Quantcast
Skip navigation.

offense

Randle El grabs yards

photo: 
Antwaan Randle El gets yardage.jpg

Antwaan Randle El runs for additional yardage after making a reception against the Arizona Cardinals on October 21st

Clinton Portis gets a Touchdown

photo: 
Portis Scores.jpg

Portis flys through the air to grab one of his two touchdowns against the Arizona Cardinals on October 21st.

Football Philosophies

Author: 
Coach Hutchison

Trying to exhibit for display all my philosophies of what it takes to win at the sport of football has proved a daunting task indeed. Although I prefer a multidimensional power offense capable of the quick strike and an overly physical, overly aggressive, dominating style of defense, these styles may not suit a particular group of athletes. It is the meshing of what a coach wants and what he or she has to work with that is the formula for success. Coaches that can at least temporarily adjust to the talent available, or the talent faced, are always going to be the more successful coaches. Such adaptation has been a benchmark of great coaches like Dean Smith, Bobby Knight, and Eddie Robinson, to name but a few. Here I will break down my basic philosophies for the offense, defense, and special teams.

Campbell burns the Eagles

photo: 
Campbell burns the Eagles.jpg

Jason Campbell draws back for a long pass in the Redskins victory over the Eagles on the 17th of September.

Pitcher for the Atlanta Braves

photo: 
Braves Pitcher.jpg

Atlanta Braves pitcher John Smoltz

Chris Cooley get a First Down

photo: 
Cooley gets a first down.jpg

Chris Cooley, the tight end for the Washington Redskins drags the defender to make the first down.

Clinton Portis Stiff-arming

photo: 
56539307PG.jpg

Clinton Portis stiff-arms one of the Tampa Bay defenders en-route to one of his touchdowns.

Brunell Avoids a Sack

photo: 
Brunell Avoids a Sack.jpg

Washington Redskins Quarterback Mark Brunell neatly avoids the charging Charger linebacker.

Syndicate content