I coach little kids and this seems like a complicated way to teach what we call man up and block away, but good to watch and learn the formation and plays to possibly run out of it thanks
@@cbadwheeler5088 lots of coaches run this using SAB blocking or TKO blocking to simplify this. I had a few years with this team to get them this good at rules blocking. The advantage to rules blocking is that it’s flexible to different fronts without confusing my kids on who to block. It can be taught to youngsters but yes there are simpler ways to do this. For me coaching usually 8th grade ball. They learn it pretty quickly.
Had similar system in the 1960’s. 2, 4, 6 and 8 blocking? Easy to remember. Gap, over, mlb, frontside. If the play was inside you, over, outside. Easy to remember 50+ years later. Coaches, Jerry Hanson, later at Michigan with Bo and Denny Marvin later with NY Giants and Jets.
@@bobfoster687 yessir. This system is basically the natural evolution of that combined with the DW alignment makes it very effective at a simple structure for blocking especially at youth.
Hey coach...thanks for this. I sent you an email with a question about a 7 man feont. I know you're busy, but i was curious how you'd coach thay scenario. Thanks again for these videos. We've had a ton of success so far in our season
@@lutherodaniels3799 yessir it’s why I recommend this offense for youth. It’s weather proof. People that run spread offenses for 10-13 yo’s fall apart when it’s windy and cold/raining. We usually tear spread teams apart cuz they can’t continue to move the chains like we do.
@ yea Coach. If I coached, most definitely would run this offense. One game I seen them run this, the field was a mess and the ran like it was nothing. Then when they got to the Pontiac silver dome (I’m showing my age)on turf, it was over. Your film actually got me wanting to coach. I subscribed and will be following you.
@ awesome coach. I appreciate the support. Yeah I mean passing at the lower ages is not statistically more reliable than a running game. I do pass. But I find we don’t usually need to. Our blocking scheme and our power play and wedge make up the bulk of our practice time. While other teams try and get good at routes. We get good and running and misdirection. Then we roll down the field eating up the clock. Game over.
I saw a video earlier for trojan sweep. Your gaurds three in spilts away from the center and their toes are 8 to 10 inches behind the centers heel. Is that the same for all your plays or just the trojan sweep?
@@ryne1226 same alignment for the line regardless of formation. UCDW I give my guards 3” splits to facilitate getting the QB some space. Gun it’s a non issue. And yes my line is recessed as far back as legally possible by design. If they go down in three points they will legally be on the LOS.
We took our first L of the season. I prepared the boys for everything our opponents did and they played scared and folded smh. Now we have a hurricane preventing us from practicing smh.
It happens. I had my QB give Up on me after he turned the ball over to our cross town rival. And we were up. And the whole team fell apart. All u can do is learn from It and move forward
@coachb7373 my rb is the fastest kid in the league and I couldn't get him to run. He kept getting ran down from behind he ran for 3 plays all game and scored twice.
@@matth5117 winged offenses are nasty. And this is usually the nastiest one. When it’s ALL you run and ur wings are flying around faking it can be hard to see how has the ball.
Seems like everyone wants to spread the ball out now, but with some speed in the backfield you can ruin some teams with counter plays 😂 especially on these 3 man fronts people try to run on defense.
@@matth5117 watch some of my old video of what this offense does to teams when I have speed. How this offense works is your main back does all the power running. Usually the left wing. Then your right wing runs all the counters. But it starts out looking like more power. And that doesn’t account for wedge either. I branched this offense out in 2016 into a Gun version and a UC version and my team did both. We were never stopped.
@@matth5117 and it’s not like I don’t like the spread. But in youth you have lots of variables to throw. Wind and rain being two big ones. QB arm strength being another. Establishing a ground and pound run offense is by and large easier. While my opponents are training to run routes in perfect weather. My team is training to pound the rock in all elements regardless of what the D does. And grind the clock down.
@ would you say the double wings splits are too tight to run triple option? I have been toying with the idea of adding wishbone fundamentals with the foundation of double wing. What are your thoughts?
@ why not just run the double wing. It’s better than the wishbone in almost every regard. And I run the triple option from zero line splits and it works pretty good. Go take a look at my read option DW videos.
@ you are the first coach I have found who does triple option under center in double wing. Or your the only coach actually showing how to do so. I thank you very much. The fundamentals of wishbone are simple as hell “get your best athletes the ball in space” Mike leach credited wishbone to his creation of the air raid. So my thought process is to add some of that into the fundamentals of double wing. I am in no way trying to argue one’s better than the other I am simply trying to be a chef and I am taking ingredients from other offenses and I’m adding them to the simplistic double wing. Triple option eliminates two defenders by making them think. A defender who has to make decisions while also deciphering pulls counters and miss direction is so much! Your veer video out of DW is amazing I thank you and my goodness am I excited to transition my team into a double wing. Looking at the double wing from a wishbone/Flexbone perspective will do nothing but make that double wing better. Again thank you coach.
@ yeah I found that fooling the right defensive end was the KEY to opening up the outside for me. DEs would squeeze power and get real jumpy with how much misdirection there was. My FB usually kicks out the DE. so when lining my FB up in DEEP the DE gets a free run at the FB. and tackles him without the ball almost 80-90% of the time. The veer option from the DW literally won me a championship cuz the team we were playing had no clue how to stop it and our fakes were repped enough that they looked legitimately like the fb Has the ball.
I hate that offense lol it’s soooonfreaking hard to stop lol the mike will have a long day trying to read his keys so many dang motions shifts and miss directions lol
@@CMBTSports I’ll bet you tell ur kids “block the kid across from you” while my offense is giving the parents sunburns from lighting up the scoreboard so much.
@@coachb7373 Relax. Im just talkin smack lol serious sally. I’m sure you’re a good coach but it’s not a real offense that works at higher levels. 🤷🏻♂️ For the record I coach high school, run a pro style spread, typically we have a top ranked offense in our league. But those are guys are more mature. Obviously these are little guys so this offense is good for now. Just kinda bs misdirection nonsense… idk, it’s fine for pee wees. It’s fine. Lol also as a lawyer the moron comment really hurts… ugh! In any case good luck in all seasons. Football is GOAT
@ no trust me I understand the smack. I hear it more often than you think. Like to me you gotta define “higher level” and how it suddenly stops working. Cuz all the service academies run this my dude. It’s THIS only way more advanced. So you gotta explain to me your claim that it doesn’t work. Not true. Just MOST move on to more effective ways of moving the ball based on their personnel. When you have the best receivers and a strong arm QB you’d be foolish to run this. It’s PERFECT for youth teams and it would still be effective if ANY team ran this as their bread and butter. But they won’t. Cuz that’s not how the NCAA and NFL works. But trust me. Watch my videos and highlights. These are mostly 10-13 yo’s and they are carrying out intricate blocking schemes for this level of ball. In youth football you have to be able to block to win championships. And this system does just that. No offense taken coach. Congrats on your success. I’d go to high school but they only want teachers and with a full time job it’s a huge commitment.
@@CMBTSports and I didn’t call u a moron I said that was a moronic comment. We just specialize at pounding the rock. Versus spreading them out. We compress them and double and KO our running lanes open.
@@sneaksc9767 yeah and we do every play. Sometimes I have 8 or 9 on the line. My center. 2 guards. 2 tackles. 2 tight ends. Basic math dude. The rule says a MINIMUM of 7 men on the line. Check ur rules again bruh. 😎
I coach little kids and this seems like a complicated way to teach what we call man up and block away, but good to watch and learn the formation and plays to possibly run out of it thanks
@@cbadwheeler5088 lots of coaches run this using SAB blocking or TKO blocking to simplify this. I had a few years with this team to get them this good at rules blocking. The advantage to rules blocking is that it’s flexible to different fronts without confusing my kids on who to block. It can be taught to youngsters but yes there are simpler ways to do this. For me coaching usually 8th grade ball. They learn it pretty quickly.
Coach B been PIMPN since been PIMPN!!!! Always OP vids with gems to match. Keep banging Coach. Much appreciated
@@driftsportz4669 of course Coach
Great Video Coach as always! Your manual has been a life saver for my team!
I’m glad
To hear Coach!!!! It’s all there man. It’s up to you guys to coach it. So hats off
Had similar system in the 1960’s. 2, 4, 6 and 8 blocking? Easy to remember. Gap, over, mlb, frontside. If the play was inside you, over, outside. Easy to remember 50+ years later. Coaches, Jerry Hanson, later at Michigan with Bo and Denny Marvin later with NY Giants and Jets.
@@bobfoster687 yessir. This system is basically the natural evolution of that combined with the DW alignment makes it very effective at a simple structure for blocking especially at youth.
Inside , on, linebacker
Make nervous to much ball handling for me
@ I use a lot of direct snap too alternatively. But yeah the ball handling has to be repped substantially
@ I’ve heard also OIL blocking like that.
Hey coach...thanks for this. I sent you an email with a question about a 7 man feont. I know you're busy, but i was curious how you'd coach thay scenario. Thanks again for these videos. We've had a ton of success so far in our season
I seen a HS team win a state championship running that offense in Michigan. That’s the best offense to run when the weather is terrible.
@@lutherodaniels3799 yessir it’s why I recommend this offense for youth. It’s weather proof. People that run spread offenses for 10-13 yo’s fall apart when it’s windy and cold/raining. We usually tear spread teams apart cuz they can’t continue to move the chains like we do.
@ yea Coach. If I coached, most definitely would run this offense. One game I seen them run this, the field was a mess and the ran like it was nothing. Then when they got to the Pontiac silver dome (I’m showing my age)on turf, it was over. Your film actually got me wanting to coach. I subscribed and will be following you.
@@coachb7373 plus it teaches basic fundamentals especially blocking.
@ awesome coach. I appreciate the support. Yeah I mean passing at the lower ages is not statistically more reliable than a running game. I do pass. But I find we don’t usually need to. Our blocking scheme and our power play and wedge make up the bulk of our practice time. While other teams try and get good at routes. We get good and running and misdirection. Then we roll down the field eating up the clock. Game over.
Someone send this film to OU
@@LitMo03 hahahahaha and keep it away from Georgia. Lmao
What do you do vs bigger stronger lineman that over power your guys?
Surrender the outcome to God
Coach Calande's system has worked for many years!
@@azaer123 it’s incredibly good once grasped and executed
I saw a video earlier for trojan sweep. Your gaurds three in spilts away from the center and their toes are 8 to 10 inches behind the centers heel. Is that the same for all your plays or just the trojan sweep?
@@ryne1226 same alignment for the line regardless of formation. UCDW I give my guards 3” splits to facilitate getting the QB some space. Gun it’s a non issue. And yes my line is recessed as far back as legally possible by design. If they go down in three points they will legally be on the LOS.
Hey the veer is also a deadly offense.
@@lutherodaniels3799 I love the Veer. De la Salle runs that near me in concord.
anything that works is great
We took our first L of the season. I prepared the boys for everything our opponents did and they played scared and folded smh. Now we have a hurricane preventing us from practicing smh.
It happens. I had my QB give
Up on me after he turned the ball over to our cross town rival. And we were up. And the whole team fell apart. All u can do is learn from
It and move forward
@coachb7373 my rb is the fastest kid in the league and I couldn't get him to run. He kept getting ran down from behind he ran for 3 plays all game and scored twice.
@@OsirisParquette yep. Gotta move if you’ve got wheels. I’ve seen it too. Wide open holes and kids sweep to sidelines. Lmao
We ran some of these plays out of the I formation with a wingback back in the 90’s. It would always confuse a defense.
@@matth5117 winged offenses are nasty. And this is usually the nastiest one. When it’s ALL you run and ur wings are flying around faking it can be hard to see how has the ball.
Seems like everyone wants to spread the ball out now, but with some speed in the backfield you can ruin some teams with counter plays 😂 especially on these 3 man fronts people try to run on defense.
@@matth5117 watch some of my old video of what this offense does to teams when I have speed. How this offense works is your main back does all the power running. Usually the left wing. Then your right wing runs all the counters. But it starts out looking like more power. And that doesn’t account for wedge either. I branched this offense out in 2016 into a Gun version and a UC version and my team did both. We were never stopped.
@@matth5117 and it’s not like I don’t like the spread. But in youth you have lots of variables to throw. Wind and rain being two big ones. QB arm strength being another. Establishing a ground and pound run offense is by and large easier. While my opponents are training to run routes in perfect weather. My team is training to pound the rock in all elements regardless of what the D does. And grind the clock down.
Seems like you have some animosity towards the wishbone?
@@LJProductions247 hahahahaba nah I think the wishbone is coool. I think there’s far better ways to move the ball however.
@ would you say the double wings splits are too tight to run triple option? I have been toying with the idea of adding wishbone fundamentals with the foundation of double wing. What are your thoughts?
@ why not just run the double wing. It’s better than the wishbone in almost every regard. And I run the triple option from zero line splits and it works pretty good. Go take a look at my read option DW videos.
@ you are the first coach I have found who does triple option under center in double wing. Or your the only coach actually showing how to do so. I thank you very much. The fundamentals of wishbone are simple as hell “get your best athletes the ball in space” Mike leach credited wishbone to his creation of the air raid. So my thought process is to add some of that into the fundamentals of double wing. I am in no way trying to argue one’s better than the other I am simply trying to be a chef and I am taking ingredients from other offenses and I’m adding them to the simplistic double wing. Triple option eliminates two defenders by making them think. A defender who has to make decisions while also deciphering pulls counters and miss direction is so much! Your veer video out of DW is amazing I thank you and my goodness am I excited to transition my team into a double wing. Looking at the double wing from a wishbone/Flexbone perspective will do nothing but make that double wing better. Again thank you coach.
@ yeah I found that fooling the right defensive end was the KEY to opening up the outside for me. DEs would squeeze power and get real jumpy with how much misdirection there was. My FB usually kicks out the DE. so when lining my FB up in DEEP the DE gets a free run at the FB. and tackles him without the ball almost 80-90% of the time. The veer option from the DW literally won me a championship cuz the team we were playing had no clue how to stop it and our fakes were repped enough that they looked legitimately like the fb Has the ball.
Who's has the ball??? That's the point,
@@user-bl6ne3hc6n precisely
I hate that offense lol it’s soooonfreaking hard to stop lol the mike will have a long day trying to read his keys so many dang motions shifts and miss directions lol
@@Mr.Burton98 yessir. That’s what the DW is known for. That’s why we love it as OC’s
This is a great offense if you don’t actually want to learn or play real football. Lollll
@@CMBTSports yeah cuz they don’t run or block at the “next level”. Another moronic comment.
@@CMBTSports I’ll bet you tell ur kids “block the kid across from you” while my offense is giving the parents sunburns from lighting up the scoreboard so much.
@@coachb7373 Relax. Im just talkin smack lol serious sally. I’m sure you’re a good coach but it’s not a real offense that works at higher levels. 🤷🏻♂️ For the record I coach high school, run a pro style spread, typically we have a top ranked offense in our league. But those are guys are more mature. Obviously these are little guys so this offense is good for now. Just kinda bs misdirection nonsense… idk, it’s fine for pee wees. It’s fine. Lol also as a lawyer the moron comment really hurts… ugh! In any case good luck in all seasons. Football is GOAT
@ no trust me I understand the smack. I hear it more often than you think. Like to me you gotta define “higher level” and how it suddenly stops working. Cuz all the service academies run this my dude. It’s THIS only way more advanced. So you gotta explain to me your claim that it doesn’t work. Not true. Just MOST move on to more effective ways of moving the ball based on their personnel. When you have the best receivers and a strong arm QB you’d be foolish to run this. It’s PERFECT for youth teams and it would still be effective if ANY team ran this as their bread and butter. But they won’t. Cuz that’s not how the NCAA and NFL works. But trust me. Watch my videos and highlights. These are mostly 10-13 yo’s and they are carrying out intricate blocking schemes for this level of ball. In youth football you have to be able to block to win championships. And this system does just that. No offense taken coach. Congrats on your success. I’d go to high school but they only want teachers and with a full time job it’s a huge commitment.
@@CMBTSports and I didn’t call u a moron I said that was a moronic comment. We just specialize at pounding the rock. Versus spreading them out. We compress them and double and KO our running lanes open.
It's an illegal formation ...ya need 7 line men on the line of scrimmage
@@sneaksc9767 yeah and we do every play. Sometimes I have 8 or 9 on the line. My center. 2 guards. 2 tackles. 2 tight ends. Basic math dude. The rule says a MINIMUM of 7 men on the line. Check ur rules again bruh. 😎
Absolute clown comment. It's a completely legal formation.