|
Post by coachjtm on Dec 7, 2015 21:32:33 GMT -6
So a family member is going to buy my son either of the DVD sets from Coach Slack, but not the whole set. Not one to look an incredibly generous gift in the mouth, I'd love to get some opinions on which one would be preferable. Any ideas?
|
|
|
Post by Chris Clement on Dec 7, 2015 23:42:25 GMT -6
The C4 would be his best purchase right now.
|
|
|
Post by 33coach on Dec 8, 2015 10:07:21 GMT -6
The C4 would be his best purchase right now. the 7DVD set is on my wishlist... from everything ive read about it; i believe that the second set builds off of the first three correct? so getting the second one without the first might be alittle difficult.
|
|
|
Post by dsqa on Dec 8, 2015 22:01:19 GMT -6
Get the Self-Correct system Throwing Mechanics set, its the best choice to start...
|
|
|
Post by coachjtm on Dec 10, 2015 9:12:10 GMT -6
Thanks Coach Slack! We're hoping to come to your camp in Dallas in March. It lines up perfectly for his birthday and it'll be a real treat to get him out there on the field with your team!
|
|
|
Post by natenator on Dec 22, 2015 16:00:29 GMT -6
Thinking of purchasing this for our peewee and Bantam teams (and maybe our JV and SR teams). We have literally no one in our org that knows about teaching QB's.
Would these DVD's help A) train a coach to help coach QB's and B) be well suited for players aged 10-14 (and maybe 15-18)?
Thanks!
|
|
|
Post by Chris Clement on Dec 22, 2015 22:29:29 GMT -6
Yes Somewhat Yes
|
|
|
Post by natenator on Dec 22, 2015 22:32:12 GMT -6
Chris, can you expand on the somewhat part please? Is there something better? Right now my concern is helping the 10-14 year old QB. Thx
|
|
|
Post by Chris Clement on Dec 22, 2015 22:55:20 GMT -6
No, it's just that on average kids that age aren't going to turn a DVD into actionable stuff. You really need a coach. And if your goal is to develop a great 17 year old QB the DVDs are great to start with a QB who is 12, but they're not the MOST efficient way for a MS team to spend their efforts.
|
|
|
Post by Chris Clement on Dec 23, 2015 0:16:01 GMT -6
Sorry, Nate, I didn't realize it was you. Your first priority with that age group under your circumstances is just to minimize the degree of shitshow. Getting a half-dozen logical pass plays installed and repped will do him wonders more than most kids on the country will get.
|
|
|
Post by natenator on Dec 23, 2015 6:52:00 GMT -6
No, it's just that on average kids that age aren't going to turn a DVD into actionable stuff. You really need a coach. And if your goal is to develop a great 17 year old QB the DVDs are great to start with a QB who is 12, but they're not the MOST efficient way for a MS team to spend their efforts. Thanks Chris. Yeah, I wasn't talking about the player themselves using the DVDs but rather if the DVDs can help train a coach so that they can help the 10-14 year old QB. I wasn't going to hand the kids the DVDS, just wanted to make sure the material was appropriate for the age group I am trying to help. Also agree on the pass plays! Thanks again.
|
|
|
Post by dsqa on Dec 23, 2015 21:26:05 GMT -6
Coach, yes, it will help a coach understand what to look for and spend his time on, albeit very limited. It will speed up recognition and clarity in what you are trying to get a kid to work on...no DVD will do all the work, but in a sharp coaches hands, it will be very valuable...you can PM me anytime and I will provide any tech support you may need as well.
|
|
|
Post by windigo on Jan 7, 2016 10:58:37 GMT -6
Thinking of purchasing this for our peewee and Bantam teams (and maybe our JV and SR teams). We have literally no one in our org that knows about teaching QB's. Would these DVD's help A) train a coach to help coach QB's and B) be well suited for players aged 10-14 (and maybe 15-18)? Thanks! 1) Yes 2) Yes My buddy is now the NFA guy for our state his got grade school kids flinging it all over the yard. You are really never too young to start working on mechanics. The longer you let kids get away with bad mechanics the longer it will take to correct. I've kind of learned coaching kids flag football and high school football that it really isn't arm strength that makes raw QBs stand out, the kids that look like they have the best arms often just the ones that have the least bad mechanics. It really is worth the time when dealing with young kids to teach the entire team how to throw. You'd be surprised how many naturally strong arms you will find once mechanics are corrected.
|
|