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HAL MUMME'S PRACTICE PLAN: Practicing the Multiple Receiver Offense Practice schedules and drills for the

pass offense are not a lot different than those for the conventional offense but I believe a great deal of thought and preparation must be done to achieve success. In the Air Raid offense I have used for many years at several different levels certain nuisances have lent themselves to practicing well. I will detail these things in the article with hope it will help you. Make Practice Consistent The pass offense depends much on timing and chemistry between players i.e. QB and WR on route, this makes consistent practice a must. I always tried to erase doubt in the players minds as to what would be done in practice on any given day. I endeavored to make all the Mondays the same, all the Tuesdays the same, etc. By keeping a consistent practice schedule through each game week of the season our players could gear up mentally for the tasks to be accomplished in each segment of practice. To give an example, our individual drills were all done the same way and same segment of each day's work out. Consistent practice makes for consistent reps, which make for great reps, which makes for great play. Practice Success That old saying about you play like you practice is true. It was always my belief that five great reps of anything were worth more than ten mediocre reps. With this in mind, I encouraged our players to slow down their reps but to do them great. For example, if you have a QB and two WR working on the curl route dont rush through the drill just so you can say you got ten reps. It will be a lot more productive to have the WR walk back between reps, take there time, and have five great curl routes each one perfect. Hustle is fine but is not the only ingredient. Practice successful reps even if it means fewer reps. I never wanted to practice anything that a player could not visualize doing in a game. The successful coach should look at every drill - be it individual, group, or team type and ask himself if this will happen in a game. If this answer is no, throw it out, it is wasted motion, which means lost time. The only resource that cannot be replaced is time. Knowing you can eliminate poor drills, look at the fruitful drills. Take each one and study how you can make them more game-like. For example, our Air Raid offense depended greatly on multiple sets, player groupings, and the no huddle attack. With those parameters, I decided to make all of our team offense drills more game-like by having the sideline coaches and players box painted on our practice field and requiring all our coaches and players to work and sub from where they would in the game on Saturday. This greatly enhanced the efficient use of subs and made delay of game penalties unheard of in our offense. I believe players will perform better in games if they can visualize what it will be like therefore practice game-like events.

Practice for the Unplanned Event Every coach loves that play which happened just the way he drew it up. To be honest about it though, those are more rare than ordinary. This is particularly true in the pass offense. Practicing contingency football is very important. I would take each of our pass plays and draw up what would happen if our QB were forced to scramble to his right and then repeat the process with a scramble left. I would drill this about ten minutes per a week to make sure everyone knew where to go on the field if the QB scrambled right or left. I had landmarks for each receiver and the offense of line and running backs had specific duties. Our teams often made spectacular plays when the opponents defense played its best and forced our QB from the pocket. We turned our lemons into lemonade so to speak because we practiced the unplanned event. Practice Organization is crucial to having an effective multiple receiver pass attack. Practice Making the Big Play Scores happen because players expect them to take place. I have certain things I want accomplished on each play from each player but the bottom line is to score. With that in mind, I made it mandatory that whomever ended up with the ball on any play had to cross the goal. In other words, our players scored on every play in practice, from individual drill right through team. I wanted all of the players to expect to score on every play. This takes some patience since the coach has to give the ball carrier time to return from the sprint to the goal. The results are worthwhile, as big plays can become habit. Plan Success All the practice habits described can be planned into workouts. The best time to plan workouts for the season is in the summer when the pressure is off. For this reason all of the workouts for the entire fall including bowl games or playoffs I planned in July. They were organized by day of the week and placed in a large binder to be used as needed on a daily basis. It was always amazing how few changes had to be made and how consistent our offense would become due to this planning. The most important time during the game week are the moments coaches spend with their players. By not having to devote daily time to planning practice schedules the coach has more time to spend with the players. Success can be planned well in advance. Basic Air Raid Weekly Schedule-Season Monday: 90 min. view previous game 30 min. dress-warm-up

40 min. special teams review 20 min. individual drills 30 min. walk through game plan 30 min. watch video of upcoming opponent Tuesday: 30 min. watch video of upcoming opponent 15 min. warm-up 15 min. special teams/individual time for uninvolved 20 min. individual drills 10 min. group routes on air/OL individual drills 10 min. one on one DB-WR/inside drill 10 min. team screens 5 min. special teams 20 min. pass skel 25 min. team offense: coming off goal, open field, third and short, FGS 30 min. individual meet watch days work-out Wednesday: 30 min. watch video of upcoming opponent 15 min. warm-up 15 min. special teams/individual time for uninvolved 20 min. individual 10 min. one on one DB-WR/inside drill 20 min. pass skel

55 min. team: goal line, red zone, third and long, open field, punt 30 min. individual meet watch days work-out Thursday: 20 min. team meet watch previous days team video 10 min. individual meet study opponents 15 min. warm-up 35 min. special teams/individual for uninvolved 10 min. individual 10 min. team scramble drill 55 min. team game plan 10 min. sideline sub special teams No meetings after practice Friday: Travel and meetings Saturday: Game Sunday: Off

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