Bill Walsh On Game
Planning
Here is an article passed around that was drafted by Bill Walsh. It
outlines his basic thoughts on game planning, scripting plays and
paying attention to details. Much of Pete Carroll's emphasis on
detailed planning stems from the influence of Bill Walsh.
A Method For Game Planning – Part 1
By Bill
Walsh
Planning for a football game today is somewhat different
than the original
concept of the game in which the quarterback was the field general and
saw
weaknesses during the game and called his plays accordingly. Obviously
the game
is much more complex today. I was fortunate to be involved with some of
the
great football coaches and programs. I have been afforded the
experience that
allowed us to conceive an offense, a defense, and a system of football
that is
basically a matter of rehearsing what we do prior to the game.
What we do is call the plays. When I was with Paul Brown and
the Cincinnati
Bengals, his trademark was sending in messenger guards. He had great
success.
Paul Brown was the man that changed the game from one that was a
rugged,
slugging it out type of play, to a more sophisticated method. The
advancing of
teaching techniques, coaching techniques, the use of teaching aids, the
use of
film, the black board, etc. All were originated and developed by Paul
Brown
just after World War II. Part of his concept was a strategy in which
virtually
everything was spelled out. It was a system in which the plays were
called from
the sideline. He was criticized for it at the time, but today it is
virtually
done by everyone. One of the problems you have today is that you don't
have
trained quarterbacks who can call plays because it has always been the
coach
who called the plays. At Cincinnati
we had a young quarterback, by the name of Greg Cook, who had a short
career,
but may have been the greatest single talent to play the game. It
became my
responsibility to call the plays from the press box. Paul would always
ask,
"What are your openers?" He wanted to know how we were going to start
the game. He was thinking about two or three plays that he would start
the game
with; an off tackle play, a pass, etc. So we began to develop our
franchise.
When I left in 1975, we had a 11-3 record and the number one offense in
professional football. A lot of it was related to disciplining a
quarterback.
At that time it was Ken Anderson. It was disciplining an offense to
know what
to expect when we called a play. Consequently we could call a play with
the
assurance that we could get something done.
My next employment was with the San Diego Chargers and I was fortunate
enough
to have someone like Dan Fouts to work with. Now the list of opening
plays
began to number 10 and 12. In other words, we began to plan the opening
sequences of the game. From there I went to Stanford and the list went
to 20.
We would have our first 20 plays to be called. Now with San Francisco we
finally stopped with 25.
What we have finally done is rehearse the opening part of the game,
almost the
entire first half, by planning the game before it even starts.
Now why would you do such a thing? I know this, your ability to think
concisely, your ability to make good judgments is much easier on
Thursday night
than during the heat of the game. So we prefer to make our decisions
related to
the game almost clinically, before the game is ever played. We've
scouted our
opponent, we have looked at films, we know our opponent well. If you
coach at
the high school level, often you are in the same league with the same
coaches
and you know them like a book. With out question you can make more
objective
decisions during the week as to what you would do in the game than you
can
spontaneously as the game is being played. To be honest with you, you
are in a
state of stress, sometimes you are in a state of desperation and you
are asked
to make very calculated decisions. It is rarely done in warfare and
certainly
not in football; so your decisions made during the week are the ones
that make
sense. In the final analysis, after a lot of time and thought and a lot
of
planning, and some practice, I will isolate myself prior to the game
and put
together the first 25 plays for the game. They are related to certain
things.
What are the reasons for pre-planning your offense before the game?
1. ESTABLISH FORMATIONS to see the adjustments the opponent will make.
You
can't wait to find out when you are on their five yard line. Early in
the game
you are going to show certain formations to see what adjustments are.
The coach
in the press box knows what formations are coming up, so he knows what
to watch
for concerning adjustments.
2. BASE OFFENSE. You have to establish in your own mind how you are
going to
handle a base offense. In other words, you want to have certain plays
to start
the game in which you take on your opponent physically, man to man, and
the
coach upstairs as well as the coach on the field, is observing that.
You get a
better feel which way to run and what kinds of plays work best. Part of
your
plays are where you attack your opponent physically and find out where
your
matchups are. You want to find that out early in the game, so that some
time
later you have an idea of just what you want to do.
3. SET UP CERTAIN THINGS. In our case we will run a given
play so that later we
can run the play pass that can win the game for us. Occasionally we
will play
an opponent in which we will run the play pass first, faking the run
and
throwing; so that later we can run the running play itself. In our case
we want
to set up the play pass.
4. SPECIALS. One of the interesting things about Paul Brown Football is
that he
would always be terribly upset if someone would run a reverse before we
did, or
a run pass before we did. He would grab the phone and scream in my ear,
"They did it before we did!" This was very distressing because it
sounded so dated. But you know something, over the years, I found that
Paul was
100% right. If you run your reverse first, and you can make 5 yards or
more,
the other guy won't run his. If you have a special play of any kind,
get it
into the game quickly. How many of you have had a ball game and you
have
practiced two or three things that you thought for sure would work. The
game is
over and you didn't try them or you are so far out of it, it doesn't
matter
whether you try them or not. Paul was right. Set up your special plays
early
and run them early. Get them done, it affects your opposition.
This approach to the game has a good track record. When I was at
Stanford, I
was told by our student manager that in seven straight games, we scored
on our
first drive. This year in virtually every game, we scored early.
Against the
Raiders, a game we lost, in 17 plays we had two touchdowns. Our problem
was
later on. The point is that in every game, we will move the ball early.
A year
ago we moved the ball throughout the game. Last year, we just moved it
early.
Planning can make the difference. Those first twenty five plays can
make the
difference.
5. ESTABLISH SEQUENCE. If you have running plays with any sequence to
them at
all, you will want to start the sequence so you can establish something
to work
from. If you can do this at home, or in your office, think and
visualize
yourself how you would like to see the game develop. Write down your
plays and
the corresponding formations. Believe me, it takes tremendous pressure
off of
you. If you feel confident going into the game, it makes you that much
more
confident. If you have the feeling that a lot of us have had before a
game,
that you are going to lose the thing, you are out gunned, etc., it
certainly
takes a lot of pressure off the out-gunned coach to know that you have
done
everything you could before going into the game. If you want to sleep
at night
before the game, have your first 25 plays established in your own mind
the
night before that. You can walk into the stadium and you can start the
game
without that stress factor. You will start the game and you will remind
yourself that you are looking at certain things because a pattern has
been set
up.
6. ISOLATE THE SECOND HALF. In our particular case we have already gone
into
the second half, not in the detail that we did at the start of the
game. In our
particular level, every game is a tight one. If you win a game by a big
score,
you never expected to. If you lose by a big score, you never expected
to. There
is just never a game that you can count on. You might as well plan part
of the
second half. You hold certain things back that you think will be
effective in
the second half. Some are related to your original plan, others are
related to
your opposition in regard to what adjustments you think they might
make. I will
tell you this, I think we can do a better job with halftime adjustments
on
Thursday than we can at halftime the day of the game. It's that simple.
A Method For Game Planning - Part
2
SITUATIONAL FOOTBALL
The question comes up how can you have 25 starting plays when you don't
know
what the down and distance will be or where you' 11 be on the field,
etc. Let's
get into the other part of the plan because that's the difference. We
have 25
plays we have basically decided upon. We have talked to the line coach,
who may
handle the running end of it. Basically you look for a formula to win
in those
25 plays. Let's talk about things we seldom practice but they win or
lose a
game.
1. BACKED UP OFFENSE.
You
won't worry about it until you are backed up, but one
of the things we do as part of our plan, the offense will run any where
from
your own one foot line out as far as your own 8-10 yard line. What are
you
going to do when you look down at the far end of the field, you have
the ball,
your players seem like they are a mile away from you and you have to
drive out.
The defense certainly has a feeling about that. They feel if they have
you in
the hole, the defensive charges are going to be lower and harder, you
know the
Opposition is going to be blitzing. You know that who ever is
supporting sweep
plays is going to be up near the line of scrimmage. You know that the
linebackers are ready to plug as quickly as they can because, obviously
they
have you in a jam. There are certain factors such as that that you look
for
when you scout the Opposition. In our case, we have probably four runs
and two
passes for the backed up offense. The passes, you hate to think of
throwing,
but you may be behind and have to throw. You do certain types of passes
from
that situation. Things that you can do the best with very little chance
of
interception.
We know when we are backed up, we can't fumble the ball. Certainly when
we are
backed up, we can't take a loss. We know that when we are backed up, a
penalty
against us is far more damaging, and we know when we are backed up we
have to
have room for out punter to punt the ball with a certain amount of
poise. If he
doesn't have the room, the ball is snapped very quickly to him, it's a
bad
punt, the return is good and it means 7 points for the Opposition. So
backed up
offense means something to us in our game plan, but also it means
something
when we practice. This all comes from experience, men. It wasn't
ordained to me
or any one else. It came through 25 years of coaching and some bad
experiences
with it.
Generally when you practice this kind of work it has to be contact. It
does not
have to be scrimmaging where there is tackling, but there has to be
full speed
blocking where everybody gets a feel. You take your offense to the goal
line,
put the ball on the six inch line, offense huddle up in the end zone,
defense
huddle up and wait. Now the offensive coaches and the defensive coaches
will
discuss backed up football. The defensive coach will talk about the
advantage
they have and how to maintain it and what you must not allow the
opponent to
do. The offensive coach talks about the things I just mentioned. Now,
the team
has been spoken to, here are the plays we will be running, probably all
year, we
are going to fight our way out of here. And so you will practice it.
You may be
able to get that done twice or three times during the first two weeks
of
practice. What you are going to do is to back up your team to the six
inch
line, move the ball out to the two yard line, move the ball out to the
four
yard line, and in each case, talk about the things you are going to do
and how
to practice them. The defense, of course, is doing the correlating
thing. Each
week in practice when you play a given opponent, you have four plays,
line up
your team on its own one yard line and you run four plays to remind
everybody
if the backed up offense and what the problems will be.
Most often the problem comes just inside the tight end. The
linebackers or ends
as you may call them, come underneath the tight ends. Often we will go
to two
tight ends, as part of that offense. But we practice it. Believe it or
not,
when your team is on the field and somebody punts the ball out of
bounds, of
some other disaster occurs and your offensive team runs out there, you
can hear
them talking about the backed up offense, what they have to do. When
that
starts to happen, your team is prepared to play football. You are doing
the
best job you can do, a thorough job.
2. 3RD AND 3 OFFENSE.
The
next thing we talk about is the 3rd and 3 offense.
Naturally this is in your game plan. 3rd and 3 is a tough situation. We
will
practice it. We will allow certain amounts of time in our training camp
for 3rd
and 3 football. We set up the down markers, we line up the defense,
offense, we
have lectured it to our team as part of our situation football. Most
often you
are going to go to your best back with your best running play and you
are not
going to fool anybody at that point. You are going to depend heavily on
that
running back to get the extra yard or two with his ability, figuring
that the
block for the first two yards of it. 3rd and 3 to us may mean a pass in
our
style of football. We may throw 3 to 1 over running the ball because of
some of
the defenses we face. 3rd and 3 means something and you practice it.
The first
two weeks of practice you will hit on that. You will say, one of the
toughest
situations we have, men, is when it is 3rd down and approximately 3
yards to
go. The opposition is not in their short yardage defense at that point,
but
they are going to come after you and it is a critical down.
Occasionally the
defense isn't quite as aware as the offense of how important it is. In
our 3rd
and 3 offense we will probably have four runs. They may be the same as
your
backed up offense, and in our case, we will have two or three passes.
You will
practice those each week. You will say it is 3rd and 3 as part of your
situation practice. We are going to have four plays, defense get ready.
It will
be live, not tackling. We are going to block it and we are going to
make it.
The runner will have the feeling of what he is after. He will come out
of the
huddle and see those 3 yards are the difference in this ball game, we
win it or
we lose it. He will learn how to control the ball, not take any silly
chances,
stopping, dodging. He has to bust up in there, use his blocking and get
his
three.
3. 3RD AND SHORT.
3rd
and short can mean anywhere from 1-6 inches all the way
to 2 yards. In this situation the 6 inch play may be different than the
2 yard
play. Often there are plays that are somewhat different than your other
plays.
Most teams will stay in their same defense but they will have a way to
play it.
Everybody will pinch down, linebackers scraping, corners at the line of
scrimmage, safety at the line, whatever. As we list our short yardage
plays, we
will list the play and we might list the formation, a 16 Power for
example, may
be the play that we use from 1 inch to 1 1/2 yards. Often 6 inches to
go, we
are going to quarterback sneak. Often 2 yards to go is too much for a
sneak,
who are we kidding, we are going to run an off tackle power with double
team
blocking. I really don't worry much about the play because everyone
runs a
slightly different offense. I do know, that you as a coach better
anticipate
the degree of what we call the short yardage situation. Again, you talk
to your
team during the two week period before your first game, you are
probably only
going to get about 10 minutes of it, and you are going to practice it.
You are
going to line up your team, you're going to have your down markers, you
are
going to show right now, we've got 2 yards to go and it is 3rd down.
Here are
the things we do, here's what to expect from the Opposition. We are
going to move
it right up to the tip of the ball on that yard marker. Meanwhile, the
defensive coach is doing the same thing. Talking about it. Each week
you are
going to get four short yardage plays. To be honest with you, it would
be more
than that for us.
4. SHORT YARDAGE PASSES.
One, naturally, is the one you try to
score a
touchdown on. The short yardage situation is the only time you are sure
what
the coverage is. Teams won't play around with it. If you are sure of
the pass
coverage, the time you might be able to score is on 3rd down and one
yard to go
and your team knows it. This is where we have them, they know the
coverage, we
know who is going to be blitzing and how to block it. We will also have
a play,
most often with the quarterback rolling out, running or passing to make
the
yard or two as one of our passes. So we have a TD play and we want it
every
week and we practice it every week. You may not use it for 7 weeks and
you will
win a game with it the eighth week.
OPPONENT'S 20 YARD LINE (PLUS 20)
By
and large, if you have gotten to your opponent's 20 yard line with one
or
two first downs, the opposing head coach is desperate. The defensive
coach is
trembling because the head Coach is walking toward him. The head coach
says,
"Blitz, stop them now. Blitz, they are killing us." The defensive
coach doesn't have time to explain that they have only made one first
down and
it was the silly offense that got them there. Most people get
desperate, some
people panic. Teams go to a man to man coverage, teams will blitz. So,
on the
plus 20 yard line, we are going to throw the ball and make a touchdown.
Now we
have a better idea of what the pass coverage schemes are. We know the
man to
man coverage is far more likely than a pure zone coverage. We know that
teams
are more likely to blitz so we are looking to throw for a touchdown. I
don't
recommend that unless you have a skilled quarterback One week it may be
the 18
yard line or the 25 yard line, but that part of our football is
special. We
will have four passes that would be scoring passes. You might go the
entire
game and not use them because that situation doesn't come up. You move
the ball
from the 45 down to the 2, you are never there. You have passes and you
are
looking to break man to man coverage. You may have some special runs
because a
blitzing defense, if you trap it just right, you can score against it.
Again,
the first two weeks of football practice, you show your team. You show
your
team what you think is best in this situation. We will use the same
ones all
year, but we are going to practice them. You talk about it for ten
minutes, you
practice it offensively and defensively. During the week of practice
before a
game, there is situational football. You move the ball to the plus 15
or plus
18, wherever that breaking point is for you and your opponent and you
run those
passes. Now when your team comes out of the huddle on the 18 yard line,
the
guys are saying, "Look out for the blitz, here's our chance to
score." The receiver is saying, "Throw the ball out front of me, don't
make me stop for it." Whatever it is, you have those plays. In our
case,
most of our touchdown passes will come from this area. If they want to
zone
you, we have outlet people who we would throw to against the zone. We
know that
it gets tougher and tougher to score as you go in closer.
PLUS 8 TO THE PLUS 3 OR 4.
This
is when your opponent hasn't got into his goal line defense. Often you
will go to your backed up football. There are certain base block run
plays
against the three man line that you are going to run right at that
point. You
are looking to see if they have substituted their goal line defense. If
they
haven't substituted their goal line defense, you are looking for your 8
yard
line or your close offense. You have certain plays that you would run.
Again,
going back to your two weeks practice before your opening game, you
talk about
it. "Men, there is a point from that 10 yard line in that they are
going
to stay in their basic defense. They are going to blitz us and we are
going to
have certain plays that we are going to run." We know that people can
get
underneath the blocker and make the stops. We know that we don't want
to lose
yardage.
GOAL LINE OFFENSE.
In
this phase they have substituted their goal line defense. I suppose
there
are teams that don't substitute, but by and large, let's assume they
do. They
use 6 linemen and the gap charge. Often you have to make a change in
the
blocking patterns that you'll use to face up to that goal line defense.
Like
our short yardage offense, when we talk about our goal line offense, we
are
talking about what we need. Certainly there is certain situation where
we need
inches. So we would start our list with those plays where we need
inches to
score. We would move our list down to let's say the six plays we might
run if
we are sitting with 3rd down and 3 on the 3 yard line and they are
still in
their goal line defense. You will see varied charges. When we get to
the six
inch line or the 1 foot line, we are going to see everyone in the gap,
coming
straight ahead. When we are on the 3 yard line with 3 yards to go,
often there
is an out charge. There is a substitute man coming in for one of the
linebackers. There is a free safety back in the game, those kind of
things
happen. We have to account for those situations. You can't account for
these
situations if you haven't planned to do it because you will look down
at that
far end of the field and you will just see a bunch of bodies and rear
ends
facing you. You can't tell where you are. You have to have a method you
have
worked with and your coach in the press box has to tell you just where
you are.
We talk to our quarterback about signaling distance. He will put up his
hands
and you think it is something that it is not. He will signal and it
looks like
we need 3 yards and later you will see the film and we only needed 1
yard. You
have ways to talk to him about what that means to you and then you have
that
part of your football developed. The first two weeks of practice you
have to
have some goal line football. Every week you have a certain number of
plays.
You place the ball on the 3 yard line, the 2 yard line, the 1 yard
line, the 6
inch line, and the 1 inch line. Bring it out to the 3 and it is 3rd and
3 on
the 3. Here's what we are going to run. Practice it that way and often
these
plays run together. Your players have so much more confidence, coming
out of
the huddle knowing what they have been in those situations before.
Obviously,
line splits make a difference. Hopefully there is an extra blocker on
the weak side,
the tight end or some big wide rear ended guy, to help protect his gap.
But
whatever you have, if you have planned it and fail, you can't blame
yourself
for losing your poise. You can't blame yourself for panicking if you
have
planned these things and they fail. You may really search yourself for
the
kinds of decisions you made on Thursday night, but you certainly can't
make the
decision during the game. As a coach, one of the things you are always
fighting
during the game is the stress factor, breaking your will. The stress
factor
will affect your thinking. I have been in situations where I could not
even
begin to think what to do. From that point on, I knew that I had better
rehearse everything.
END OF THE GAME (Last 3 plays).
To save your own sanity, you'd better practice the last
three plays of the
game. I don't worry so much what they are. Don't get yourself in a
position to
try to think of something to do with just a few seconds left because
you will
always wonder why you didn't do something else. Through experience we
said that
we were going to have 3 plays. Often they are the kind of plays with a
very low
percentage. I have seen the Atlanta Falcons win their division in three
consecutive games, I think it was, throwing the ball way down the field
on
their so-called planned play with a tipped pass. I won't talk about
those plays
in detail, but certainly one would be catching the ball and lateral it.
Our
team has practiced those last three plays and when it gets down to that
point,
they go in the game knowing just what they are going to do. I say,
"Good
luck" and amazingly enough, a couple of those have worked. We walked
off
the field with our heads up. "My God, we almost pulled it out."
Rather than throwing the ball up in the air and having it intercepted
and
humiliating you.
3RD AND 8 YARDS TO GO (OR MORE).
You
have plays that you are going to call for that kind of situation. A lot
of
high school teams will run the ball on 3rd and 8. If they can run it,
they
should run it because it is certainly the best way to attack somebody.
3rd down
and 8 should mean something to you. Number one, the best single pass in
Football is the hook. It's not an out. Percentages throwing an accurate
out
drop considerably compared to a hooking pass. Obviously, a receiver can
adjust
to a hook. The receiver can see the ball leave the quarterback's hands
and the
receiver can adjust to coverage schemes. You will need some type of a
hook pass
that gets you 8 yards on 3rd and 8. You hear the sportscaster comment
that the
receiver did not run the distance he needed to make a first down. You
have to
school your team on the fact that half of the yardage you make forward
passing
is after the catch. If we have 3rd down and 15 yards to go, it does not
mean we
are going to run a 15 yard pass pattern. We will generally throw the
ball 10
and get up into the 20's. We remind our team, it is 2nd and 20, 3rd and
25, we
are going to run a basic pattern, get all we can out of the completion
and run
for the rest of it. We are constantly reminding our receivers what
their stats
are running after the catch. Dwight Clark might be 4.2; Fred Soloman
might be
9.3. This is one way you measure a receivers performance and his
contribution
to the ball club. 3rd down and 8 does not mean you have to throw an 8
yard
pass.
LONG YARDAGE - LAST THREE PLAYS.
What
are you going to do when you have 15 yards to go on a given down? You
count on your best receiver catching the ball and then have running
room to
make the yardage. In each of these situations, you will practice them.
A Method For Game Planning - Part
3
TIME FACTOR.
The
next thing you talk about is the time factor in a game. There is a
dramatic
difference for example, between the end of the first half and the end
of the
second half. Obviously at the end of the game if you are behind, you
are not
going to be very cautious. You have to do certain things. Some of the
gross
errors are made at the end of the first half.
So often teams leave the field after attempting to drive and
score with time
outs remaining. I suggest, if you have a so called two minute offense,
you
first decide whether you are going to score or run the clock out. You
can run
the clock out in a way that your principal and students won't notice.
You have
to call certain sweep type plays, but you are looking at the clock and
you want
to get the heck out of there. We know, we may try to go for it with a
two
minute offense, but the minute I see the odds start to turn the other
way, I
signal to our quarterback and now we watch the clock run. We want to
get out of
there. Let's say that we feel we can get into position to score and we
have
been a reasonably effective team in doing that. We are a team that uses
our
time outs. We want to use our time outs even if it is at the wrong time
as far
as the clock is concerned. What we really need to do is discuss
strategy with
the quarterback. We will give the quarterback two or maybe three plays
to call.
We will talk about what the defense is doing, what defense they are in,
remind
him what our game plan was. We are not going to be able to send plays
in at
that point. So we will set our strategy at the expense of the clock. We
know
that with a minute and 20 seconds left in the half, call your time outs
if the
clock is running because if that clock is running with a minute and 20
seconds,
if you have any kind of play, by the time you run the next play you
have
probably run 20-25 seconds off the clock. You do that twice and it is
now third
down and you are really in trouble, because the other team is going to
get the
ball back. I say use your time outs and don't wait too long.
Almost the first day of practice you install your basic
running game. It might
be a 16 Power or a 17 Power, whatever it is, you simply talk to your
team in a
meeting and tell them that we are going to call two plays. The
quarterback is
going to call the formation, the plays are going to be on a certain
snap count,
for us it is on set which is the second sound, and the quarterback is
going to
say "two plays" 16 Power twice. You come up to the line of scrimmage
and you run 16 power on set. You don't jump around, you take your time
and run
it again. If you will do that in your early camp once or twice a day,
just a
couple of plays, you have established a system in which you can call
your plays.
Most two minute offensive plays are not elaborate plays. You can repeat
the
same one three or four times. It could be a very simple hooking type
pass or an
out. The point is, all you need is the facility to do it. You simply
say, two
plays and name them. The next thing you might do is call your formation
Red
Right, check with me, you come to the line of scrimmage and say 16. Now
you can
run two plays. Remember if you huddle up it could cost you at least 25
seconds.
The two minute offense is related to one, being able to call two plays
in the
huddle; two, to use your time outs; three, know when you are not going
to make
it. Those are the key things.
FOUR MINUTE OFFENSE.
Four
minute offense does not mean you are trying to score. In the two minute
offense you want to score points. Four minute offense, you want to use
the
clock and control the ball. This was brought home in 1972 when I was
with the
Cincinnati Bengals. With four minutes left in the game, we had an 11
point lead
and had the ball. We lost the game. We know this, we can use 35 seconds
on the
clock by simply not going out of bounds, not throwing an incompletion
and not
being penalized. But 35 seconds is 4 forward passes that your opponent
can get
if you don't use it up. In a four minute offense, every play can use 35
seconds. All we really have to do is make a first down and we are going
to win
that thing. You must practice the four minute offense. It has to be
live, you
don't tackle people necessarily because you can blow the whistle when
you think
the man would have been stopped. You have to talk to your team about
it. You
are going to win the game and here is how you are going to do it. You
are going
to have the lead with four minutes to go and you are going to have a
first
down. You will win if you can maintain control. You know you have 35
seconds if
you don't go out of bounds. You know the clock will stop on a penalty.
You know
that a fumble is disastrous, that if you can just squeak out a first
down by
good play calling and aggressive blocking, you will win.
Always feel that when you go into a game, the other team has a one
point edge
on you. As a coach even if they have a 40 point edge on you, don't
think about
that. You figure every time you play, you are a one point underdog.
They are one
point better than you are. You will be a little more alert about it. If
you
think the opponent is one point better, you have to control the ball.
We have
plays that we are going to run. We are looking at the clock and
unfortunately,
we may have to throw a pass to get that first down, which we have had
to do and
have been successful. But we have practiced it and our quarterback
knows the
fears he can have with a mistake. Your four minute offense can win you
the
game. If you will talk about it, you will be surprised. If you practice
it each
week, four of five plays. You can say, here we are, on our 30 yard
line, four
minutes to go, let's see what we can do. Let's see if we can get a
first down
and how we will use the clock. Throughout much of this situational
football,
there is pressure on the offense.
SNAP COUNT.
One
of the big mistakes you can make is to play around with the snap count.
Any
time we are backed up, we are going to snap the ball on set. Any time
we are
sitting there in short yardage, we are not going to play around with
the snap
count. We have seen teams try to draw teams offside and one of their
own
linemen moves and then it is 3rd down and 6 to go. We are going to snap
the
ball on the regular count that makes sense. Paul Brown has a certain
snap count
for every play and Paul was right because with certain plays it makes a
dramatic difference in the way you use your cadence. The first thing
you remind
yourself, don't outsmart yourself. Give the offense every chance to
come off
the ball together. Further down the list you might say, let's disrupt
the
defense by getting them off balance. Your snap count is very important
to you.
If you are talking about offensive football, the running game is the
most vital
part of the game, but when you talk about your running game, what you
are
saying is you have to be able to run when you are backed up. You have
to be
able to run on 3rd and 3, you have to be able to run on short yardage.
You have
to be able to run through tough situations. In the professional level,
the
forward pass dominates the rest of the game. But if you can't run in
tough
situations, your chances of success are minimal.
So what do we do? We take a sheet and list our first 25
plays. We keep a sheet
and on one side of it are listed 25 plays that we are going to run. We
have one
square accounting for the second half of the football game and we have
a block
where we write in our adjustments at half time. I will show you two
charts at
the end of this talk.
You start the game with the first 25 plays, but now it is 3rd and 3.
You turn
the sheet over and go to the 3rd and 3 list. You have listed the plays
in the
order that you would call them on 3rd and 3. You take it; turn the
sheet over
and go to your next play. Trouble; long yardage, you turn the sheet
over and go
to the long yardage category. Punt; get the ball back. You have your
first 25
plays listed, but of course, somewhere in here you are going to be
backed up.
You have the ball on your 1 yard line; so don't fight it. Turn over the
sheet and
look at your BACKED UP OFFENSIVE PLAYS. You make a first down, turn the
sheet
over and now we are on play number 5. It works; go to number 6. It
works; go to
number 7; we are in pretty good shape. Oh, you got to the 20 yard line.
You
have another choice now. You can stay with your original list which
might have
been a basic run; or you can decide to try to get into the end zone
with a
pass. Say you don't quite make it and you are on the 8 yard line. You
are on
the 6 inch line. You look at these categories. You score a touchdown.
By the
time you get back to the sheet, you are behind 21-7, but don 't worry
about it.
You have a lot of plays on your list to call. So continue to go through
your
list.
This is a way to pre-plan the game. We feel pretty solid
about this. Write on
the plan the opponent and the date so that you don't end up using last
years
plan. This is a format that establishes how you practice.
The next thing is when do you practice these things. Obviously we have
more
time to practice than you do. But I will fake a plan for the high
school
coaches. If I remember right, you play on Friday night. On Saturdays
you are
cutting the grass, if I remember right. That is not a bad life. On
Sunday you
should go to church with your wife.
MON. - Review, etc. Install plays.
TUE. - We will not cover the situations that much.
WED. - 6 plays (4 minutes)
6 plays (3rd & 3)
6 plays (short yardage)
6 plays (goal line)
THU. - Last 3 plays
6 plays (long yardage)
6 plays (3rd & 8)
FRI. - GAME
When we plan our practice we don't talk about how much time we are
going to
practice. We figure that one play is one minute. So we go by the number
of
plays. In a given practice we will have 5 plays of short yardage, and 6
of long
yardage. We will say "get 12 plays in 10 minutes" of drills. Each day
you will have one segment of your game plan that you will practice.
There is
obviously time when you are going to cover your base offense and your
base
defense. But, you plan on certain days for these things to be done. You
can
live with this much easier than second guessing yourself.
Bill
Walsh
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