Coach J Jarrett

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Coach J Jarrett

Coach J Jarrett

@CoachJJarrett

Retired Offensive Coordinator & QBs Coach

a golf course or the beach Katılım Mayıs 2016
283 Takip Edilen525 Takipçiler
Coach J Jarrett
Coach J Jarrett@CoachJJarrett·
@CoachFriley Hello, Coach Riley. I just now followed you and wondered if you would follow me back so that I can message you. Thank you so much.
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tony franklin
tony franklin@coachtf·
BadAss QB reminders halfway through the season: 1) Throw it to guys with your color Jersey 2) Win one play, then the next 3) Have a short memory ( good and bad) 4) Celebrate with teammates 5) Accept the criticism, spread the praise 6) Take what’s easy 7) Make Plays 8) No excuses 9) Find A Way 10) Adjust to what’s changed ( injuries, poor performers, rising talent, game day play makers) 11) Play to your strengths 12) Spend an extra5-10 minutes working on your flaws 13) Make a highlight and a low light video for self study and write down the good, the bad, and the ugly 14) Feed your mind with positive helpful information 15) Live in the moment…can’t change the past…Can improve the future 16) Benched?…Get better…Your only one play away 17) Keep writing your story…You hold the pen
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tony franklin
tony franklin@coachtf·
The best wide receiver training I've ever learned came from "McCaffrey" no-not Christian-His dad Ed! Some cutups from his training camps taught me how to coach receivers...Watch these videos which I just voiced over 1 more time. It can change your career!
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tony franklin
tony franklin@coachtf·
@Kurt13Warner & other disciples of the belief that high school and college coaches’ jobs are to prepare their QB’s for the NFL: 1) The idea that a high school and college coaches’ job is to prepare their QB for the NFL is incorrect at best. 99.8% of high school quarterbacks will never play in the NFL and 98% of college quarterbacks will never take a snap in the NFL. Therefore, to make your gameplans, teaching techniques, etc. based on the 1% would be incredibly selfish and self-defeating. The number one goal of high school and college coaches for their QB and other players isn’t and shouldn’t be the NFL…It’s teaching life skills, making a dramatic and continuing impact in their daily journey, winning games by highlighting their best skillsets, working to correct their flaws, and making certain that every player they coach understands and has experienced “getting up” after getting their ass whipped. 2) Good quarterback coaches, offensive coordinators, and head coaches adjust to their quarterback’s talent, as well as adjust to the talent they are surrounded with. Certain “NFL Old School Schemes” will never work in high school or in certain college programs because their talent doesn’t allow it. Great coaches adjust scheme to fit their QB and their surrounding cast. 3) All information in football used to flow “downhill” … in other words from the NFL to college and then to high school. The last 10-20 years or so a dramatic shift in information flow transitioned as information at times flows from high schools to college to the NFL. High school coaches became more creative with tempo, RPO’s, and playing their best athlete at the QB position and the game has never been the same since. It’s more popular than ever before in both the NFL and college (NFL viewership was its second highest ever in 2023 and college football viewing is up 28% over the last 5 seasons). 4) NFL teams have unlimited time to install schemes and study film of opponents and themselves. College and high school teams’ QB’s are limited by rules and realities for physical involvement, as well as academics, work schedules, and challenges in life that NFL players don’t deal with. 5) The idea that college quarterbacks from some programs can’t or don’t “full field progression read” is a valid point for some college systems, however it isn’t a correct label for all. For example, the Hal Mumme and Mike Leach Air Raid system has full field read progressions 1 through 5 as well as pre-snap “hots” etc. Their genius came in making the pre-snaps and read progressions seem simple instead of complicated. They have been criticized for this by the “self-proclaimed experts” when they should be lauded. Great teachers take the complex and make it simple. Bad teachers take the simple and make it complex. 6) The best quarterback in the NFL is 2023 as well as the last several years is Patrick Mahomes. Why…Because he is incredibly gifted with a unique skill set of big hands, off balance throwing angles, good arm, great escape talent, toughness, competitiveness, and intelligence. But Mahomes greatest weapon is his coach, Andy Reid. Instead of trying to make him into a “prototypical NFL QB, Reid decided to build the offense around his skill set. That’s great coaching. What you know as a coach is not relevant, it’s what you can teach and how you adjust to your team’s overall talent. 7) For decades NFL coaches blame college coaches when a QB fails, college coaches blame high school coaches when their QB fails, and some QB gurus blame everyone but themselves. The reality is simple: coaching matters at all levels and when it works in high school and works again in college and then fails in the NFL then NFL coaches should look deep in the mirror because there’s a good chance that the person looking back at them is the one to blame for the failure of their quarterback. 8) I have no doubt that many an NFL, college, and high school quarterback that fell short of reaching their potential came from the pure luck of the draw of who their coach was. I’ve had many all-conference, player of the year, all-state, arena, foreign, and NFL quarterbacks I’ve had the privilege to personally coach, to train, and to follow. The one thing I’m certain of is that coaching matters. Every coach who makes the game easy for the QB and focuses on the strengths of his QB enhances his opportunities for success, not only for the QB, but for the team. 9) We only know what we know…and to say that every QB who doesn’t perform well in the NFL is the blame of his college and high school coach is reckless and disrespectful to coaches and the game. All of us who have made a living and dedicated ourselves to the game of football and to coaching the QB have had times where we found the right formula to make them their best self and other times where we couldn’t make it work. It proves that no one is always right and that what works for one doesn’t always work for the next guy. Great teachers are always adjusting. 10) None of us should ever fall into the trap of thinking that the way we experienced something in our history is the “only way” or the “best way”. If we do adopt that attitude that the “old way” is the “only way” then we will end our lives as bitter old humans who missed out on the wonderful world of creativity that every new generation brings. 11) Tom Brady was great, Peyton Manning was great, Kurt Warner was great, Patrick Mahomes is great, Lamar Jackson is great, Josh Allen is great, Jalen Hurts is great, Jared Goff is great… and I could go on and on. Notice anything? They are all uniquely different and each of them have been horrible at times. Manning through the most interceptions in NFL history for a rookie, Brady through 5 interceptions in a game, Hurts productivity fell dramatically in 2023, Goff was run out of LA and declared washed up, and Lamar was an unstoppable MVP until he wasn’t. Everyone sucks at some time. It’s very popular these days to “pile on” and be part of the mob for good or bad. Just remember, playing QB is possibly the most complicated and difficult job in sports, and everyone will struggle at times. But never forget, the right team-mates, the proper coach at the right time, and all of history can change overnight. 12) Thanks to @Kurt13Warner for openly discussing this topic. I appreciate his greatness as a player, commentator, and human being who personifies overcoming hardship and achieving despite adversity. And I agree with his statement that because we disagree doesn’t mean you should attack the character of the human you have a different opinion from when it comes to the subject of sports.
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Luke Cross
Luke Cross@Luke_Cross10·
Season opener vs BASA 2 for 4 with a 3-run HR and bunt single Just getting started
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Coach J Jarrett retweetledi
Social Circle Baseball
Social Circle Baseball@SocialCircleBSB·
Completed some facility upgrades recently 💯 thank you to everyone that has helped make this happen!
Social Circle Baseball tweet mediaSocial Circle Baseball tweet mediaSocial Circle Baseball tweet media
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Coach J Jarrett retweetledi
SC Wrestling
SC Wrestling@skinswrestling·
SC champs at Oconee County over Mill Creek and Brayden Mitchell records his 150th career win!
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Ryan Lesniak
Ryan Lesniak@coachlesniak·
@chris_parker222 HS baseball coach @CoachJJarrett , allowed me to grow as a leader, shared Christ w/ me before I knew I needed Him. @hoosierdaddy89 showed me what organization was needed to be a HC and conviction needed to be a leader. Mike Allison, showed me patience it took to be successful.
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Chris Parker
Chris Parker@chris_parker222·
Who had an impact on your coaching career? As we approach Thanksgiving, let’s spread some “thanks” to those that taught you the game.
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