Forming the Team

This week marks the first week of our summer OTAs (Organized Team Activities).  From the outside looking in, our evening training sessions appear to be 30+ high school athletes working hard to get bigger, faster and stronger. We are installing read progressions, match zone coverages and beginning to build the base of repetitions that will in time, become second nature.  Simultaneously, we are building our 2019 team and developing this year’s culture as we go through the five stages of Tuckman’s Model of Team Development (Forming, Storming, Norming, Performing, Adjourning).

As is always the case, forming takes time, and coaches are the most prescriptive. Undoubtedly fundamental components are emphasized, as is attention to detail in every aspect of preparation and practice. 2019-06-13 StormingEven 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.

This early in the process, tasks are relatively simple, initial goals have an element of challenge, but are largely attainable on individual levels as we begin to build incremental momentum born out of success. Friction will intentionally be injected into the routines of formations, schemes, and techniques, but it will be surmountable. These initial “forming” steps serve a distinct purpose. Mental placement… mindset… is equally if not more important than foot or hand placement. If we don’t get the mind aligned to the team’s goals and objectives, and clearly convey our expectations for the character traits at the core of who we are, the best playbook on Earth isn’t worth the paper it’s printed on.

Who will be the Hilltoppers of 2019? Last year’s seniors are gone, replaced by this year’s incoming players.  This is a new team with new talents. As we begin OTAs, team members’ roles and responsibilities may be unclear.  As coaches, we will provide this newly formed group with guidance, direction and baseline expectations.  Standards will be set and adhered to. We will see some of our older, returning players step up to welcome new players to the group.  As coaches, we want to see the example they set for younger teammates or players potentially brand new to the game. It can be said that integrity drives us to do the right thing whether someone is watching or not…

Coaches will indeed be watching, and so will players. Some we expect to step into leadership roles will do so. Others may not. Some may surprise us and rise to levels of leadership unanticipated, but all will need to put the interests of the team above their own. All must recognize starting positions are earned, and the opportunity to lead their teammates is a privilege.

As we forge the common vision of who we want to be and what we want to attain. We reinforce that vision with common values and beliefs in our ability to measure up to the challenges that confront us. We develop belief in ourselves and one another. We instill trust, respect, and forge the bonds of relationships capable of seeing us through adversity and success. Good team culture is founded in relationships.  The process of building effective relationships begins this week. I invite you to join us for this year’s journey!

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!

What it Takes to Coach

Any man “can” father a child but not everyone “should” be a father…

It is much the same for coaches.  Just because someone was a great player with both knowledge of the game and skill to apply it doesn’t naturally translate into coaching potential. Leading, guiding, and directing a team…building and reinforcing a culture…helping teammates come to realize they are more potent and capable together than they could ever hope to be alone, requires far more than the talents that may have produced hometown headlines in years past.  2019-06-06 Coaching Tools

To have what it takes to be a football coach at St Johnsbury Academy, you need to first and foremost be able to Teach.  One of the best compliments I ever received was from Mike Kuchar, X&O Labs Senior Research Manager, and Co-Founder when he told me, “The clarity of your teaching simplifies the game tremendously.”  The game of football is complex but as we discussed a couple weeks ago in the “Occam’s Razor” post, coaches must simplify the concepts, strategies, and techniques necessary for the players to both individually and collectively understand and apply them.

Next, you must have a passion to positively impact the lives of those players in your charge and often, a willingness to develop life-long relationships with them. As I’ve noted in other posts, it’s the positive impacts my coaches had on me that fuel my desire to re-invest in my players and staff. I love the John Wooden quote, “A good coach can change a game, but a great coach can change a life.”

Lastly, a commitment to put in the work.  Coaching is not a Monday through Friday,  9 to 5, kind of job.  Hours spent in video analysis, preparing practice schedules and scripts, coaches meetings, game plans, scouting reports, and more,  afford your players a greater opportunity for individual and team success.  My mentor, Jim Pry is often heard saying, “Never let anyone outwork you, or outlast you.” It’s as true in the coaches office and practice field as it is on game day.

If you can teach, love your players, and are willing to work hard, you can be a great coach in any sport at any level.  Just be sure to start by checking your ego (and Glory Days) at the door. With a nod to Coach Wooden, I’d like to suggest the product of a coaches efforts are measured more in graduates and decades of service, than wins and losses.

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!

What It Takes…

If you looked at the top of the STJ Football Summer Calendar posted last week, you saw the words “What It Takes.”  Our defensive coordinator, John Lovett, took it upon himself to write those words when he created the document.  We never discussed it.  He just did it on his own.  Coincidentally, I was planning on using those same words as our motto for the season.  Perhaps after working together for a half a dozen years, we are rubbing off on each other.

Although we chose the same inspirational words we both had a different idea of what they meant.  As Coach Lovett explained the calendar at our Spring meeting, he informed our players that following the schedule of OTAs, 7v7s, camps, etc is what it takes to be successful and get us back to another state championship.  For me, it was not about doing what it takes but rather having what it takes.

While at the USA Football National Conference this year, I heard University of Minnesota football coach, PJ Fleck, recommend John Eldredge’s book “You Have What It Takes.”  Those 52 pages inspired me to begin seeking those on 2019-05-30 you-have-what-it-takesour 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.

Having what it takes can be defined in a number of ways.  For the Hilltoppers, having what it takes means you are willing to work hard on the field, in the weight room, and in the classroom, you are tough physically, mentally and emotionally, you make good decisions in practice, in games, and in the community.  Ultimately, it means that we can count on you to do what is expected of you; to place the interests of the team above your personal gain.

Do you have what it takes?  Do your coaches?  Do your players?

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!

 

Summer Calendar

Today marks my 100th Blog Post on OLineskills.com. Hard to believe when I started this experiment 2.5 years ago it would turn into such a wonderful dialogue with players, parents, faculty, community members, and other coaches. I believe coaching is a privilege and as I’ve stated before, my efforts have, and continue to be an endeavor to pay forward all the investments others have made in me. I’m convinced getting the culture of a team right is a prerequisite for success and a coach’s primary responsibility. It’s been great to share such perspectives with all of you, and in keeping with the theme of culture and communication, let’s get on to the meat of our 100th conversation. Whether this is your 100th blog post, or your 1st, thanks for taking the time to join me on this journey.

The culture of our football program is built on the philosophy that games are not won on Friday nights and Saturday afternoons in the Fall.  Games are won with the work done from January through July with the lion’s share of the work in June and July.  2019-05-23 Summer CalendarIf 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.

Our summer calendar includes the days and times of our OTAs, 7v7 tournaments, Strongman competitions, and camps.  We include reminders to update their physicals and the closing date of our online team store so that they have their shorts and tees ready for training camp.  We also include the date of our Meet the Coaches parent meeting.  More to come on that in a future blog.  Scrimmage dates and our first game are also listed.  Most importantly, we intentionally schedule weeks where we have no OTAs.  Players are on their own the weeks of June 3, July 29 and August 5.  Those are the weeks we encourage our families to take their vacations.

If you want your kids to participate and your parents to buy into your program, open the lines of communication and give them the information they need so that they give you what you need…their kids with you Monday, Wednesday and Fridays through the summer. Culture begins with (and is underpinned by) communication of standards and expectations. If we share common goals, common awareness, and a common vision of success, we can make consistent decisions for the team’s best interests. (Save the surprises for opponents!)

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 over these 100 blog posts, and as always, thanks for your time!

Occam’s Razor

The principle of Occam’s Razor states that one should not make more assumptions than the minimum needed.  It also states that the simplest solution tends to be the right one.  Although Occam’s Razor is intended to be used to solve a complex problem with competing hypotheses, we use it to determine our summer 7v7 installation schedule.

What could be more complex than a teenage boy trying to decide which of 5 receivers he should throw the ball to while they are being covered by 7 opponents? 2019-05-16 Simplify Even more problematic, we coaches have a funny way of making things more difficult than necessary…

We love to prove (largely to ourselves) how smart we are and how much football we know.  Unfortunately, as I have stated in earlier blogs, it is not about what you know.  It’s is about what you can get your players to understand and execute.

As we prepare our summer 7v7 installation schedule, we need to keep in mind we will have a new quarterback this season.  Therefore, we need to minimize assumptions and simplify solutions.  Regardless of how much we may like a play or pass route combination, if it does not fall into one of our three basic Quarterback read categories, it will not be installed.

Similarly, regardless of the backfield action, we group every route combination into one of three quarterback read categories:

  • Triangle Reads
  • Curl-Flat Middle Reads
  • Level Reads

We have 42 different route combinations that we can lump into these three reads.

42 route combinations are a complex problem for defenses, but we “simplify” them for our Quarterback; tipping a hat to Occam’s Razor.

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!

Champions On & Off The Field

We are very proud of our 2017 state championship and our 3 state championship game appearances in the past 5 years.  We are equally proud of our Gatorade player of the year and USA Today Offensive and Defensive players of the year, but what we are most proud of is something very few people know.2019-05-09 Cady Award

On Sunday, May 5 the Vermont Chapter of the National Football Foundation hosted its annual scholar-athlete banquet.  The foundation provides 6 scholarships to the top student-athletes in the state every year.  They also provide scholarships to the most courageous athlete and the recipient of the Community Service Award.  In the past 3 years, St Johnsbury Academy Hilltoppers have captured 5 of those scholarships.

We have had one of the top scholar-athletes in each of the past 3 years (2016-Collin Urie, 2017-Jasper Rankin, 2018-Renwick Smith).  In 2016, Shane Alercio captured the Most Courageous Athlete scholarship for battling a rare vestibular disease called Dandy’s Syndrome that negatively impacts balance and ocular tracking.  This weekend, Jake Cady took home the Community Service Award for his efforts in creating a non-profit called Team Sullycat which has raised over $40,000 to help support families battling cancer.

Our players are champions on the field, in the classroom, in the community, and in life.

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!

YOU are on the clock!

Last week’s NFL draft allowed teams to pick their Jimmies & Joes for the upcoming season.  Some teams followed last week’s football saying…culture trumps talent.  2019-05-02 You're on the clock LogoThe Giants clearly prioritized culture over talent when they traded away one of the most talented players in the league earlier this year.  They also went with culture with their #6 pick in the draft.  Not to say that Daniel Jones is not talented, but he is most definitely the best cultural fit of this year’s QB choices due to his relationship with the Mannings.

A year ago, I shared a blog detailing a practice we do at St Johnsbury Academy.  Draft your own team.  You are the General Manager and every player on your roster makes up the list of available players who have declared for the draft.  Create your 15-20 player draft order. After you are done, invite your assistant coaches to do the same; but do not share your draft order with them prior.  Their draft order will tell you a lot about them and what is important to them.

They may go with best available, positional need, cultural fit or all of their position players.  It is also interesting to see how yours differs from theirs, and theirs from each others’.  If all of your coaches understand your culture and their values reflect yours, one should find little difference between all of the draft orders.  Once you and your staff have the draft completed, you may find the opportunity to discuss culture and values, as well as assess positional changes to ensure the best 11 are on the field.

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!

Culture Trumps Talent

Last week I shared a saying in football “it is not the Xs & Os it’s the Jimmies and Joes.

This week I share another football saying, “culture trumps talent.”  2019-04-25 compass

That is not to say that a good culture can overcome poor talent, but it is most definitely true that poor culture can destroy a team with great individual talent.

Do your players and your team’s values, beliefs and attitudes reflect what is most important to you?  What are you doing to create a strong culture within your team? Our culture hinges on shared perspective around 4 key components:

* A shared understanding of the environment – “We know what we face”

* A shared vision of where we are going – “We know what we have to do”

* A shared set of organizational values – “We are in this together”

* A shared feeling of power – “We can do this. “

We layer lessons about individual character traits; Integrity, Loyalty, Trustworthiness, Selflessness, and others to inspire teammates, foster commitment, and reinforce interdependence.

While you are putting your schedules and practice plans together for summer OTAs, Mini Camp and Training Camp, be sure to include team building activities into your plan and make certain that your coaches are on the same page.

The plays, schemes, and techniques we teach our players will serve them well through the season but will soon be forgotten.  What you teach them about being part of a team and putting others above themselves will serve them for the rest of their lives.

A strong culture will make them champions on the field, and champions in life.

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!

Jimmies & Joes…

There is an old saying in football, “it is not the Xs & Os, it’s the Jimmies and Joes”.  If your Jimmies & Joes are better than your opponents’, you’ll likely to win most games.

2019-04-18 Xs & Os vs Jim & Joe

That is why, over the past three months, I traveled to Bergen County NJ, Princeton NJ, Mystic CT, Windsor CT, Biddeford ME, and Orlando FL to attend clinics, conferences, and spring practices.  

In the NFL, you can draft better players.  In college football, you can recruit better players.  In high school, you have to coach the Jimmys and Joes who go to your school and you have to make them better than the Jimmys and Joes walking the halls of the schools on your schedule.  

The drills, techniques, and schemes we learned at Glazier and Nike Clinics, the USA Football Conference, and UNE practice will help us to make our players better.  We appreciate those coaches who were so willing to share what they do with us so that we can share it with our players and make them better Jimmys and Joes!

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!

 

Minds Blown!

“You’ve blown our minds.  We have been old school blocking up front.  You have caused us to rethink everything. We are changing how we do things starting now.”

2019-04-07 Alercio Oline Clinic 4
Players and Coaches attending the 2019 Alercio OLine Clinic, St. Johnsbury, VT

This is what a fellow Vermont coach told me after the first hour of the inaugural Alercio OLine Clinic at St Johnsbury Academy.  He was not familiar with the concept of identifying leverage of the defender in relation to the ball, then determining the appropriate step, visual target, and strike points to execute a block.  

We shared these concepts with 47 players and a dozen coaches including our rivals from Lyndon Institute.  Although our two schools have competed against each other for over 100 years, on a Sunday in April, our players worked alongside their players, and our coaches worked with their coaches to make both of our teams better.  For just one day, we all played on the same team.

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!