The state football playoffs and our defense of the Vermont Division I Championship begins this tonight. In Vermont, we start and end early because the snow comes early in the Green Mountain State.

As we prep for the playoffs, our number one priority is to stick with the same routine that has gotten us to this point in the season (and served us well in three of the last four state championship games). We continue to strength train on Monday afternoons and Thursday mornings. We continue to run the same tackling, pursuit & takeaway drills on defense. We continue to drill our blitz pickups, read progressions and route conversions on offense.
As the season goes longer and the days get shorter, keeping players motivated and emotionally engaged can become a challenge. We may throw a wrinkle into our offense and defense to keep our players sharp. We also focus on the brotherhood, supporting our teammates, and celebrating the successes of others. We reinforce the commitment, sacrifice, and interdependence that has been the foundation of our season together thus far, and the expectations of those who went before us and established the Hilltopper reputation.
I’ve often heard other coaches say the football season is a “Grind.” It can never seem that way to our players, especially this time of year.
This time of year should be the most exciting.
With every playoff win, comes the gift of another game and another week together.
Enjoy this time. It, as so many seasons have before, will too soon come to an end.
Coach Rich Alercio is available to discuss coaching philosophy, X’s & O’s, or teach his O-Line “techniques in the trenches.” Contact Coach at richalercio@gmail.com and share http://www.olineskills.com with your colleagues and friends. Thanks for your time!

Focus your coaches and players on this opponent, this week. Control what you can control. I’ve noted before, I love the game of football for its parallels to life. Life is unpredictable, and when a ball has points on its end, the ball doesn’t always bounce the way one expects. Football forces us to confront those unanticipated bounces and decide what to do next. Further, football often hands us the unexpected when confronted with daunting combinations of fatigue and stress.
This weekend, football coaches all over the country will wear a Coach to Cure MD patch on their sleeve during games. Coach to Cure MD is a partnership between the American Football Coaches Association (AFCA) and Parent Project Muscular Dystrophy. One reason the AFCA was drawn to Coach To Cure MD was because of the unique parallels between Duchenne Muscular Dystrophy, a disorder which robs young men of precious muscle strength, and football; a game where young men are at the peak of their muscle strength. The goals are to raise national awareness of the disorder and raise money to fund research for a cure.
Three weeks into the 2018 season and every Division 1 team in the state of Vermont has at least one loss. I just read an email from one of our TV sports anchors addressed to every coach asking if anyone can recall the last time that has happened. Certainly not in my five years as a Vermont high school football coach.
in September to participate in the Walk to End Alzheimer’s. We believe it is a great opportunity to give back to the community and support a worthy cause.
As I reflect back over my 30 years in coaching, it is hard to remember a year or a team that did not have an offensive lineman as one of its captains. One of my proudest moments was being named a captain of my team at Ursinus College in only my 3rd year with the program and 2nd year starting at Center on the offensive line. Although the average football fan pays little to no attention to the offensive line, the five men who comprise that unit and their selfless efforts are clearly recognized by their teammates.
As I think about the training camps I’ve participated in as a player, assistant coach, and head coach, memories ebb and flow, but the near torture that was the end of practice conditioning (wind sprints, gassers, timed runs, etc) was the least favorite part of my football experience. Since then, I have never been a fan of ending practice with conditioning. While players will undoubtedly encounter fatigue during the season, (and our staff reminds players of Lombardi’s sentiment, “Fatigue makes cowards of us all,”) old-school conditioning drills do not translate well to the game of football. Worse, they often drain player morale and disincentivize coming back the next day. A better approach is incorporating conditioning into the football position specific drill work we do throughout practice. Our coaches incorporate bursts of intense work during practice with a 1 to 4 work to rest ratio throughout.
We divided the players into 8 teams and our practice field into 4 fields. Not only do players work at maximum capacity, their movement patterns translate well to football (e.g. lateral movement, changing direction, tracking an object in flight, reacting to an opponent’s movement, etc.)