Our week of Mini Camp followed by our 7v7 tournament, Strongman competition, and Oline Challenge saw our team reach the performing stage of Tuckman’s Model sooner than expected, and not just on the field. The first sign came after the first day of mini camp. I saw a group of our senior, returning starters taking a few incoming freshmen out with them to Wing Night at a local restaurant, a Monday night tradition. Welcoming new team members, making them part of the whole is a great indicator of turning “me” oriented individuals into “we” oriented teammates.
As we discussed in last week’s blog, we played (non-football) games to develop team chemistry, increase conditioning and work on agility. An interesting thing happened on the second day of mini camp, we concluded practice by going into our fieldhouse and breaking up our players by their offensive positions to play pickup basketball. We did not tell the players the rules or how to pick teams. We just gave them a court and a ball and told them to play. On Court 2, the Wide Receiver court, I saw two of our senior, returning starters elect themselves captains and align the others in a pool so that they could select their team. At first, I thought, “oh no…” This is exactly what I did not want to happen until I saw what these two seniors did. They picked their teams in what I would consider reverse order. The first pick was a young man who has most likely been the last pick every time teams were picked. They then continued in that manner until the best player in the pool was left. They clearly understand the shared vision of our program and a strategy of how to execute it.
Mini Camp ended with our 7v7 tournament, Strongman competitions, and OLine Challenge. Our team went 5-0 on the day, winning the championship game against a very good Mount Mansfield Union team. On the day, our varsity offense scored on every possession except one, and our defense never gave up more than one touchdown in a game. Our Tight End/Defensive End won the Strongman competition in the heavyweight division, taking first place in every event. The OLine Challenge came down to a tie-breaker. A spirited tug-of-war between the Hilltoppers and the Falcons of North Country Union. With great energy, effort, and enthusiasm, the Hilltoppers prevailed. Players in both the OLine Challenge and on the field for the 7v7 showed a high level of interdependence we had not yet seen.

After the first four games of our 7v7 tournament, one of the officials came up to me and said, “this is so much fun. I do not know why there is not one of these tournaments every weekend all over the state.” Good question.
The following pictures are the teams from Mount Mansfield Union and North County Union High Schools who earned 2nd and 3rd place, respectively in this past weekend’s tournaments.


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 supporting this blog and joining our conversations, and as always, thanks for your time!
All our coaches have successfully completed their online USA Football Certification courses prior to Mini Camp to ensure we are up to date and teaching the safest techniques in our sport.
it would be very easy to look at others as “Them.” 25% of our student body are dorm students from all over the world. We have players on our team from Canada, Mexico, Germany, Finland, Spain, Hungary, China, Thailand, Taiwan, and even Rwanda. The largest population on our team is from local students; players whose families have lived in the area and attended the Academy for generations. Then there is another population whose parents are Faculty/Staff. Many of these students live on campus and their parents serve as dorm proctors. Our campus is truly an amazing intersection of cultures. Our student-athletes have exposure opportunities my teammates and I could never have dreamed of back in New Jersey in the early ’80s.
But for one week this summer, boys from St Johnsbury’s youth football program, the Rodliff Raiders, and those from the Lyndon Vikings youth program came together as teammates and friends. Kids from both towns did not look at each other as “them” but rather as “us.” That which could have so easily divided us was set aside for a greater good; for teamwork, camaraderie, and mutual benefit.
versus a team from national power Bergen Catholic in our first game of the UMass 7v7 tournament was more than our newly formed team was ready for. But it was just what we needed. As the day went on, we witnessed our team go from the Storming Stage of Tuckman’s Phases of Team Development to the Norming Stage.
While I may be discussing these stages in weekly posts, I don’t mean to suggest I think our team (or many others) moves from stage to stage in one-week intervals. The goal is to work through Forming, Storming, and Norming (essentially assembling the pieces of the puzzle) before the real season kicks off. “If” we time it right (always an “if” given the variables we juggle), we’ll hit the “Performing” stage about a week before our season opener and move through the season refining our performance.
Even returning veterans of the program benefit from the mental adjustments catalyzed by sharp, pointed direction, and the shrill of a coach’s whistle. Life is no longer “normal.” Players are reminded “games are not won on Fridays and Saturdays in the Fall…” Players new and old are candidly reminded of their responsibilities and commitments to teammate and team. Coaches relay the importance of setting a personal example… an example of what it means to be a Hilltopper on and off the field, as well as in the community.
our team who have what it takes and identify those who can be inspired to have what it takes. Our job as coaches is to help those who have it to reinforce it, and those who don’t yet know, to find it, and to recognize both that they “have what it takes…” and that it must be both cultivated and for all to know it must be protected.
If you want better participation numbers for your summer organized team activities (OTAs), be sure to create a calendar and get it into the hands of your players and their parents as soon as possible. We distributed ours on Friday of last week. With family vacations, other sports travel teams and everything else kids can do these days, we need them to know in advance when and where they need to be.