The Hounds Have to Keep on Trucking!

Not to make light of our situation but there are times you have to look into the days that are coming.  Eddie Kendricks might have it right:

Yup….this is what we have to do!

There is nothing as empty as losing….you can look for silver linings and moral victories.  But when it is all said and done we look at the win-loss record and we sit there with a big fat zero in the “W” column.

Well as lousy as you feel – tomorrow is going to come and we are going to have to review the game video and fix the mistakes.  It is a never-ending process of studying and correcting.  But, that is the beauty of the game as well – the constant repetition allows you to slip into a routine and drive the demons out of your system.

In fact we will start that process tonite (Saturday) individually.  We will compare the call sheet with the execution of our various plays and schemes in all three phases of the game.  Obviously we will spend a great deal of time working thru this process of self evaluation.

Although we are very frustrated as players and coaches we have to look at each game individually as they play out.  We need to see if our corrections are bearing fruit as we work our way thru the 2017 season.

I know that our hard work is playing off because there has been significant improvement in individual players.  I don’t know who or which team started using the phrase “you have to trust the process.”  Although I think this is an overused and trite phase it often applies.

As coaches we have to be aware of a very big fact – we have so many young and inexperienced players in starting or key roles all over the field.  This is a hard situation to live thru – but that is what we need to do.

Coaching requires patience and also confidence.  We have to continue to be patient in our teaching and our development of fundamentals.  At the same time no matter what happens we must maintain our confidence in the fact that the team will emerge as a much better unit thru our coaching.

Again, I know we are down….but now is not the time to feel sorry for ourselves.  Now is not the time to look to pass the blame on to someone else.  Now is the time to believe in who we are and what we do.

For me personally I really feel for the troops.  I have seen a lot of teams practice over the years.  I would be hard pressed to think of another team I have coached that comes back day after day and works so hard.  I have used the word “resilient”  about this group several times this year.

But, we have to look down the road and realize that we are going to be a good team.  It is going to take “sun ups and sun downs” for our guys to grow up and assume roles that allow them to be successful.

We need to stick to our beliefs – ignore the naysayers  – and trudge on.  I know that the troops will continue to do what we expect of them.  Get to all of their classes – make their assigned meetings – in short be a great teammate and a HOUND.  It is what we do!

 

 

 

Preparing for the Bullets…Talking Option Football…Pizza, Yocco’s and Great Weekend Coming Up

One thing you can always count on in football.  That is the time you use to prepare for a game doesn’t vary very much as the season progresses.  You only have “X” amount of hours to use – and you have to figure out the best possible ways to employ your time.

I’m sure many people (and several of them teach at Moravian) think that we just show up on a Saturday and throw on some colorful uniforms and kick the ball off.  Well, that is not the case -there is a lot of time spent on preparation.

The troops really do a great job of absorbing the information we give to them.  Much is consolidated in the scouting report that they study (hopefully!?!) – then more is offered up in meetings and film studies.  It really is a lot of data to digest.  But it must be done or you cannot function on game day.

This week’s opponent will be Gettysburg College.  The Bullets (awesome nickname by the way – obviously way behind my high school’s nickname – KONKRETE KIDS! however) present some unique problems offensively.

Aerial view of Gettysburg campus

It is a beautiful campus set right across from the Civil War battlefield.  The Bullets like many other Centennial Conference teams we play have fantastic facilities (Of course their 282.9 million dollar endowment – 4th in the Centennial – helps a great deal)

             

They run an option style attack that often employs the normal offensive line and quarterback,  one running back, two wide receivers and two hybrid players who are a cross between a wide receiver and running back.  The quarterback is generally a throwback to the old veer option Qb’s we saw in the days that I was playing football.  Yeah that was a long time ago in the mid 70’s.

Traditionally the Gettysburg offense is one of the top in the Centennial conference.  They are extremely effective with the ball.  With the right players on their team they put tremendous pressure on the edges of the defense…. forcing you to be disciplined with your assignments and also to be very good tacklers.

Normally the quarterback is the key to the whole offensive scheme as everyone realizes.  (Just think who gets paid the most in the NFL!  That’s how you know). At Gettysburg they have a senior named Jason Davidoff (#7).  He is a real threat.

This style of offense requires a very crafty runner who can also throw the ball to keep the running lanes open.   Everyone needs a good quarterback if you expect to be successful – as mentioned earlier.  But the Gettysburg offense requires a much more versatile athlete who can put pressure on the defense thru his running skills and ball handling AND he has to throw too.

Davidoff (#7) is one of the top five offensive weapons in the Centennial Conference – he averages 245.2 yards per game in total offense (passing and rushing yards combined.). He is masterful with the ball putting a lot of pressure on the perimeter of the defense when he has it in his hands.

Reggie JeanCharles (#24) is their leading ball carrier.  He is a 
freshman from New Jersey who is a strong runner with some decent cutback ability.  We are going to have to hold our gaps and get a lot of “hats” on him to cut him off.  To this point he has rushed for an average of 86 yards per game (4.2 per attempt with two rushing TD’s)

Their offensive line and their line splits create problems for defensive teams.  Those who see the game will notice how “tight” together they align.  Their line splits are very narrow.

For you weekend fans or novices – line splits refer the the gaps between the offensive linemen (offense – they are the guys with the ball  – hah just kidding! ). Normally the splits will be around three feet or so.  But the Gettysburg line will often be two feet or less!

This “compresses” the middle of their offense and expands the outside of the field where Gettysburg wants to attack.  They release laterally on their blocking patterns preventing the defense from penetrating.

Ah – boring stuff you say.  But all of you Madden, fantasy football gurus and pseudo general managers…the game that is played on the field is real and a lot more complicated than you think.

So when Gettysburg has the ball they will continually probe with their back and then suddenly the ball is on the perimeter and the defense better make a tackle or lookout! Trust me when your neighbor in the stands or watching a game with you at home complains that the dummy on the field missed a play – well it is a lot harder out there than you think.

Ah…I digress from the actual game vs. the Bullets.  But just wanted to point out that this isn’t a computer game your son’s or friends are playing.  It is difficult and challenging on every play.

Gettysburg always does a nice job of spreading the ball around to their outside players.  There isn’t a single player in a pass receiving position  that gets the ball more than the others.  Davidoff (#7) takes what the defense will give him in the passing game.

But, I will say this Ty Abdul-Karim (#1) can flat out fly.  He is very dangerous outside receiver and the Bullets like to get him set up where he is isolated and in a one-on-one situation.  He is a big play weapon for their offense.  Statistically he has 7 catches for an average of 21.7 yards per reception.  That is pretty good by the way!  Although he has only one TD he is a threat to take it all the way anytime he touches the ball.

Defensive the Bullets have struggled – but they have been very successful in rushing the passer this season.  Right now they are tied for the conference lead with 16 sacks.

Bullet Freshman Logan Aikey (#38) has 3.5 sacks on the season.

They seem to be aggressive on defense trying to force the ball.  We might be seeing more man to man coverage than we normally have in the past.

They are normally very good in the kicking  game and they are again this season.  Currently in the top five of every kicking department – including a Centennial best in kickoff coverage.

This will be a tough game but our preparation has gone well.  The Hounds are looking forward to getting after it on Saturday!

********

OK let’s take a look at what is going on around the Lehigh Valley this week for the second luckiest man in the world.

Somewhat of a busy week outside of the football world.  Fratelli’s Pizza put their hook into me twice – Saturday and Monday!  Yocco’s – yeah they caught a few of my dollars – some people say those dogs are good with chocolate milk.  Hmmmmm…!

I still don’t really have a feel for that – Things that go together – I mean I get cookies and milk, peanut butter and jelly, Coors Light and potato chips (whoa…where did that one come from?).  But seriously folks – Yocco’s and chocolate milk – just not really seeing that one.

Had lunch with some school chums over at Chili’s by the Lehigh Valley Mall.  Randy and Judy (the “Queen of Treichlers” as I call her) met me along with Sam and Rita and our other chum Mary.

We had a great visit and told some old stories again.  Visited about the Konkrete (Spell check keeps trying to make me spell it with “C’s”) Kid reunion last summer.  Unfortunately I missed it – but they had a great time.

Going to head up to the great borough of Northampton tonite….yup a little dart throwing at the Hungarian Hall.   Captain Saturn looks to inspire his team again….yeah with that yellow bandanna and yellow crocs he sets the standard for dart fashion as well.

A little known fact.  Next time you are in your hometown take a look at the signs that mark the street – you know like “Elm,” “Front,” “Washington,” “22nd” etc.  The signs are green with white letters.  Nope not in the great borough of Northampton – Orange and Black – how can you beat that??

Probably be forced to have a few Coors Lights!

Tomorrow get up to see the K Kids in action against Nazareth in Al Erdosy/Lou Wolf football stadium!

Going to be a great finish to the week before we head west to Gettysburg to get after the Bullets on Saturday!

GO HOUNDS!!

 

What in the Wide Wide World of Sports is the OODA Loop?

I know you have been waiting to learn about the OODA loop.  Many of you have been thinking about bringing this up to me…I just know it.  OK, maybe not.  But this is something I learned many years ago and it actually came up in a conversation I had just yesterday (Sunday).

I have mentioned my late friend Frank Gansz who was one of the most inspiring and knowledgeable coaches (people) I know.  Frank was one of the original Special Teams coaches and to this day acknowledged as one of the best coaches in the NFL.

Frank taught me many things about the great game of football – but in his own way he taught me about the OODA loop.

The OODA loop is something that everyone can use in day to day life.  (Actually you may already use it and not even know why or what it is). It is especially effective when utilized in high stress decision making situations.  Trust me it is very effective.

OODA stands for Observe, Orient, Decide and Act.  It was a system developed by a USAF Colonel – John Boyd.  Now John Boyd should have  attained a rank of higher than Colonel, but apparently he just could not get along with his superiors.

He must have been a stubborn guy who stood by his work and his assumptions.  This got him crosswise with leadership and  put Colonel Boyd on the “shit list” with many higher ups.  He was known as the “Mad Major,” and “Genghis John” due to his strong stances about warfare in the sky.

None-the-less his theories are used throughout the world today.  Colonel Boyd had a dramatic impact on aerial warfare and he is credited with helping to develop a critical part of the plan for the invasion of Iraq during the 1991 Desert Storm.

The OODA loop is a practical theory that allows for rapid and accurate decision making when time and clear thinking is imperative e.  Naturally this can be applied to athletics and football in particular.

Here is the way it works in a picture:

But in real life (Football??) It applies to everything we do – from studying the game video – to teaching the players to the actual execution by the players on the field!

Just think of video study by coaches.:

You OBSERVE (watch) the video….then you ORIENT (develop your thoughts for a game plan from your observations)…then you DECIDE (actually formulate your plan of action from those thoughts)….then you ACT (You create the plan and implement it with your team from those decisions).

Now, think of it as a player who has been through a week of game plan meetings and practice.  You have experienced all of those things mentioned above in the OODA loop as a student in the classroom of football.

Now, you are playing the game against the opponent you have studied all week.  You are a Safety (that is a defensive position for some of my friends who aren’t interested in football)….the other team comes out in a certain formation:

You OBSERVE (see this specific formation). You ORIENT (this formation triggers the key points you learned through video observation, coaching meetings and practice sessions during the week).  You DECIDE (take an alignment you learned during the practice sessions to counter this alignment – perhaps you make a specific “Call” to adjust your teammates positioning or assignments as you have been instructed by the coaches).  Then the ball is snapped and you ACT (you execute your assignment as you were taught during the week of practice).

Then you clear your mind (another great technique to learn as an athlete) and start over as you prepare for the next play.

https://youtu.be/aXrpmN6hHqc

This is how the OODA loop works.  Perhaps you know it by another acronym or you just do it in your daily life.  But – like a hammer, wrench or saw – it is a valuable to keep it in your toolbox.

Colonel Boyd took this further however.  He added that the fighter pilots who could do cycle thru the loop the fastest were destined to be the best warriors.

So, the more you you work on the OODA cycle the better you become at your profession (real life as well I guess).  The more you can Observe in your realm – whatever that may be.  will allow you to Orient yourself faster.  This in turn spurs a quicker Decision and then a faster and more effective Act.

If you think about it…this is what we are trying to do on every play.  The team that executes their fundamentals the fastest in the heat of the battle…well that is the team that is successful!

Alright maybe you weren’t interested in the OODA loop – but you have to admit it is some pretty cool stuff.

Hard Loss….but Back on the Treadmill

Here come the Hounds!
The real Hound!

 

 

 

 

 

 

There are a lot of things that you take away from games – win or lose.   Many great teaching moments present themselves.  As a coach (players as well I expect) first you must get the bitter taste of losing out of your mouth.

After you get past that disappointment you can dig thru the video and review your notes to find things to help your team improve.  That is what makes coaching such a great profession – you are always searching for better ideas and techniques to give to your guys.

Oh yeah – sometimes you can overthink things as well. See things that really aren’t there.

From the outside looking in – it may seem like there is so much futility when teams are struggling as the Hounds are right now.  There is obviously frustration to contend with, but when you have a group like we have right now – it is different.

Our guys are very resilient and they quickly rebound.  Believe me no one is happy with our record at this point….but there is a lot of trust within our brotherhood.  As coaches we believe in the troops – we know that before this group is finished they will achieve some really great things.  I think that the guys are understanding this as well.

The players are willing to work and learn new concepts –  and each week we make progress as a football team.  I think that it is just a matter of time until we see the results on the field.

Interestingly, I ran into two former players who saw us play at Kings and then again this weekend at Homecoming.  They both agreed that although we have a ways to go – the team is much better right now.

Obviously it is good to hear this from guys who have worked within our system and know how we approach football.  They have lived it with us and they have achieved success as Hounds.  Their input is very valuable to a person like me because they are honest to a fault.

They don’t need to hold back because we have walked on the field and thru the locker room together.  We are connected and understand that truth is one of our core values and sometimes it might hurt….but to improve and achieve excellence we have to be clear.

So – as a team we continue to hammer away to build a  better Greyhound unit.  Like every week for the past many years on Sunday we go through our post game routine.

Coaches get together and review the video – then compare notes and brainstorm on how we can manage the next week.  It is a grinding process that allows us to lay previous game out to the bare bones.  You have to check your ego at the door because we have to be completely honest in our evaluations.

This can be an uncomfortable process.  But to improve in almost any business or profession you understand that getting out of your comfort zone allows for growth.  Anyway that is how we start every Sunday win or lose….it is what you do as coaches.  (By the way it is a long day – but it is what we do – and yeah it is pretty much done all across the country by football staffs everywhere…..we aren’t the only ones doing it.)

The players first go to the trainers and have a medical review – this is so we can find out how we made it thru the game.  How are the injured players from the day before?   Also – have any of the bumps and bruises that seemed minor after the game blossomed into problems?

Coach Chris Leavenworth talks about the PAT team at a Special Teams meeting on Sunday.

Then….we meet with the players and watch the special teams – usually a half hour or so.  Then the players go to the weight room with Coach Long and get the  kinks out.

Now Coach Long is one fired up guy…….  He is going to get the guys going……he is going to push them – work them – encourage them etc.  Tom is going to get every last drop out of them.  The players really respond to him.  What happens in the weight room will be a big key in our future as a team.

After that we have group meetings with our players.  For instance Jim Newhard takes the defensive line, John Harrison will meet with the QB’s,  Chris Leavenworth grabs the offensive line (for fu**ks sakes).  Those meetings are where you really get things squared away.

Corrections are made….notes are taken….egos may be bruised.  But, we all come out of these meetings better prepared for the next week’s game.  It can be intense, but it is really a very cleansing and enlightening experience  because you walk out of the meeting knowing that you have put the previous days game to rest.  Time to move on to the next game.

That’s where we are now….moving on the the next week.

Go HOUNDS!

Nic visiting with many former players and friends for the Homecoming weekend.  Always a good experience for everyone involved.  I can vouch for the troops having a few beers.

Welcome back for Homecoming lads!

Although I couldn’t join them at Roosevelt’s across from the stadium – I’m sure a good time was had by one and all!

 

 

 

 

Homecoming Day! Darts in Northampton too and the Hungarian Hall.

Homecoming!

Big weekend for any school – high school or college.  Always a fun time as alums come back to visit with old friends and relive their glory days.   The waistlines expand, hair either goes away or grays,  stories get more colorful,  tales get taller (get it – “tall tales.”). Hangovers hurt a little more etc….etc.

Ursinus football

Usually the date is later in the fall.    Personally I have never seen a Homecoming date in September – but what do I know?!?   But, for whoever (whomever?)  is  in charge here at Moravian they felt an early date is the best – probable interfered with their vacation days.

Well, the trees won’t be a colorful and there won’t be need for a blanket or a flask in your pocket.  OK the flask is still permissible!

I am looking forward to seeing some of the troops from the past.  Always nice to visit with the guys you have spent so much time and shared so many experiences with.  It is going to be a nice weekend on the Bethlehem campus.

Ursinus will be our opponent for this weekend.  They enter the game with a 3-0 record following a back and forth game with Juniata last weekend.  This is the first time in many years where they have started off with three straight victories.

Ursinus football

The Bears are a very solid team with one of the better QB’s in  the Centennial Conference – sophomore Thomas Garlic.  He is a big (6-4, 195) strong armed thrower – completing 60.6% of his passes with four TD’s and a pair of interceptions..

Their top runner is sophomore Stacey Gardner (70 ATT. 406 YDS and 3 TD) and he has a 57 yard scoring run to his credit.   The QB does a good job of spreading the ball around to his receivers and he  has hit junior  running back Asa Manley with 11 passes and senior WR Carmen Fortino with 7 (he has a 20.1 yard per catch with 2 TD’s)

Averaging 35 points per game the Ursinus offense as been pretty steady but  their defense has been very opportunistic.  They have created eight turnovers over their first three games while giving up just one per game.  The Bears’ +5 margin leads the Centennial.

Ursinus football

These turnovers have been very instrumental in each of their wins.  Stopping a drive inside the 10 at the end of the Juniata game with an interception by Danny Freeman.  In the Gettysburg game Tyler Gordon had an interception to stop a potential scoring drive early in the game.

So, as always we are preparing for a physical game.  Defensively we will stress our fundamentals such as tackling and having hard pursuit to the ball.  Nothing new for the Hounds, but we cannot take anything for granted – need to emphasize it and practice it so that it happens in the game.

I really felt our practices were spirited and we got a lot done.  Since I spend so much time really impressed with how some of our younger guys (whoops – they are all really young guys out there this year – hell do we even have a senior?) ran around.

Brett Polling sets the offensive line for the Hounds

Offensively our offensive line will take on a heavy load as we continue to improve up front.  Our young group (Tackles Zach Cregar, Jason Barish and Tyler Maxsim, Guards PJ Weierbach and Matt Shields, Center Brett Poling) has to counter the Ursinus front seven that has been up and down this season.

The Moravian future is bright since all of those guys are sophomores except for PJ who is a freshman.  They continue to improve each week with Chris Leavenworth working with them – we all know he won’t put up with any shenanigans out there.

Tanner Stokes, Tanner Mish and LeRon Smith ponder the Periodic Table or are they wondering about that B-Gap Blitz

We have been pretty effective over the season, but the stress this week will be on consistency and maintaining ball possession.  So these big guys will shoulder much of the load.

Every game is important and this will be another test for our young bunch as we continue to grow as a team.    They really are a great bunch of guys who show so much promise.  I keep reiterating that the future is bright – it really is.

Wasn’t there a song in the 80’s – My future is so bright I wear sunglasses at night?

Well I was kinda close.  You millennials and whatever is next have no idea about good music.

Oh yeah shot up to Northampton and the Hungarian Hall Thursday nite…..the dart league (A-League) kicked off – or shot off  guess.  Captain Saturn on a new team.  Looking for a new championship ring.  Old crew looks great.

Andy Onkotz still running a tight ship in the old hometown hangout – need some more members.  Cannot go wrong for 15 dollars a year!

OK many people ask Hungarian Hall???  Well much of Northampton’s heritage (Moravian guys – there’s that work “Heritage” again) is from Eastern Europe – Czechoslovakia (Czech Republic or Slovenia), Russia, Germany, Poland, Austria and of course Hungary.

The home church right behind the Hungarian Hall – well of course “Our Lady of Hungary Roman Catholic Church!”

GO KONKRETE KIDS!
GO HOUNDS!

Another Day in the Life of the Hounds – Little Detour to New Zealand – Hungarian Hall Dart League – What a Life!

Tuesday as Coach Puksyzn talked with the team after practice he spoke about taking care of your business as a football player.  Like many other things football parallels life off the field.

We had several players who skipped their obligations as far as doing their weekly weight lifting.  This is a vital part of our program.  To maintain strength during the season is imperative for safety and success.

Plus we have one of the best strength programs in the country headed up by Tom Long with his interns Amanda and Laurie.  These guys are in our complex by 5:00 or 5:30 am every weekday and often here after 7 or 8 at night.  Oh yeah here on the weekends as well.  You don’t see many cars in the faculty parking lot at these hours by the way.

Amazingly enough you can see a common thread here.  There were eight or nine of our 85 or so current players who decided it was just to difficult to do what their teammates could do.  (My father, the electrical engineer, would be proud to know that I figured this to be a little more than 10% of the team.)

I know – this is Division III athletics and no one is under scholarship.  But that doesn’t mean we don’t do the necessary things to develop a strong and successful program.

Right now we are playing with young and inexperienced players so it is essential that we develop championship habits. These are traits that will enable us to move forward and be successful on the field.  But, these are also the things that carry over into our lives off the field.

Now I’m not telling anyone anything earth shattering here- the guys who miss our “voluntary mandatory” work are the same guys who miss meetings (“Just can’t get out of bed – I’m not a morning person”)  Skip class although they tell you they are going (“Honest coach I was there”) – this is after an email where the prof alerted us to the absence.  Or missing weight lifting (It’s pointless..I don’t play that much anyway”) – yeah you’re  a senior and have been dodging everything for four years – can’t get on the field – imagine that!

Listen, with my outstanding 2.25 grade point average I don’t have a lot of thick ice to stand on here.  I was certainly a screw up that found his way (somewhat anyway) eventually.  I’m sure I was a handful.

But after years of working with young people you hope they can learn from experiences you can pass down to them.  It gives a coach tremendous satisfaction to see the players around him succeed in whatever they choose.  So, it is our obligation to have some conformity with the guys within the program.

But, what the seniors in this group of wayward football players will find out when (if) they graduate – the cruel cold world doesn’t care if you are not a morning person or if you had your latte with espresso shot to get your heart going.

To the underclassmen who are finding the easy way to their liking – just look at what that path has gotten those seniors mentioned above!?!

Coach also touched on the emphasis on doing the small things that are necessary to be successful on and off the field.  Paying attention to the details that are so vital to being not only a successful athlete or student but a productive member of our campus as well.

Hey…just do what you are supposed to do -go to class…..do your job on the field….. be a good teammate……don’t be late……don’t embarrass your family, yourself or the program.  Just to name a few.

He cited a quote from one of the best books you can read (“Legacy” by John Kerr) about successful organizations.  “Sweeping the Sheds” is a statement about how even the best players help clean the locker rooms after a practice or game.  No one is above doing the smallest and dirtiest jobs on or off the field.

This is a fantastic and easy read about how the New Zealand national rugby team – the “All Blacks” builds their organization and creates such a successful team on and off the field.  They have been World Cup champions several times and have won more than 85% of their International tests (games) over the past twenty or so years.

I have and would encourage everyone who is about team building to find a copy and give it a quick read.  I have spent time with one of their coaches and another of their associates and I will tell you this is an amazing bunch of people.

Many of you have seen the All Blacks perform the haka  before they play.  If you haven’t:

Trust me it is an unnerving display of testosterone used to fire up their team and intimidate the opponent.  I think this might a good exercise for a Zumba class!

So we will continue to build the Greyhound football program.  We will continue to help the athletes realize how much they can learn from a simple game.  Yup, we will get un their collective asses if they screw up as well!

GO HOUNDS!

Oh yeah how about some darts this week with Captain Saturn and the lads at the Hungarian Hall in Northampton this Thursday.  Seems like a great idea to me.

Perhaps a quick stop at Mario’s Pizza for a snack.  Yeah that does seem like a pretty good idea.

 

 

 

Hounds Knocked Down but Certainly Not Out!

OK….we left Baltimore after a hard loss to John’s Hopkins.  But, we saw great effort throughout the game and we showed a great deal of toughness from beginning til end.  These are things that you can build on as a team.

We returned to Bethlehem thinking we did some things pretty well…..others not so much.  We knew that we made many mistakes…but  as long as we could see the effort we would feel pretty good.

Saturday evening after returning we would sit down and study the game videos.  It is the best way to learn about your team.

As expected we saw many things that we need to attend to.  But the mistakes – honestly they are certainly things we can repair.  Also two valuable things really stuck out.

Things we corrected last week – they were not repeated this week.  That is encouraging and this is truly what pleases you as a teacher.  Plus you could see the team hustling and on defense there was great pursuit to the ball.

So we are making some good progress.  Sometimes it is incremental.  But, none-the-less we are getting better every day.

The expression….”the film does not lie” …..is certainly true.  There are so many things you can learn with a few hours sitting at the computer watching video of a game.

Warming up at Hopkins

As coaches we spend a lot of time studying film (video) because this is a key tool in our search for excellence.  Although illusive – excellence is attainable.

I have heard you look for perfection – but most successful people and organizations talk about excellence and not perfection.  Since perfection is impossible it is hard to use it as a goal.

To set a goal of being perfect may sound great on the outside….but the minute you fail (lose) –  well that goal is shot and you can throw it out the window.  Unfortunately in football half of the teams can eliminate perfection from their goal sheet after the first week of the season.

But, if you teach striving for excellence as we try to do – well that is attainable because you can always continue to fine tune your goals.  In coaching for instance there are goals you set for the season, and then goals you look at weekly for each game, and then goals for each day.  (That’s a lot of goals!)

When you look at your aspirations for a team you have to realize that every year that bunch of guys is different.  For instance our goals for the team a year ago were different than for this squad.

Our team last year was an experienced bunch so we could see them in a different light than the 2017 edition of the Greyhounds.  This year we have to approach the season differently since we have so many young players and have lost others thru attrition.

I have been in football since I was ten or so years old.  (Been awesome by the way.)  In that time I have never seen as many injuries as we have had this season.  We have actually lost eleven players to season ending injuries.

That is truly mind boggling.  Now, I am not complaining here.  That is the hand we were dealt and we all have to band together and make the best of it.  Again the phrase “No one said it was going to be easy….and no one said it was going to be fair” comes to mind.

But this situation, coupled with the fact that several key players – starters in a few cases – decided to leave the team before we even started puts us in a tough spot.  Some thought they needed to play more – others felt they needed to study more still others were concerned about injury.

Personally I get it,  you play for your own satisfaction here at Moravian.  We are not handing out football scholarships  – we are a Division III school.  But the irony here is this – the guys who wanted to play more.  Yup, several of them probably would have been starting or seen significant time  right now.

In all honestly I wouldn’t want our team to be any different.  I realize that we are 0-3 and people on the outside see us in one way.  But here “in the bunker” we see things as gradually building towards something special.

One thing we have is time….another is the energy and the will to become better.  These guys are a special bunch and the toughness that we are building now will play huge dividends in the future.

You should see these guys work together….this is a great bunch of teammates.  Awesome young men!

So the coaches put the game plan together today….adjusting schemes and play calls to work around our injuries…then we all  get back on that treadmill tomorrow and start working towards the game with Ursinus next week.

I did want to take a second and acknowledge the parents and friends of the troops.

Thanks for all of your support.  I love that you give so much to the guys.  Always there with food, encouragement and whatever it takes to bolster our confidence.

It’s not easy to just be a supporter when you don’t always agree with our coaching decisions and how we use personnel on game day.  But for the most part I only hear cheers for our program.

Trust me, it isn’t always easy to coach a football team.  (I think I’ll write more about this at another time!). But, we truly love these guys – they are a credit to you and how you raised them.

Seriously…thanks for all of your help family members and friends!

 

The Hounds’ Brotherhood prepares for Week 3

As we prepare  to play Johns Hopkins this weekend in Baltimore we stress the necessity for cohesion and teamwork.  Obviously two essential aspects of any sport played by a group of individuals working towards a common goal.

This is such a good group to work with – actually a great group.  We are very young and inexperienced – but there is talent that is developing.  I have said this before – when these guys are finished here at Moravian they will play on some very strong teams!

At this moment the situation  is hard but not impossible!  The fact is we have to go through our growing pains and each week will be a battle.  But, so what!  No one said it would be easy and certainly no one said it would be fair.

One of the most motivated people I know stopped by to visit the team on Wednesday.  Bobby McClarin, a Naval Academy graduate and founder of the Five Hearts Project gave us all a lot to think about.

Bobby McClain of Five Star Hearts rallies the troops. Shares what it is like to model championship behavior.

Bobby’s Dad – Bob – coached with us here at Moravian College.  Another great man but decided to step away from coaching this year to  enjoy some time with his wife who just retired in June.  (Now he spends his time fooling around at his lake house and on his yacht on Lake Wallenpaupak – really, he would rather do that and drink beer than teach inside zone and pass protection to the running backs?   Go figure!)

*Don’t worry Bob will get back to coaching next year when Joan gets tired of ordering him around!  Seriously though it is pretty cool that they get to go yachting together every weekend!*

But it is easy to see that the “apple did not fall far from the tree.”  The entire McClarin clan is a remarkable bunch and with Bobby creating the Five Star Heart Project right here in the Lehigh Valley.  Our area is truly blessed to have this organization operating here.

Among other things this group puts on many activities to help this area’s youth.  Although he targets kids who are at risk….but if you know Bobby at all – he is there for everyone in the Valley.

When you get some time check out Five Star Heart Project and how it came about and all they do for us. (thefivestarheartproject.org)

Bobby’s talk to the team was straight from his heart (and it is a strong heart) and right on point for our young and inexperienced squad.  As coaches we all see this….but it is really fantastic to hear a notable man like Bobby voice it with such passion.

His comments stressed the value of being a great teammate and how as a unit we are truly the sum of our parts.  There will always be great players on a team….but great teams are made up by members who will give selflessly of themselves regardless of their abilities.

When you are talking about football as a team sport – you are talking about a brotherhood.  In a brotherhood you count on one another and believe that the man next to you will do anything in his power to help the group attain it’s goal.

It is the same as you proceed on down the line.  When you look to any of your teammates you know the same selflessness exists in each and every one.  Everyone pulls his weight and everyone is held to the same high standards.

We know that when the prize is on the line that we understand that the mindset is the same from man to man.  We are going to achieve a high level because we are all striving to operate at the maximum of our abilities throughout our brotherhood.

Bobby also stressed the need to develop “grit.”  Grit is more than just hanging in there – it is passion and perseverance over a long period of time.  Continuing to work to attain your goals knowing that you will stumble along the way.

Check this out if you want to learn about grit!

Understanding that you are going to fall down over and over again – but that the champions will keep getting up and figuring out how to succeed.  Success is not an overnight thing – the light just doesn’t come on one morning.

No, it takes many, many small steps.  Incremental gains towards our goals.  As I said it won’t be easy…nor will it always be fair. But we will stay with it and we will find a way to improve every day and in every game.

Our brotherhood – the Hounds – continues to work towards the goal of excellence.  Every day we strive for it….each day we fall down and then get back up again.  We slip – but we fix our mistakes and move forward.

I know these guys – and this is their mindset.  They have the grit and the staying power to build this program into a consistent winner. Some will walk away – quit and lose their beliefs.  Those who stay know it won’t be easy and there will be nay sayers at every turn.

But we don’t care what is going on the outside  – we just work to help each of our brothers become the best that they can become.  And, day after day we will develop this Greyhound Brotherhood into something special.

I can’t wait to see our guys line up and play this weekend – there will be mistakes.  But, I promise you we will grow a little more during this game.

GO HOUNDS!

 

Hounds Lose – But Good Things On the Horizon!

Well, we had a tough outing against McDaniel this past weekend.  After an impressive goal line stand the Hounds  played an even first half at 14-14.  But McDaniel just had too much for the us in the last thirty minutes.

This was by far the best McDaniel team that I have seen in the five or six seasons associated with Moravian football.  They had a large contingency of seniors including several three-year starters.  That is really an important factor in football – well  experience in any business is key.

And on the other side of the coin – we are young and inexperienced in many key positions.  The only thing that will cure this situation is what I call “sun ups and sun downs” – or time.  And, what we get done during those “sun ups and sun downs” is what will develop this team.

You have to give them credit – McDaniel played a very solid game from the start til the final whistle.  They played hard and it was the physical game that we had anticipated from them.

We also played hard – we were both tough and had great enthusiasm.  But some very fundamental mistakes added up throughout the game.  Defensively these breakdowns are what keep drives alive and ultimately what allows scoring.

On offense obviously the converse is true.  Breakdowns are going to lead to the offense getting “behind on the chains.” (Commentators on TV love to say things like that). When you get behind  on the downs – well you have to force the issue at times.  That can lead to mistakes and sometimes put our inexperienced players in bad positions.

As pretty much everyone knows I am a “fundamentalist” when it comes to football.  If you cannot line up correctly, read your keys and accomplish your responsibilities – well some bad things are bound to happen.  Unfortunately we had too many to allow us to win.

Trust me, we have some very talented players at Moravian and eventually this is going to be a very competitive team.  But, first we must stay on our basics – blocking and tackling, throwing and catching, kicking and running etc.  These are the keys to having a successful team.

As coaches we understand that there is a learning curve when it comes to the process of absorbing our offensive and defensive  schemes.  That takes concentration and study.  Outsiders often do not understand the complexity of competing in team sports and the amount of work that a player puts in.  Hours in the meeting room coupled with more hours on the practice field and training in the weight room.

I once explained to my father – who is a very smart man and an electrical engineer – that I felt football may be the best taught subject in any school.  (And professional football is even more well taught because of the time available to work with the players).  He scoffed (how do you like that for a college word “scoffed”) at me.

    A Footnote here – my Dad still doesn’t believe that I graduated from college.  In reality I don’t have any proof since I did not attend my graduation.  No, they never sent me a diploma either.  Well too late now I am retired (semi that is!)

So I explained to him the very simple version of what goes on.  I did this when I was coaching with Detroit so my explanation was much more in depth than what follows.

But, for perhaps the only time in my lifetime, he eventually saw my point.  Just think how many hours a “normal” college class meets per week in college.  What a total of three hours – then maybe some have a two hour lab?  Piece of cake.

For football at Moravian we meet with our players Tuesday thru Thursday for an hour each time.  We teach and the players learn football.  Then we have two hour practices (I try to keep Jeff under that two hour time – but most of the times fail) four days per week.

We also give the players scouting reports and tip sheets throughout the week so that they can be prepared for the upcoming game.  Naturally like all students in any discipline – some are more diligent than others.  Some will really delve into the information while others just toss it in their locker with their dirty socks and jocks.

Then every Saturday for ten weeks we have a test – a game.

We “ask” our players to do this at Moravian.  Remember in division III there are no scholarships…the players do this because they want to play ball.  Well, occasionally we do try to help their “want to” by telling them that they are going to spend some time on the bench if they don’t follow thru on their”required tasks” here.

In the bigger (scholarship) schools the requirements and demands are much more intense.  The players spend much more time preparing to play football and the experts available to them are almost too many to count.

Professional football – well that is a whole different animal – as I tell people there is a reason they call it “professional”.

I really admire our guys.  They have a commitment to each other and really it is their accountability that makes it so much fun to work with these young guys.

Sure some work harder than others.  But for the most part the majority of our guys are extremely diligent and try to do the things we ask of them.

There are still going to be some frustrating times.  It is inevitable as we grow through this stage of our football development.  But there are great things on the horizon.

The things that I see in these guys makes me excited for the future here at Moravian.  Having players like this – guys who really care and want to succeed  – paints an exciting picture here in Bethlehem.

GO HOUNDS!

Hounds warming up pre-game

Being a defensive coach I do have to mention some really exciting things I did see on Saturday.  Think about these things.

A tremendous Goal Line stand right before halftime that kept us alive and shows us that things that we are working on are coming together.  It was an observation from the coaching booth and Jim Newhard, Shaun Daignault and Evan Harvey to set up a strong blitz that ended the scoring threat as the clock ran out.

Some really hard hitting from out secondary and safeties Nick Zambelli and Jackson Buskirk in particular.  Wow…some really great play going on back there.

Pursuit – hell – Foud Haddad and Nick Tone were running down plays all over the field.

Joe Milano gets back on the field and his aggressive play gets the team fired up.

These are just a few of the reasons why I am so excited about this team.

Yup…gotta get ready starting tomorrow for our next game – in Baltimore against the Johns Hopkins.

Game Two – What the Heck is a Green Terror – 1937 Wonder Team – Yocco’s vs. Pott’s

We are approaching the second week of the 2017 football season – preparing for a new and improved McDaniel College Green Terror.  They opened their season with a big 30-10 win at home last week.

This is a team that has shown improvement in their program over these past two seasons.  The Hounds are regrouping and preparing for a tough battle this weekend.

***But, what the heck is a “Green Terror?”  Well, we will deal with  that later.***

On offense McDaniel wants to play a physical game…so we have to be prepared to stop their running game.  We will concentrate on shutting down their backs – trying to make them a one dimensional team.  

Last weekend they had two runners rush for more that 100 yards each.  That is a tremendous accomplishment in this day and age of throwing the ball all over the yard.

Both are short but powerful runners – they are veterans and saw significant time last season.  They like to get downhill quickly with their shoulders square to the line.

Defensive Line getting ready for indoor practice in the ARC.
Wide Receivers and a Rookie QB talking about what Wide Receivers talk about.

Defensively we will rely upon the front to play solid “gap” defense with each player executing his assignment.  You stop the run by filling each gap with shoulders parallel to the line of scrimmage.   We have to be sure with our responsibilities and execute them decisively.

We pride ourselves on our hard tackling and overwhelming pursuit to the ball.  We need to be on point up front and force them into a throwing game.

McDaniel also played some really strong defense as well.  Their opponent Catholic University managed only 22 yards in the second half and no first downs.  Now, I don’t care who you are playing against – that is some pretty stout defense.

***It’s not even the Green Terrors (as in plural for Terror) but “Green Terror!”***

The Green Terror also had the Centennial Conference defensive player of the week – Senior Ray Doh (2) had seven tackles (one for aloss) and two sacks.  At 6-3 and 230 pounds we will have to be aware of him.

***Again with the “Green Terror?”***

OK – I am not making  fun of this Green Terror nickname (I am a Konkrete Kid – the greatest nickname ever by the way!).  Did you know that a Green Terror is an  aggressive aquarium fish (fresh water and a Cichlid by the way).  I actually have known this for many years being an aquarium aficionado (Seriously I am.)

I know that McDaniel is not using a fish as their mascot.  So let’s delve deeper.  Reading about this mysterious mascot and nickname one stumbles upon this  tidbit….perhaps  (and again I say just…. PERHAPS) once long ago the McDaniel team – clad in green – played like terrors during a win.  

Or perhaps (again with the PERHAPS again) many years ago a coach tried to boost his players morale after a loss by saying they played like Terrors in that game.  Well for whatever reason they are the “Green Terror!”

I know you all wanted to know that bit of useless trivia.  But these are interesting things.

Back to serious matter like the game.

Despite some weather issues the guys have prepared well this week……because whatever their mascot is, and their nickname is…..the McDaniel players are the real deal. and they mean business.  They are coming to play us on Saturday at one o’clock –  and we have to be ready.

But, that’s what makes these games so exciting.  Getting ready and then going out to show our skills!

Preparing the troops then sending them out on Saturday – watching them put it all out for the GREYHOUNDS.  Now there is an awesome nickname and mascot!

GO HOUNDS!

OK here’s a little detour…..

Alright let’s take a peek at my high school.  The Northampton H.S. Konkrete  Kids. Once Voted as one of the top nicknames in the country by USA Today.

As most everyone knows I am a Konkrete Kid thru and thru (and if this spell check thing tells me that it is “concrete” one more time I may have another beer.) You won’t find a more loyal NHS grad.

Really looking forward to this Friday because the Kids are at home and I will get to watch them in person.  I think they play Pleasant Valley – but it won’t matter because we will tear there lips off!

Pretty much everywhere that I go I spread the lore of Northampton.  People all over the world know about the Orange and Black (yup I said “world” because I met another Konkrete – again with the spell check –  Kid coaching in Lucerne Switzerland.)

But, here is a bit of history I learned just this week.  2017 is the 80th Anniversary of the Northampton High School “Wonder Team.”

Here is an article about that team written by Mark Wogenrich for the Morning Call.  (By the way Wogenrich is a  Northampton name!)

The Wonder Team During Their Undefeated 1937 Season, Northmapton’s Konkrete Kids Were Virtually Unstoppable — Scoring 58 Points A Game While Allowing Only 25.

January 28, 2000|by MARK WOGENRICH, The Morning Call

They called it the short-punt formation. Coach Woody Ludwig imported it from his Ivy League days at the University of Pennsylvania. Behind it, the Northampton High football team was unstoppable.

The short-punt formation worked time after time.

“We really thought we could score every play,” Zirinsky said.

They nearly did. Blessed with size and a dazzling offense, the Northampton Konkrete Kids ruled high school football in 1937. To this day, the town remembers The Wonder Team.

Loaded with big, strong senior lettermen, Northampton went 9-0, overpowering opponents in the process. It scored 518 points — nearly 58 per game, almost one per minute. It also allowed only 25, shutting out five opponents.

The scores were outrageous: 75-6 over Palmerton, 73-0 over Stroudsburg, 86-0 over Slatington. The pinnacle had to be Thanksgiving Day, when the Konkrete Kids outran Catasauqua 85-0.

“It wasn’t a game,” said Donald Gillespie, Catasauqua High class of 1940. “It was a walkthrough.”

Most of the season was. The Konkrete Kids frightened opponents with their size, then jolted them with their skill.

For the 1930s, this was a big football team. Tackle John Yankovitch, a captain, was 6-foot-4, 200 pounds. Schneider, who played end, went 6-4, 190. George Gilly, the other end, was 6-2.

The backs also scooted behind the blocks of guards Robert Burkhardt and William Evans and tackles Daniel Newhart and Paul Leibensperger.

“Man, we were big,” said Steve Pritko, a 175-pound backup end who played behind Schneider. “We’d just block up front and throw to the beanpoles (Schneider and Gilly).”

And, unlike most other teams, Northampton loved to throw. Though primarily a running offense, the short-punt formation allowed for a variety of options.

In the formation, four backs lined up behind center John “Ginger” Chernansky. The quarterback, then primarily a blocker, hedged 2 yards behind right guard.

The three backs — two halfbacks and a fullback — lined up 4 yards behind him. The center could snap to any of the four.

“It made us real tricky,” Zirinsky said.

For instance, Zirinsky, a quarterback and halfback who scored 99 points, broke the big runs. Skok, the fullback, barreled behind the guards for a team-high 122 points. And halfbacks Onkotz (94 points), Alex Schur or Charles Heffner threw.

Schneider was their favorite target and culprit in the team’s most creative play. Upon catching a short pass, Schneider pitched a lateral to a guard, who lateraled to a halfback, perhaps even the halfback who threw the pass.

“That play almost always worked,” Zirinsky said.

Directing the whole package was Elwood “Woody” Ludwig, who played at Penn and coached Northampton for five seasons. He later coached at Bucknell and the Pennsylvania Military College (now Widener University).

One assistant was Al Erdosy, who took over for Ludwig in 1939 and coached for 32 years. Another was Mike Lisetski, who became an NFL official and had a Northampton street named for him.

“The coaches were great. Toughies, but great,” said right guard Andrew Kometic, who still lives in Northampton. “They wanted us in good shape, but what they wanted most was for us to get to class.”

Zirinsky said the 1937 team featured 18 seniors, a high school rarity then. The Depression had forced many teen-age boys from school and into jobs.

Most of the players were first-generation high school graduates in their family. Kometic was the only one of five brothers to finish school.

“That’s just how it was,” he said.

It was that way for Pritko, too. His parents, immigrants from Austria-Hungary, could not speak English. Pritko signed his father’s $30 paychecks from the slate quarry every two weeks.

But he graduated to a prep school in New Jersey, then to Villanova. A backup to Schneider in high school, Pritko bloomed thereafter.

“That’s when I got three squares a day,” he said.

Pritko played end and punted at Villanova before entering the Marines. After his discharge, Pritko signed with the Cleveland Rams. Having bulked to 235 pounds, Pritko became an All-Pro end who helped the Rams to the world championship in 1945.

When the Rams moved to California in 1946, Pritko went with them. Zirinsky didn’t.

After playing at Lafayette and flying blimps in the Navy during World War II, Zirinsky joined Cleveland two games into the 1945 season. He didn’t want to move to California, so the Rams traded Zirinsky to the Philadelphia Eagles.

Zirinsky, who splits his year between Catasauqua and Naples, Fla., later played a season with the Bethlehem Bulldogs in the American Football League. So did Schneider, who starred at Muhlenberg and whose name now graces Northampton’s gym.

When the season ended, they wanted to display it. On Thanksgiving Day, Zirinsky scored four touchdowns in the victory over Catasauqua. Before that, Northampton had scored just 64 total points in 14 games against Catasauqua.

As a reward, the unbeaten Konkrete Kids were invited to Chicago to play Austin High and its legend, Bill DeCorrevont.

A back who later played with Northwestern University and the Chicago Bears, DeCorrevont led Austin to an unbeaten season. More than 110,000 fans watched Austin win the city’s annual Prep Bowl.

The Northampton players itched to go, but their trip was canceled — “Couldn’t get any money,” Pritko said. The Kids were irked and, Zirinsky said, threatened a strike.

It never got off the ground.

“Mr. Ludwig also coached basketball, and he said, `Look, if you’re not here tomorrow, you’re through,'” Zirinsky said. “That stopped everything, because we all wanted to play basketball.

“We were pretty good in basketball, too.”

The 1937 “Wonder Team”

Pretty cool stuff!  Many common Northampton names in that article! Onkotz, Schneider, Kometic, Pritko, Zirinski, Erdosy, Lisetski, Ludwig, Yankovitch, Gilly, Newhart, Burkhart, Leibersberger etc.

!HOTDOG FIGHT!

At work we just revved up the Yoccos vs. Potts controversy.  We have hotdogs from Potts every Wednesday during the season.

OK it seems like Potts gets a few extra votes since the men’s Basketball coach at Moravian….hmmm….his name is Potts.

Have to admit, they are pretty good.

Maybe Mario’s tonite….Carvels……what more could you want.

The second luckiest man in the world has only this to say?…Hah, what a life!