Everyday Drills (EDDs) That Actually Translate to Game Day
Stop wasting practice time on drills that look good but don't help your team tackle or block on Friday night.

Most coaches try to put in their entire playbook in the first week of camp. They hand out massive binders, spend hours on the whiteboard, and wonder why their players are playing slow on Friday nights. The truth is, complexity is the enemy of execution.
The Problem with Traditional Installs
When you overload a high school athlete with too much information, their physical speed decreases. They start thinking instead of reacting. Our goal as coaches shouldn't be to show how much football we know, but to teach our players how to play fast and confident.
"You can't develop great players until you become a complete coach. And a complete coach knows what to leave out."
The 3-Day Framework
Instead of a 10-day install schedule, we condense our core offensive philosophy into three days. This forces us to prioritize what actually wins games.
- Day 1: Base Run & Quick Game. Establish the physical tone and give your quarterback easy completions.
- Day 2: Play Action & Protection. Marry the run game with explosive pass concepts.
- Day 3: Situational & Screens. Third down, red zone, and constraint plays to punish aggressive defenses.
Reps Over Variations
By limiting the volume of the install, we maximize the reps of our core plays. We want our players to face every possible defensive front and coverage against our base concepts in practice, so game day feels slow and predictable.
