Thursday, July 30, 2009

The Value of 7 on 7


Rod Johnson, statewide football editor for Virginia Preps.com recently shared his thoughts on the value of 7 on 7. Here is what he had to say.

The end of summer is here (for football players) as training camps open up next week for squads from one corner of the state to the other. With the end of summer comes the end of the 7 x 7 passing leagues and tournaments.

A few years back, the publishers, editors and staff at VirginiaPreps.com made the decision to start covering the events throughout the summer and to attend as many events as we could despite common objections / questions like...

Why cover touch football events?
Does it really matter who wins those events?
With no linemen playing and no pads on, is it really football?
Without disagreeing with those sentiments and without answering the objections individually, I will respond by saying that I find value in the events as they help form my opinion about which teams have talent coming together as one and which teams might be struggling to reach their potential.

There are three things that I look at while attending the passing events...

1. Watch the athletes run and compete.
Nothing beats seeing a kid play live and watching how fluidly he moves, he well he competes against kids of the same caliber, how he fights for the ball in the air, how he reacts to the long days in the heat, etc... There really is no substitute for standing on a sideline and watching a kid play to judge his speed, fluidity and competitiveness.

2. Watch teammates interact with each other.
Successful coaches and teams constantly talk about team chemistry and how important it is to their continued success. The tricky thing about team chemistry is that it cannot be measured statistically and there's really no way to put a value on it to compare one team's chemistry against another's. However, it is something that, if you have been around enough teams, can be sensed as you watch the players interact with each other and with other teams. You can get a sense of a team's confidence, their dedication and the seriousness with which they work. For lack of a better term, you get a sense of a team's "personality".

3. Watch the coach's coach.
No single piece of information is more important to gather at a 7 x 7 event then this! Every successful team that I have seen over the past seven years has had a coaching staff with similar characteristics -- organization, setting a fast pace, always pushing for more hard work, preaching excellence, concerned about getting better at a 7 x 7 rather than focusing on winning the event.

Attend an event next summer and watch for the teams who are working drills when there is free time before an event, watch for the teams whose players support each other versus the teams who point fingers at each other, and watch for the teams whose coaching staffs who talk to their players after every play rather than watching from the sideline. Don't worry about who won the event, you'll know who the good teams will be.

Got a question for Rod? E-Mail us at TheSportsBuffet@verizon.net and maybe we can start feeding some questions to Rod out of the mailbag. He is always hungry to talk football.

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