Installing Today’s Hybrid Pistol Offense Run & Pass from Top to Bottom
This manual provides you with the full offensive line, receiver, and quarterback mechanics for installing each offensive play presented. Coach Campbell has left no stone unturned for implementing today’s Pistol Offense into your program.
Coaches
I am attempting to put together a player evaluation scale, rubric etc.
How do you evaluate your players? I am getting ready to have my post season exit meetings and would like to have the players self evaluate and the coaches evaluate each player as well.
The first characterstic I would like to evaluate my players on is trustworthiness.
Can I trust that a player will do what his coaches ask...weight room, academics, school community etc.
How to Tell a Winner from a Loser
1. When a winner makes a mistake, he says "my fault"; when a loser makes a mistake, he throws the blame on someone else.
2. A winner credits his "good luck" for winning on being fundamentally prepared; a loser blames his "bad luck" for losing on bad breaks even though he is not fundamentally prepared.
3. A winner works harder than a loser and always finds time to do what is expected of him; a loser never finds the time and when he does, he works on the wrong things.
4. A winner makes commitments and sets goals with his heart and sets out to accomplish them; a loser makes "promises" with his mouth and never sincerely means to keep them.
5. A winner shows he's sorry by making up for mistakes; a loser says "I'm sorry" but does the same thing next time.
6. A winner thinks, "I'm good, but not as good as I should or could be." A loser thinks, "I'm not as bad as some of the others."
7. A winner would rather be admired for his ability than liked, although he would prefer both; a loser would rather be liked than admired because he knows he hasn't worked hard enough to be admired.
8. A winner hates to lose; a loser could care less although he may put up a good front.
9. A winner is fundamentally sound in all aspects of the game; a loser is not!
10. A winner knows that strength, agility and quickness are the keys to success in athletics and works hard to attain those things; a loser may know, but never attains.
11. A winner takes constructive criticism from the coach, realizing that it will help him and the team; a loser pouts and thinks he's being picked on.
12. A winner thinks of the team first and never wants to let the team down; a loser thinks of himself first and the team last.