How Many Formations For Winning Youth Football Teams?
Posted: Wednesday, June 06, 2007
by Dave Cisar
Winning Youth Football
Many youth football coaches are looking for help in determining the right number of offensive formations for their youth football teams. The optimum number all depends on the age and experience level of your specific team.
Many coaches feel the more formations they have, the more complex and difficult it will be for the defense to stop the offense. I’m not sure I buy into that train of thought and at some point there is a diminishing returns point as you spend inordinate amounts of time working on formationing, you confuse the kids and lose practice time elsewhere. Many times in the leagues my teams have played in, the teams with the most formations are the teams with the lowest offensive scoring output.
If a formation that is different from your base formation gives your team an advantage, it may make sense to have an additional formation of two. But if you add formations in just so you can say you are running additional formations, that makes little sense to me. Formation advantages could include getting better blocking angles for specific plays, isolating a back or receiver on a weaker defender, adding more punch to the point of attack, decoying the defense or taking a dominant defender out of the play.
There is a matrix in the book that shows you which formations you should be running with the age and experience levels your particular teams has. We do the same for the football plays as well, which football plays make sense for each team based on age and experience. For rookie teams, just one formation probably makes a lot of sense for the first game or two and for some teams maybe the entire season. Add additional formations in only as your team masters the offense and other aspects of the game.
We will run our base football plays out of several different formations, but each formation does something to add to the play. We don’t change formations just to say we can or to give the defense a different “look", we do it to gain specific advantages.
Here are the poll results of over 75 Successful Single Wing Coaches on the Number of Formations they ran in 2006:
One Base Formation: 11%
Just The Base Plus a Nasty Split: 15%
Three Formations: 45%
Four Formations: 15%
Five Formations: 4%
Six or More Formations: 11%
So as you can see, 71% of successful Single Wing coaches run three formations or less. I’m not preaching out in the wilderness on this one.
Don’t be one of those jack of all trades master of none guys we see so often coaching youth football. Master your base formation first, then add in what only gives you very specific quantifiable advantages.
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