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The
Following Pages are intended to be used as an aid for Australian Rules Football
coaches who are interested in reading it. This manual was mostly written whilst I
had the privilege of coaching the varsity football team of the
University of Western Australia.
I have always had a great love for Australian Football and the
idea of coaching was very attractive to me. I had 6 wonderful
years coaching, finally retiring because it was simply taking up
far too much of my time and, worse, my emotional and thinking
energies. I loved those 6 years. When I see the players again
now I always feel a great warmth towards them.
It
amazes me that even now, years later, I see players in the AFL
doing things that are low percentage.
One of many examples of this is the
annoying backwards handball by a player who has a mark or
free kick. This puts the receive under unnecessary pressure and
doesnt 'break the lines'. So we rehearsed over and over again a
move where the receiver actually runs past the man on the mark
and receives the attacking handball over the top. This
removes most of the pressure that the man on the mark can
generate and puts the receiver in an attacking position
downfield where he can break up the lines. But it is hard to do
without practice eg. the deliverer forgets to move forward (to
make the man on the mark stay committed, to get forward momentum
and height into the handball, to shorten the distance etc) and
the receiver forgets to pick the right line and the other
players forget to create the space for that receiver to move
into over the mark.
Another example occurs when a ball is
kicked to the goalsquare. There are a lot of low
percentage things to do, but a good strategy is to start behind
the pack as the kicker moves in, then build up speed so that as
the ball is kicked you are on the move to the front of the pack
in the square. That makes you the most likely to mark a kick
that goes left, right or drops short, all of which are more
likely to happen in the last quarter when legs are tired.
Lack of creativity by some players
and coaches is also frustrating. Our philosophy was to develop
new high percentage moves which were just a bit different and,
most importantly, to rehearse them over and over again at
training. I recall something I heard once on the radio, a phrase
that is on the wall at the BBC, which says 'if you want anything
to look spontaneous, rehearse it'. Of course many of the moves
never worked in games, but at least it kept the opposition
guessing. Once I made the blokes do some moves which I developed
from watching gridiron when I lived in the USA. They had to
criss-cross the square at bouncedowns and 'roll out. It never
worked once and guys were confused. But so were the opposition
and we just seemed to cut through their defence like knife
through soft butter. After the game the opposition coach came
and congratulated us for our brilliant strategising. We thanked
him and laughed, because the move hadn't worked once. But a
perception of unpredictibility by opposition backmen is as
important as structure in the forward line. But this should only
be a perception to the opposition.
Coaching Australian Football. AFL. Australian
Rules Football coaching.
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