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jimmifli
08-25-2015, 09:07 PM
http://www.wsj.com/articles/nfls-best-practice-no-wasted-time-1440539319


In order to win in the NFL, you still need a quarterback and a solid defense. But this season you’ll also have to tackle the same problem facing every office in the world: a solid time-management plan.


This is the problem the Buffalo Bills faced when a new coaching staff, led by Rex Ryan, came to town this year. Because of recent regulations, practice time has never been more precious. And according to coaches, the attention spans of their players—most of whom are millennials—have never been shorter. The old methods simply don’t work anymore.

How NFL Teams Practice When They Aren’t Allowed to Practice
“I remember coaching under my dad—oh my god,” said Ryan, who worked under his father Buddy Ryan in the 1990s. “We had two, three hour practices every day, back-to-back padded practices. It was the craziest thing I’ve ever seen.”


That’s no longer the case. Teams are limited to one practice a day instead of infamous and grueling two-a-days. Once the season starts, teams are limited to 14 practices in which players wear pads. Yet despite decades of technological and schematic advancement, NFL practices are still generally the same as they were years ago. Players take turns running plays. It is no frills.


With these two factors in plain sight, Bills offensive coordinator Greg Roman identified a problem with NFL practices: “In my experience, there’s a lot of standing around.”


So Roman devised a plan to change the way Buffalo practices. The first part is to effectively split practice into two practices on separate parts of the field, so that everyone is running a play at all times—and there’s no more standing around.


“In this business, for some reason, smart and efficient are bad words,” said Bills general manager Doug Whaley.


Instead of backups watching starters run plays—or starters getting a breather while watching the backups—everyone on the Bills is operating in their own ecosystem. This, Roman said, is crucial, because he thinks younger players need to be more engaged at all times. “Attention spans are shorter than they used to be,” he said.


Whaley said this is crucial for roster development. Because third-string players or undrafted rookies typically get the least amount of reps, he said, it is hard to get a read on who is standing out. According to Whaley, an undrafted free agent who would get 10 plays each practice under a normal schedule, is now getting 20-25 useful plays each practice.


“Last year, it was just ‘ones [starters], go go go, twos go...’ now everyone gets an equal amount of reps,” said wide receiver Robert Woods. As Ryan puts it: “We’ve added plays without adding time. Ten years ago we looked at practice and said ‘oh, we’ll catch up on that later.’ You can’t do that anymore.”




Roman and Ryan’s time-saving methods are not limited to running concurrent practices. They have also found another simple way to ensure their fast-moving practices move even faster: They don’t correct mistakes on the field. They simply want to run as many plays in practice as possible, then they will address any mistakes to players in the film room later.


“We are not going to call a timeout and stop the practice on the field to tell a receiver he needs to take a two-yard split inside the numbers,” Roman said. “The quickest way to get better at football is to play football. Not watch football and not talk about football. It gives players the opportunities to make mistakes.”


Woods, the Bills’ receiver, said the no-mistake-correction philosophy has an added benefit for players because it allows a player to practice “stress-free” without walking on eggshells, afraid of offending their coach with a wrong route. That will come after practice.


“There is no confrontation between the coaches and players out here in practice,” tight end Chris Gragg said of the no-corrections policy. “They want you to play fast...there’s more detail per play [on film] than I’ve been around.”

more...

Roman sounds like he's not as dumb as some of our recent coaches.

bleve
08-25-2015, 09:38 PM
I'm smarter than I wuz

Meathead
08-25-2015, 09:46 PM
yeah but that happens when you read green eggs and ham

DynaPaul
08-26-2015, 04:50 PM
I'm just shocked that it wasn't implemented sooner. Why are people standing around? You'd think running an A, B, and C team and then swapping out the over and under performers would have been standard policy. The only way to get better is through practice reps that aren't imaginary. The old way sounds like a bunch of lower belt martial arts students just watching black belts do their thing without actually practicing self-defense, katas, and bagwork themselves.

Mace
08-26-2015, 06:14 PM
I'm just shocked that it wasn't implemented sooner. Why are people standing around? You'd think running an A, B, and C team and then swapping out the over and under performers would have been standard policy. The only way to get better is through practice reps that aren't imaginary. The old way sounds like a bunch of lower belt martial arts students just watching black belts do their thing without actually practicing self-defense, katas, and bagwork themselves.

I don't know why it wasn't done sooner, I just hope a lot of our opponents keep doing it a while longer.

IlluminatusUIUC
08-26-2015, 06:41 PM
I'm just shocked that it wasn't implemented sooner. Why are people standing around? You'd think running an A, B, and C team and then swapping out the over and under performers would have been standard policy. The only way to get better is through practice reps that aren't imaginary. The old way sounds like a bunch of lower belt martial arts students just watching black belts do their thing without actually practicing self-defense, katas, and bagwork themselves.

As noted, the old way was under old rules where they had more practice time. In those days, they may have just prioritized coaching right after the mistake and having young players observe the older ones.

bleve
08-26-2015, 08:25 PM
yeah but that happens when you read green eggs and ham

Yes, but sometimes I think I lose IQ points reading some threads here. So this was a re-charge

ParanoidAndroid
08-29-2015, 11:42 AM
Roman and Ryan’s time-saving methods are not limited to running concurrent practices. They have also found another simple way to ensure their fast-moving practices move even faster: They don’t correct mistakes on the field. They simply want to run as many plays in practice as possible, then they will address any mistakes to players in the film room later.



Yikes! I liked everything but this. And it's an alarmingly bad idea. Every bit of research regarding feedback in education says the faster you give it, the better the learning and the more permanent the learning is. Immediate feedback is extremely valuable. Also, if you are letting mistakes go that are then repeated during a single session, they become learned. Now, not only do you have to re-teach the correct way to do things, your "students" now have to unlearn the learned mistake. That is extremely difficult to do.