I trust that everyone saw the Super Bowl. I am not a Patriots fan but you have to appreciate what they have accomplished.
So I bought "The education of a coach" a rather old book on Belichik but it seemed like the best one.
His dad was a scout and what his dad said was that every team wants to play to its strength especially under pressure.
So he would scout teams and suggest a way to counter their strength so that they had to play in a way they did not like to play.
If a team liked to run, make them pass and vice versa.
The effect on his son is obvious. Look at what the Patriots did to the Rams.
The whole night I was yelling for the Rams to try dink and drop. Short pass patterns. Anything to try and get in the game.
They never really did.
They kept trying to go deep. With no success.
The Rams were outcoached. But they also have a young quarterback who likely is not able to adapt easily.
It's the Super Bowl so there is no way a team can expect to win the way they always do.
It got me thinking about tennis and about attacking people's strengths.
In tennis is attacking the strength really what Bill Tilden suggested?
Or is it making people play their strengths in ways they do not like?
Nadal is weak when people attack his forehand but only crosscourt.
So it is attacking the strength but it is also trying to get him to play the way he does not like.
More like neutralizing the strength.
Any thoughts?
So I bought "The education of a coach" a rather old book on Belichik but it seemed like the best one.
His dad was a scout and what his dad said was that every team wants to play to its strength especially under pressure.
So he would scout teams and suggest a way to counter their strength so that they had to play in a way they did not like to play.
If a team liked to run, make them pass and vice versa.
The effect on his son is obvious. Look at what the Patriots did to the Rams.
The whole night I was yelling for the Rams to try dink and drop. Short pass patterns. Anything to try and get in the game.
They never really did.
They kept trying to go deep. With no success.
The Rams were outcoached. But they also have a young quarterback who likely is not able to adapt easily.
It's the Super Bowl so there is no way a team can expect to win the way they always do.
It got me thinking about tennis and about attacking people's strengths.
In tennis is attacking the strength really what Bill Tilden suggested?
Or is it making people play their strengths in ways they do not like?
Nadal is weak when people attack his forehand but only crosscourt.
So it is attacking the strength but it is also trying to get him to play the way he does not like.
More like neutralizing the strength.
Any thoughts?
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