s down
block.
QB: Turn butt towards play, pivot around and handoff to 3 back. Holster hand on hip and
carry out keep fake to the right.
Power Left
BSTE: Safety
Center: Block backside.
Guard: Pull and lead up the alley.
PSTE: First man inside (Backer)
3 back: “J” block end (block him out)
2 back: stay tight to QB’s to get handoff. Explode upfield just outside of TE’s down block.
Keep ball covered with both arms.
QB: Turn butt towards play, pivot around and handoff. Holster hand on hip and carry out
keep fake.
QB Keep Right (18)
BSTE: Safety
Center: Block backside.
Guard: First man inside (backer).
PSTE: First man inside (Tackle)
2 back: “armpit” block end (seal him in)
3 back: step over QB’s foot for fake handoff. Explode upfield just outside of TE’s down
block. Run a great fake, keep pocket for football.
QB: Turn butt towards play, pivot around and fake handoff to 3 back. Holster hand on hip
and carry out keep to the right.
QB Keep Left (19)
BSTE: Safety
Center: Block backside.
Guard: Pull to the left lead around edge.
PSTE: First man inside (backer)
PSHB: “armpit” block end (seal him in)
BSHB: step over QB’s foot for fake handoff. Explode upfield just outside of TE’s down
block. Run a great fake, keep pocket for football.
QB: Turn butt towards play, pivot around and fake handoff. Holster hand on hip and carry
out keep to the left.
Sweep Right (38)
BSTE: Safety
Center: Backer
Guard: Reach DT.
PSTE: Reach End.
PSHB: Corner
BSHB: Sprint to take handoff, get outside
QB: Get ball to halfback, fake boot backside.
Sweep Left (29)
BSTE: Safety
Center: Backer
Guard: Reach DT.
PSTE: Reach End.
PSHB: Corner
BSHB: Sprint to take handoff, get outside
QB: Get ball to halfback, fake boot backside.
Dive Right (24)
BSTE: Safety
Center: Backer
Guard: Drive DT
PSTE: Drive End.
PSHB: Explode forward take handoff get upfield.
BSHB: Fake away from play.
QB: Get ball to halfback, carry out keep.
Dive Left (33)
BSTE: Safety
Center: Backer
Guard: Drive DT
PSTE: Drive End.
PSHB: Explode forward take handoff get upfield.
BSHB: Fake away from play.
QB: Get ball to halfback, carry out keep.
End Pass Right
PRACTICE GUIDELINES:. Football players between the ages of 10 and 12 years old should practice
2 to 3 days per week with each session being 75 to 90 minutes
“Long practices are neither desirable nor particularly beneficial.” - NFL championship coach
Tom Coughlan. One of the most common errors is practice sessions run too long. This leads to a
loss of focus. Replace “How will I fill the practice time?” with “How can I use the least amount of
practice time in the most efficient way?”
5 LEVELS OF CONTACT
1. AIR - Players run a drill unopposed without contact.
2. BAGS - Drill is run against a bag or another soft-contact surface
3. CONTROL - Drill is run at assigned speed until the moment of contact. One player is pre-
determined the “winner” by the coach. Contact remains above the waist, and players stay on
their feet.
4. THUD** - Drill is run at full speed through the moment of contact. No pre-determined “winner.”
Contact remains above the waist, players stay on their feet and a quick whistle ends the drill.
5. LIVE ACTION**- Drill is run in game-like conditions and is the only time that players are taken
to the ground.
** Thud and live action are on the clock. No more than a total of 30 minutes per practice.
FOOTBALL SKILLS
QUARTERBACK • Stance • Receiving an under-center snap • Receiving a shotgun snap • Making a
handoff • Throwing mechanics • 3-step drop • 5 step drop • Play-action fakes and passing • carrying
out fakes in the run game
RUNNING BACK • Stance • Directional steps • Taking a handoff • Evasive running • Run blocking •
Carrying out fakes in the run game
RECEIVER • Stance • Route running • Catching a football • Above number • Below number • In front •
Behind • Over the shoulder • Stalk blocking (Rookie and 11-player Tackle)
OFFENSIVE LINE • Stance • Blocking fundamentals • Run blocking • Pass protection • Pulling to
block •
DEFENSIVE BACKS • Stance • Shoulder tackling or Flag pulling • Backpedal • Backpedal transitions
• Zone drop principles • Man-to-man principles • Defeating a block
LINEBACKERS • Stance • Shoulder tackling or Flag pulling • Defeating a block • Lateral and downhill
shuffle • Zone drop principles • Man-to-man principles
DEFENSIVE LINE • Stance • Shoulder tackling or Flag pulling • 2-point stance (Rookie Tackle) • 3
and/or 4-point stance • Defeating a block • Rushing the passer • Block recognition
Tackling Drills
● Discussion of heads up tackling, Illegal tackles: spearing, targeting, facemask, horsecollar,
late hit, defenseless players. Discussion of Illegal blocks: holding, block in back, cut block,
blindside, defenseless players, unnecessary block.
● Hawk tackle on knees (eyes through the thighs, cock, shoot, wrap, squeeze, roll)
● Hawk tackle standing - (same coaching points)
● Hawk tackle 5 yards apart drive for 5. Add the coaching point “step on his toes” to emphasize
running the feet through contact)
● Hawk tackle at angle - swoop in, tackle near hip.
● Profile tackle (pec tackle) 5 yards apart, directional.
● Compression (2 man) tackle - 5 yards apart. One high one low, heads to to opposite sides of
ball carrier. Heads stay out of the play. Higher man strips ball.
● Low tackle. Wrap and squeeze the knees, step on his toes. Roll and land on him.
● Tackle from behind - wrap and roll, punch ball.
● Open field angle TACKLE with cutback. (run the inside hip, do not allow cutback)
● Tackle Wheels tackle circuit - head on, chasing, lateral L/R, angle toward L/R.
● Lift partner and drive for 5.
● Open field tackle - shimmy to BC until he turns his hip, then attack near hip.
● Stance and reads. Buttdown, chest up, weight on balls of feet. Roll forward anticipating
snap and ready to attack football.
● Inside backer - Guard Reads: down block right, down block left, reach left, reach right, coming
at LB, pass, pull left/right,. The guard’s butt takes you to the football. Fill first open window to
the football in the direction the butt read gives you. Attack the LOS don’t run laterally.
● Strike, Rip, Tackle near hip. - with ballcarrier running toward outside. Keep inside lev
on BC.
BC
Tackle Inside Hip
Rip pastBL 2
BL1
Hand Strike -
Get near foot down, explosive punch.
SPUR
● Run Through drill - vs. line of blockers with hand shields. Ballcarrier behind running
toward outside. Bust through the first open window and keep inside leverage on ball.
Avoid running laterally to football. Low pad level, explode past blockers.
BC
B B B
L L L
LB
Bag drill
Maze Drill
Baskett Agility
● FORCE drill - Attack football. Attack blockers with outside leverage. Vs. 1st blocker use
punch technique (near foot strike), vs. 2nd blocker rip through. Destroy outer half of blockers
and tackle ballcarrier outside hip.
BC
Tackle Outside Hip
BL 2 Rip
BL1 Strike
SPUR
1. GET OFFS on coach pass set fast and low. With or without chutes. Race 5 yards and
dive on pad.
2. Shifts
3. Get offs with coach reads. coach block stimulus (move right, move left, pass set, pass
set and screen/retrace) Read the near foot of the coach as you blast forward. Foot to:
Bust Through Get upfield fast and low. Foot away, bend into the play: DT: plant
outside foot, turn momentum as low and tight as possible. Put 2 cones on midline for
aim point. DT 1 yard deep end 2 yards deep. Break down at cone.
4. Get offs vs. partner. with foot read. pass set - get to QB. foot away - bend into the
play run the heel line. Foot to - rip past speed rush then stay tight to inside of your
gap. Change up the snap count. 3 each way and 3 more with game on.
5. Spin toward pressure. Vs. partner
6. Get offs with arm punch & spin- get off & blocker squares up on you press out blocker to
get separation, get inside hand position punch with base of hands and explosively punch out,
fight straight into the pressure.
7. Game technique. Foot to - loop across his face. Other reads are the same.
8. Pinching Start wide to simulate, Rip across face and read foot, both directions.
9. Bend Speed Drill - Race vs. partner
DL DL
Offensive Drills
8. Blocking -
Lead Block - Run at defender. Attack, stay low and drive defender where you want him to go.
Read block - Run at defender. Take defender where he wants to go. Running back cuts off of block
Edge Block - get to edge defender. Attack outside armpit and drive inside. Head upfield and get
hips around or ‘butt to ball’.
QB - RB Exchange
- Smelly armpit toward QB
- Hide Ball (cover with both hands)
- Let ball hit your belly
- High step through bags
- Carry out good fakes
- Don’t unwrap until Xmas
- Attack defenders with eyes
- QB grabs hip on fakes
- QB ball on hip on keeps
Handoff work (coach or center snaps ball) - set up bags for hole assignments
a. 2-4 dive right
b. 3-3 dive left
c. 2-3 power left
d. 3-2 power right
e. 2-9 sweep left
f. 3-8 sweep right
g. 1-9 QB left (fake 2-3)
h. 1-8 QB keep right (fake 3-4)
2 minutes water
20 minutes Individual Drills
● Hawk tackle on knees (eyes through the thighs, cock, shoot, wrap, squeeze, roll) air
● Hawk tackle standing - (same coaching points)
● Hawk tackle 5 yards apart drive for 5. Add the coaching point “step on his toes” to emphasize
running the feet through contact)
● Hawk tackle at angle - swoop in, tackle near hip.
15 minutes Two groups or 3 or 4 (Center, QB, RB and QB Receivers/TE) QBs change spots after 7
minutes
Center - QB, RB - RB
Running plays to all holes. Focus on Exchange, QB Footwork and RB exchange
Handoff work (coach or center snaps ball) - set up bags for hole assignments
a. 2-3power left
b. 3-2 power right
c. 1-9 QB left (fake 2-3)
d. 1-8 QB keep right (fake 3-4)
e. 2-4 dive right (NEW INSTALL)
f. 3-3 dive left (NEW INSTALL)
g. 2-9 sweep left (NEW INSTALL)
h. 3-8 sweep right (NEW INSTALL)
3 minutes Water
2 minutes Wrap up
Offense #1 TE G C G TE Rotation
QB ________ @ ____
RB RB ________ @ ____
________ @ ____
Offense #2 TE G C G TE Rotation
QB ________ @ ____
RB RB ________ @ ____
________ @ ____
Practice #4
5 minutes Team Talk
What we’re doing today.
Being part of a team. And using everyone’s strengths to be the best team you can be.
Playing a role and owning that role. Doing the very best you can.
Late 100 yard down and back
Missed 2 – 100 yard down and backs
10 minutes Baskett dynamic stretching
Front kick, side kick, Knee to chest, lunge, step-heel down – cowboys
High knees Shuffle
Running sideways turn hips – backpedal turn and burn
Backpedal Move backwards…coach direction move the ball turn hips with ball
10 yard swoop -gaining ground toward ball
Defense 10 yard sprint off ball Offense 10 yard sprint off ball
20 minutes – Blocking
3 on 3.
OL OL OL
DT DT
LB
5 minutes water
20 minutes running plays against a defense (or bags)
Red and black
Grey and white
3 minutes announcements/wrap
20 minutes – 4 on 3 station
4 offensive players. QB, C, G, RB 6th grade match up and 5th grade match up.
Defense is lined head up over the G and C
3 defensive players. DL, DL, MLB
Red vs. White at one station
Black vs. blue/grey at one station
4 minutes Water
3 minutes announcements
5 minutes Water
Water – 2 minutes
25 minutes Two offenses per team against air – QB, RB, RB, TE, TE
Handoff work -coach snap or center snaps ball if you need work on that - set up bags for hole
assignments
i. 2-4 dive right
j. 3-3 dive left
k. 2-3 power left
l. 3-2 power right
m. 2-9 sweep left
n. 3-8 sweep right
o. 1-9 QB left (fake 2-3)
p. 1-8 QB keep right (fake 3-4)
5 minutes water
Race of the day – shuffle, roll race. A player from each team match up against other teams guys.
5 minutes announcements/wrap up.
5 minutes water
Handoff work (coach or center snaps ball) - set up bags or cones for hole assignments
q. 2-4 dive right
r. 3-5 dive left
s. 2-5 power left
t. 3-4 power right
u. 2-9 sweep left
v. 3-8 sweep right
w. 1-9 QB left (fake 2-3)
x. 1-8 QB keep right (fake 3-4)
y. Power Pass Right (fake 3-4)
z. Power Pass Left (fake 2-5)
Race of the week –
Practice Plan #9
Water – 2 minutes
25 minutes Two offenses per team against air – QB, RB, RB, TE, TE
Handoff work -coach snap or center snaps ball if you need work on that - set up bags for hole
assignments
a. 2-4 dive right
b. 3-3 dive left
c. 2-3 power left
d. 3-2 power right
e. 2-9 sweep left
f. 3-8 sweep right
g. 1-9 QB left (fake 2-3)
h. 1-8 QB keep right (fake 3-4)
Wrap -
Practice Plan #10
5 minute Team Talk
Mental Minute (pick one)
10 minutes Baskett dynamic stretching
Front kick, side kick, Knee to chest, lunge, step-heel down – cowboys
High knees Shuffle
Running sideways turn hips – backpedal turn and burn
Backpedal Move backwards…coach direction move the ball turn hips with ball
10 yard swoop -gaining ground toward ball
Defense 10 yard sprint off ball Offense 10 yard sprint off ball
25 minutes All players tackling drills.
4 minutes Hawk tackle recap
● Hawk tackle on knees (eyes through the thighs, cock arms, shoot, wrap, squeeze, roll)
● Hawk tackle standing - (same coaching points)
● Hawk tackle 5 yards apart drive for 5. Add the coaching point “step on his toes” to emphasize
running the feet through contact)
● Hawk tackle at angle - swoop in, tackle near hip.
Water – 2 minutes
25 minutes Two offenses per team against air – QB, RB, RB, TE, TE
Handoff work -coach snap or center snaps ball if you need work on that - set up bags for hole
assignments
aa. 2-4 dive right
bb. 3-3 dive left
cc. 2-3 power left
dd. 3-2 power right
ee. 2-9 sweep left
ff. 3-8 sweep right
gg. 1-9 QB left (fake 2-3)
hh. 1-8 QB keep right (fake 3-4)
5 minutes water
Practice #11
5 minutes Practice Summary/Team talk
Mental Minute (pick one)
Late 100 yard down and back
Missed 2 – 100 yard down and backs
35 minutes Offense vs. Defense Scrimmage – vs. team you played last week
5 minutes Water
35 minutes Offense vs. Defense Scrimmage – vs. team you played last week
I like having talented players as much as the next coach. That said, I think that we tend to overrate the
importance of talent. I think we as a nation are obsessed with it. We want to believe that having talent
guarantees greatness. We want to believe we can accurately gauge somebody’s greatness with times,
measurements and data. What’s your IQ? What’s your forty time? What’s your vertical leap? What’s your
fastball reading on the radar gun? Your SAT score? What’s your squat max? Give me your numbers, and I
will tell you how good you can be.
Football leads the charge in all of this. Look at the endless reports we get from the NFL combine. Look at the
lists spit out by all those recruiting service rankings, telling us that this guy is five stars and that guy is four
stars, as if it were the final word.
Except that’s not how the real world works. The number of stars next to a guy’s name or where a school might
rate on someone’s list of the best recruiting classes is nothing but a highly subjective snapshot. Maybe it will
turn out to be accurate. Or maybe it won’t. There are even multiple Web sites that actually declare a national
recruiting championship. I understand this is all driven by a huge fan following that college football has. The
point is that a pile of numbers is not nearly as important as how hard a guy works and how driven he is to get
better.
Mariano Rivera, the greatest relief pitcher of all time, signed with the Yankees for $2,000 and a glove and was
not even in the top fifty prospects in rookie ball when he started. Aaron Rodgers went to a junior college
because nobody thought he was a Division I quarterback, and he only wound up at Cal-Berkeley because the
coach saw him when he was recruiting somebody else. Malcolm Butler, Super Bowl hero, was unrated out of
high school, played at University of West Alabama, and was picked up as an unrestricted free agent by the
New England Patriots. Not a single starter for either team in Super Bowl XLIX (49) was rated a five-star recruit
out of high school. Think about that. I have learned that being elite is not about how talented you are; it’s
about how tough and committed you are to getting better.
Being a Good Teammate
Several years ago, the Colorado Rockies re-signed a former player and asked for his input. The player had
enjoyed a 16 year career with 6 different MLB teams and in the process had been a teammate of hundreds of
different players.
Before jumping into that year’s free agency market, the Rockies organization was looking at potential players
to sign to their roster. The insights from the former player they had just rehired could be invaluable to them in
that process.
“The most indispensable player in this year’s market will be Jamey Carroll. If we don’t get anyone else, we
need to get Jamey,” he said.
To say that the others in the meeting were surprised is an understatement. Jamey was a 5-foot 9-inch, 170
pound middle infielder who batted .251 with no home runs and three stolen bases the prior season.
But the wise consultant divulged Jamey’s real talent: “He makes everyone around him better. He does the
little baseball things, like hitting behind runners, bunting, and other personal sacrifices that won’t show up in
the box scores, but in the process everyone around him rises to a higher level. He’s the best teammate I’ve
ever had.”
We can all be like that – if we choose to be. We are around people every day who we can either serve by
helping to make them better or dismiss and focus on our own needs. We can help them by being a positive
example and doing things for them that may go unnoticed, or we can drag them down.
We also get to choose whether we want to be around people, such as Jamey, who lift us up or people who
might drain us. If given the choice, wouldn’t we want to be around the Jamey Carrolls of the world every
day? I would.
We all have the opportunity to have quite and influence on those around us on a daily basis, making others
stand out and shine. Jamey had a great year with the Rockies, and then with the Dodgers he was awarded the
Roy Campanella Award for outstanding leadership.
1. Competitive Excellence – Stacked receivers Urban Meyer (2 min)
In the hours and days following Super Bowl XLIX, there were numerous interviews with Malcolm Butler, the
New England Patriots’ cornerback, who had produced what instantly became one of the most heroic plays in
Super Bowl History. His story was such a clear example of competitive excellence that we use it as another
one of our primary reference points when teaching our players. We streamed Butler’s commentary throughout
the facility for all the players to see and learn from.
In the final seconds of the game, New England is leading Seattle, 28-24, but the Seahawks are on the 1-yard
line, second and goal. Butler a free agent out of University of West Alabama, is in the backfield for the
Patriots. When the Seahawks break the huddle, they stack two receivers to the right. Butler has instant
recognition of what the Seahawks are planning.
“I remembered the formation they were in, two receivers stacked, I just knew they were going to run a pick
route,” Butler said.
In the days leading up to the big game, Butler had studied numerous hours of Seahawks’ film. The Patriots
scout team had run the play in practice multiple times. And now, his number had been called.
The Seahawks’ quarterback takes the snap, makes a quick drop, looks and passes right. Butler explodes
forward. He beats the receiver to the ball, making the interception and clinching the Super Bowl victory.
It was an outstanding play, and you know that made it even more brilliant? Two plays earlier, on a long pass
play down the right sideline, Butler’s man made a crazy, flat-on-his-back catch, even though Butler had
deflected the ball and had apparently broken up the play. Butler later used the word “devastated” to describe
his emotional state in that moment. He thought he had lost the Super Bowl for his team. And then look at
what Malcolm Butler did. He managed that horrific event as well as you can manage it. He turned his focus to
making his response the best it could be. Like Kirk Gibson, he pressed pause and got his mind right. He
changed the only thing he could change – how he performed on the very next play. He did his job brilliantly. It
was the definition of competitive excellence.
1. Your constant companion Brian Cain’s 12 pillars of Peak Performance (2 min)
We become what we do on a daily basis. First we make our habits, and then our habits make us. We don’t
rise to the occasion; we rise or sink to the levels of our training and habits. The secrets of success are hidden
in the routines of your daily lives. As I think back to the Bomber Baseball players that were champions on the
field and champions in life, I am reminder that they had great habits and routines in their daily life.
Thomas Edison made many attempts at inventing a working lightbulb with setback after setback. Yet he was
confident he hadn’t failed even once. He had simply found ten thousand ways not to make a lightbulb. That’s
a great perspective when you face adversity. In the effort toward any worthwhile goal, failure has to be
considered part of the process. Failure in achieving a particular result isn’t really failure if it’s another step on
the way toward the goal. It can be a vital part of the journey.
I wish I had learned more about failure when I was young – how to handle it and even appreciate it. I just
didn’t realize how often it would rear its ugly head. I experienced twenty-eight years of coaching with one
Super Bowl and twenty seven years not so super. I saw successful people and didn’t even consider the
struggles that might have been part of their journey to get where they were. But I’ve since learned that failure
– in sports and in every area of life - happens regularly. It’s part of everyone’s experience. And if we’re afraid
of it we won’t step out and try very much. We’ll never accomplish our dreams if we’re afraid of what might
happen when we try.
Don’t get discouraged when you fail. In fact, consider it a normal part of learning. I hope you fail less than I
have, but you can count on failing sometimes. The most successful people have learned to be comfortable
trying something that doesn’t work out. Success isn’t about never failing; it’s about persevering through
mistakes and adversity. If you persist, even your failures can turn into a valuable part of your success story.
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2. Humility Speaks Louder Tony Dungy (1 min)
How often have we seen someone blowing his own horn – or trying to – only to have it blow up in his face?
It happens on a regular basis in the world of sports. There’s the player who brags before the game about a
sure victory because his performance alone will make it happen, and then he has one of his worst games ever.
Or the player who is showboating in the middle of a play, high stepping it toward the end zone after badly
beating the defensive coverage on a long pass play, and he drops the ball just before he crosses over the goal
line into the end zone. No touchdown.
As former U of Texas Football coach Darrell Royal said, “Act like you’ve been there before.”
Even though my sport has been football, I respect how difficult the game of baseball is – especially deciding in
about a quarter of a second whether to swing at a ball being hurled at ninety-five miles per hour toward your
head. I can appreciate someone who just hit a home run running around the bases with fist pumps. But you
show more respect toward the pitcher if you implement Coach Royal’s motto and express humility.
In our baseball program instead of having a “look at me” attitude, we try to elevate our teammates and lift them
up.
Too often we fall into a trap of comparing ourselves to other people. They see someone who has a
bigger house, or a nicer car, or makes more money, or has the “perfect family”, or has some quality
they want, and in their minds they begin to chase after what someone else has.
There is nothing wrong with admiring others, or allowing someone else to inspire us, but don’t fall into
the trap of comparing to them. Remember, the real comparison we need to be making is with who we
were yesterday.
The person in the mirror is the real competition.
Every night when you go to bed, ask yourself, “Was I better today than I was yesterday?”
The real competition is YOU becoming a better parent, a better spouse, a better employee, a better
boss a better friend. It’s all about YOU and has nothing to do with someone else. The question you
should ask every day is this: “Who am I becoming, and am I becoming someone who is better than I
was yesterday?” Your biggest competition is the person staring back at you in the mirror.
Are you becoming a better person of character? Are you more reliable today? Are your convictions
stronger today? Are you more positive today? Is your influence reaching more people today? Are
you more determined today to reach your goals than you were yesterday? These are the questions
you should be asking.
The best way I know to make sure you are only competing with yourself, is to be very clear and
specific about what you are trying to accomplish with your life, and creating an action plan to follow
every day.
Make sure your goals are clear. Make sure they are specific, attainable, and measurable. Break
down bigger goals into smaller ones, and celebrate the small victories along the way.
Knowing and believing in your purpose will be the fuel that you need to keep moving through the
difficult times. When times get hard that’s often when that little voice inside your head begins to talk
and tries to get your focus off what you are trying to accomplish and on to the comparing your life with
someone else’s.
Stay focused on become a better version of yourself.
It’s ok, to allow another person to inspire you, but you’re not competing with them. You are only
competing with the person in the mirror, so make sure you are focused on who and what you are
becoming! If you are a little better today than you were yesterday, then you are on your way to real
victory!