I ran this same offense in high school 2006-2010. It functioned okay but once you run into a team with disrupters up front things got tough. Your guards must be athletic and have to be precise with who they’re blocking, no time to second guess
Great stuff! We used a doubles formation , left slot jet right while fb ran trap first then qb dropped back to fake pass . One game the jet gave us 400 yds rushing in a game we weren’t supposed to win
Great stuff! I used to coach Wing-T at Parkersburg High (WV) and Christiansburg High (VA). I've been out of coaching for a long time but plan to get back in. I believe in the Wing-T and think it's still valid.
I find a lot of wing t plays watching nfl and ncaa football, just out of different formations and motions. I found coaching it for years that if you don’t have the Jimmie’s and Joes and face a great team that does, you have to have the ability to pass effectively, and many ways to do that out of the Wing T. The problem I find is, time to put it all in.
I have watched Tubby teach wing T and I have watched you teach wing T. I love watching both. I am not to smart and I understood what you were teaching. If I were coaching I would use your system.
The modern base for this offense is a book by Tubby Raymond (Univ. Deleware), famous in the Wing-T lore. It is called "The Wing T; An Order Of Football". This book is not hybrid. It is the basis of Wing-T. Some aspects are outdated such as the shoulder block. Still, it is a must-have though. Buck sweep series, Belly series etc. My father coached it and I played it. It was the ultimate bathroom book in my house.
I ran this same offense in high school 2006-2010. It functioned okay but once you run into a team with disrupters up front things got tough. Your guards must be athletic and have to be precise with who they’re blocking, no time to second guess
Great insight, coach!
Great stuff! We used a doubles formation , left slot jet right while fb ran trap first then qb dropped back to fake pass . One game the jet gave us 400 yds rushing in a game we weren’t supposed to win
Great stuff! I used to coach Wing-T at Parkersburg High (WV) and Christiansburg High (VA). I've been out of coaching for a long time but plan to get back in. I believe in the Wing-T and think it's still valid.
I find a lot of wing t plays watching nfl and ncaa football, just out of different formations and motions. I found coaching it for years that if you don’t have the Jimmie’s and Joes and face a great team that does, you have to have the ability to pass effectively, and many ways to do that out of the Wing T. The problem I find is, time to put it all in.
I have watched Tubby teach wing T and I have watched you teach wing T. I love watching both. I am not to smart and I understood what you were teaching. If I were coaching I would use your system.
4 championship in 5 years. This is what we ran as I was the OC. In fact if you watch San Fran that’s basically what they are running.
Can I get the slide show sent to my email?
I run a lot do these concepts. I would like to add some new elements you have as well.
Thanks
Where can we get a playbook for this?
The full system can be found in Glazier Drive here. production.glazierdrive.com/systems/hybrid-wing-t-system-1-1
@@GlazierClinicsa while ago, I payed for the subscription on GlazierDrive but there were no “attachments” all it was were videos. No playbook.
The modern base for this offense is a book by Tubby Raymond (Univ. Deleware), famous in the Wing-T lore. It is called "The Wing T; An Order Of Football". This book is not hybrid. It is the basis of Wing-T. Some aspects are outdated such as the shoulder block. Still, it is a must-have though. Buck sweep series, Belly series etc. My father coached it and I played it. It was the ultimate bathroom book in my house.
Wishbone is best!
The Bone!