Free Special Report on the most common mistakes youth coaches make
Follow John on
FacebookTwitter

View Cart

Bookmark and Share

$15 off and free shipping with your purchase of 5 or more books! Buy for the whole coaching staff by using coupon code "staff" at checkout!

Featured Books

Gap-Air-Mirror Defense for Youth Football
Single-Wing Offense for Youth Football
Coaching Youth Football
Football Clock Management
The Contrarian Edge for Football Offense

Checkout

How to Order

Supplemental material including comments on clock management in recent football games and errata for the book Football Clock Management.

Copyright by John T. Reed

Need six to eight receivers to run whole-game no-huddle

In the 1/8/01 Sports Illustrated, Florida State’s offensive coordinator Mark Richt said they did not run as much no-huddle in the Oklahoma game as they wanted because “you’ve got to have six receivers and you’re better off with eight.” Two FSU receivers were out of the game—one for academic problems, the other with a sore hamstring. In the whole-game hurry-up chapter of Football Clock Management, I said you needed to become expert in fatigue management to run it. This is an example of the kind of knowledge you need to run prolonged no-huddle offenses.