Good vid! Could be helpful on the film study to add an arrow or circle on the player for the first frame that you’re looking at to draw focus for the viewer, but great content!
Great video! Sometimes I'll be staring at the person I'm supposed to defend... and just zone out! I forget I'm playing ultimate! I get beat a lot, but I'm hoping this vid will help.
Thanks Jonny, great video. P.S I think switching is really underrated on defense, a lot of teams do very well by having a greater focus on 7v7 defense rather than 1v1 defense.
I wholeheartedly agree. A person on person D should always be ready to shift covers. The hard part is knowing who the person switching was covering a moment ago. That is why I prefer a zone focus requiring temporary, and sometimes rapidly changing, person on person covers. If a team works out how the transitions generally occur, switches can be fairly efficient.
this is a great video! would it be possible to go into how to open up your hips when the offense moves (while you’re on defense)? for example if you’re forcing deep, how should you open up your hips to go with them and maintain that under buffer? once again, great video!
Thank you so much for your support! I will try to work in some advice on this inquiry moving forward. In general, it's best to make sure that you're keeping your hips square to your person in deny position. DO NOT commit your hips until you are sure of your positioning to take away the deny space. Too often do I see early-committed hips lead to waterskiing and over-pursuit. In order to stay with your person without turning your hips, it's best to work on footwork and backpedalling. All of this goes back to what Rowan says in this video about staying patient on defense!
I'd love to know just a little bit more about footwork when the person you are guarding creates contact with you in your deny position. For ex) you are forcing under they create contact with a hard cut deep. Is the only option to back pedal?
Holy shit thank you for this. Could you also please cover when to look at the defender's hips vs looking downfield towards/for the disc? Sometimes I turn my eyes away and I get rekt, sometimes I don't turn my eyes away and still get rekt... @jonny malks
You're so welcome! Thanks for your support. The best advice I can give here is to check back into the disc when your person is in a normatively non-threatening position, like the middle of a vertical stack, early on in the stall count as a handler, etc. Studying and recognizing these low-tempo moments in a game is something that the best defenders I know do best!
@@JonnyMalks thank you so much! I recently discovered your videos through Rowan's Excel Ultimate and I've been going through your videos one by one. Really appreciate the support and advice you're so generously offering the community! :)
Those kinds of plays are tough because it's the responsibility of a matchup pair to determine the appropriate amount of contact that each player is comfortable with. If the offensive player was uncomfortable with the defender's amount of contact in this instance, he would have the right to call a foul, thus signaling to his opponent early-on that he will not accept being pushed a little bit. That being said, it's important not to uphold a double standard. For instance, if the offender called a foul for pushing and then pushed a little bit when he played D, that would only anger his matchup and cause them to revert back to their earlier style of play. It's up to the matchup to determine the appropriate amount of contact, but yes a foul could be called there.
Hi Mattia! Great question! I think the main thing I would recommend is watching film. There are so many good free games on UA-cam and Vimeo. Pick a few players whose defense you like after watching a couple games, and focus on them as they move throughout the field!
Good vid! Could be helpful on the film study to add an arrow or circle on the player for the first frame that you’re looking at to draw focus for the viewer, but great content!
I agree with you 100% - I'll have to up the editing game!
Great video! Sometimes I'll be staring at the person I'm supposed to defend... and just zone out! I forget I'm playing ultimate! I get beat a lot, but I'm hoping this vid will help.
Seriously dude, you keep releasing videos on exactly what I'm covering with my players. Thanks for the content!
Glad to help!
Thanks Jonny, great video.
P.S
I think switching is really underrated on defense, a lot of teams do very well by having a greater focus on 7v7 defense rather than 1v1 defense.
Great point, Marcus!
I wholeheartedly agree. A person on person D should always be ready to shift covers. The hard part is knowing who the person switching was covering a moment ago. That is why I prefer a zone focus requiring temporary, and sometimes rapidly changing, person on person covers. If a team works out how the transitions generally occur, switches can be fairly efficient.
Love your video Jonny, so fun to watch
Daym , Daym , DAYM . This might be your best video yet . Really really helpful , thank you so much for all your uploads
Glad it was helpful!
Love the tiny shorts and tiny microphone
Contact is gonna happen way more with this method. But they explained it well and I liked it.
This was so helpful. Thank you
I'm happy to help - thank you so much for your support!
this is a great video! would it be possible to go into how to open up your hips when the offense moves (while you’re on defense)?
for example if you’re forcing deep, how should you open up your hips to go with them and maintain that under buffer?
once again, great video!
Thank you so much for your support! I will try to work in some advice on this inquiry moving forward. In general, it's best to make sure that you're keeping your hips square to your person in deny position. DO NOT commit your hips until you are sure of your positioning to take away the deny space. Too often do I see early-committed hips lead to waterskiing and over-pursuit. In order to stay with your person without turning your hips, it's best to work on footwork and backpedalling. All of this goes back to what Rowan says in this video about staying patient on defense!
Tommaso 🅿️ sent me here
lets fkking go mate
Thanks for your support!
I'd love to know just a little bit more about footwork when the person you are guarding creates contact with you in your deny position. For ex) you are forcing under they create contact with a hard cut deep. Is the only option to back pedal?
Slow feet don't eat 🔥
Holy shit thank you for this. Could you also please cover when to look at the defender's hips vs looking downfield towards/for the disc? Sometimes I turn my eyes away and I get rekt, sometimes I don't turn my eyes away and still get rekt... @jonny malks
You're so welcome! Thanks for your support. The best advice I can give here is to check back into the disc when your person is in a normatively non-threatening position, like the middle of a vertical stack, early on in the stall count as a handler, etc. Studying and recognizing these low-tempo moments in a game is something that the best defenders I know do best!
@@JonnyMalks thank you so much! I recently discovered your videos through Rowan's Excel Ultimate and I've been going through your videos one by one. Really appreciate the support and advice you're so generously offering the community! :)
@9:27 isn't the defence on the player playing the swing a defensive foul.. I'm seeing defence push the guy backwards..
Those kinds of plays are tough because it's the responsibility of a matchup pair to determine the appropriate amount of contact that each player is comfortable with. If the offensive player was uncomfortable with the defender's amount of contact in this instance, he would have the right to call a foul, thus signaling to his opponent early-on that he will not accept being pushed a little bit. That being said, it's important not to uphold a double standard. For instance, if the offender called a foul for pushing and then pushed a little bit when he played D, that would only anger his matchup and cause them to revert back to their earlier style of play. It's up to the matchup to determine the appropriate amount of contact, but yes a foul could be called there.
When it's AJ vs. sweatshirt, my money is on AJ. Sweatshirt looking slow these days #washed.
Sweatshirt was my pick for DPOTY this year. Sad to see them looking so deflated, I was expecting great things.
Hi jonny, How can I improve my defence IQ?
Hi Mattia! Great question! I think the main thing I would recommend is watching film. There are so many good free games on UA-cam and Vimeo. Pick a few players whose defense you like after watching a couple games, and focus on them as they move throughout the field!