Slice Guy Nick
5.5K posts

Slice Guy Nick
@Nick_Dailey
Fat dad, bad golfer, trying to improve both any way possible
Katılım Nisan 2009
498 Takip Edilen169 Takipçiler

@ThadWells I started doing it using extra linemen because we are lucky enough to have 6 legit guys.
Also going unbal with a tackle wide in a bunch confuses defenses thinking he’s eligible
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We started going unbalanced because we struggled to find 5 good OL each year.
It allowed us to hide a guy and get him away from the point of attack.
Thad Wells@ThadWells
We just released Rooski 26. It lets you call plays using images on the field. You can run more plays AND execute them while going fast. This video explains everything about the system hundreds of football coaches at all levels use to remove the bottleneck of memorization.
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@CoachFBInsights I have endless formations just for the fact that you never know what best suits your team. Find out their play style and use the plays/formation/system that is going to help them the most
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Me building our offense at 26:
- Started with what looked good at a clinic
-Built toward complexity
- Added plays when things broke
- Called it "ahead of the curve"
Me building our offense now:
- Start with what my kids can own
- Build toward one idea
- Subtract when things break
- Call it a system
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@ChalkLast0712 I do the first option, we have a ton of formations, but we only run 3 running plays and maybe 5 passing concepts out of them give or take. Primarily we overload to a side and even cover eligible guys to get mismatches and space advantages
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@WinningSystemFB @Ethan_Shelton05 Yeah my first thought was smash. That outside hitch should be open
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@Ethan_Shelton05 Vs Quarters I want to create a 2-on-1 on the flat defender. Smash concept is hard to beat here.
• Outside WR: Hitch
• Slot: Corner
• RB: Fast to flat
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@TheRealCruzOx Reggie Bush
Adrian Peterson
Ricky Williams
Got to see the first two in person at Oregon, my god they are freaks
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@js_ace_football @AdamBreneman81 @NextUpWithAdam I would agree. I coach 12u and tell the QB to look at the safeties first before anything, so this seems insane
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In any basic pass concept no matter high school , college or pro, you read the safety and go from there. That’s day 1 basic football 🏈 the problem is that many of these QBs play in these spread RPO offenses where it’s a play call from the sideline and all the need to do is throw a bubble or run
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Johnny Manziel said something every college star eventually figures out:
You think you know ball… until the league shows you how much you don’t.
He walked into a pre-draft meeting with Bill O’Brien and told him he read linebackers under center. Bill stared back in disbelief. In the league, you read safeties, rotations, disguises and everything that happens after the ball is snapped.
That moment hits every player eventually. College gives you confidence but the league gives you humility.
No matter how talented you are, you learn fast that the NFL speaks a completely different language. 👇👇
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@dbtips101 We did this year. The two outside backers were closer to the line with zero pass responsibility unless a back swung out to their side. We’d blitz the Mike most of the time as well, with the ends going to the B gap, overwhelming the interior. Starting D gave up 0 yards or TDs
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Dan Wilson is so bad. Keeps making the same terrible decision over and over every single game #Mariners
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@Genetics56 This was awesome. So many fans have only been there the last 10-15 years, they didn’t have to watch a terrible product slowly right the ship. Thanks for putting this all together, very cool
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Oregon Football: The rise from the ashes to a football super power
Oregon currently holds the nations longest home winning streak and have won 18 straight regular season conference games, dating back to their last season in the Pac-12.
30 years, $500M to $800M. That is how long it takes and how expensive it is to become a football powerhouse. The rise from the ashes to the nations elite is a tough, very hard, and expensive path to go down. It is why so few schools are able to turn the coner from their historic norm to a super power lable.
Now, I know people are going to bash away with their claims of 0 = Zero National titles. That is true. But that is the POINT of this post. That will change. Oregon has staying power. They have invested, they have been winning, they are now a brand that young kids, teenagers, and you adults know. There is no other school in the country, besides Indiana, as close to winning a national title that hasn't won one in their entire history as Oregon is.
The foundational core of Oregon football's rise didn't start with buying a QB out of a transfer portal or landing a 5-star OT or landing a first round OT from the transfer portal. It started with facilities dating back to the 1980's.
In 1981, Oregon built their intial weight room as part of a stadium expansion, that dealt with a stadium club. To my knowledge, there wasn't another football program across the country that had that type of setup. It was different then and that was the starting point, in general, to the uniqueness of Oregon football.
To fund athletics, Oregon introduced Sports Action in 1991, which helped cover costs for facility upgrades.
1991: Autzen Stadium Turf Upgrade
Upgrades coincided with Oregon's 1994 Pac-10 title win and 1995 Rose Bowl appearance
It was that season's success that led to more donations, ticket sales, and overall program momentum.
In 1998, Oregon built facilities that had climate control, medical facilities, and batting cages. It was used as in-door tailgating experience for fans as well. Once again, something that was different in college football.
In 2002, Oregon underwent an Autzen stadium expansion. They increased capacity and that had a positive impact on football recruiting.
2002: Autzen Stadium Facelift and Expansion
A $90 million renovation added seating and luxury boxes on the south sideline, boosting capacity from ~41,000 up to 60,000 with standing room. It included upgrades to Casanova Center locker rooms, treatment facilities, and weight rooms, enhancing overall athlete needs.
2008: DuckVision 2.0 Scoreboard Installation at Autzen Stadium
A new 33-by-85-foot high-definition LED scoreboard and replay screen replaced the 1998 version.
2010: Autzen Stadium Field and Surroundings Update
The field was replaced with new FieldTurf (removing the crown for a flat surface), and walls were paneled.
2010s: Focus on Elite Operations and Recovery
2013: Hatfield-Dowlin Complex (Football Operations Center)
A 145,000-square-foot, six-story building adjacent to Autzen, costed $68 million (donated by Phil Knight).
Features included a 25,000-square-foot weight room, practice fields (one grass, two synthetic), dining facilities, meeting rooms, video theaters, a players lounge, recruiting center, and advanced video editing.
2014: Autzen Stadium Amenities Refresh
Updates included a digital east end-zone scoreboard, 150 flat-screen monitors in concessions, food trucks, cell phone repeaters, sound system upgrades, and new sideline graphics.
The facility upgrades were tied together with success on the football field with Chip Kelly's different approach to offensive schemes and style of play. It made Oregon different.
2025–Present: Hatfield-Dowlin Complex Expansion and New Indoor Practice Facility
Under construction is a $250 million project includes a 170,000-square-foot indoor practice facility that includes a 130,000-square-foot field + 40,000-square-foot connector with expanded weight room, players lounge, terrace, recovery spaces, nutrition hubs, and flexible meeting rooms. There is also a 30,000-square-foot renovations to the Hatfield-Dowlin Complex.
1975–1988: The Dark Ages and Early Rebuilding Under Rich Brooks
In the 1970's Oregon had a 14 game losing streak and lost to their rival 0-66 (1974 season). At that time Oregon football was nationally irrelevant, living in the ashes of the not spoken about world of college football media. The football program was so bad they only scored 49 points in conference play in 1974.
In 1977, Oregon hired a coach by the name of Rich Brooks. I'm positive that 99.99999999% of every college football fan and national CFB media member does not know who that is.
Oregon was on probation in 1980 through 1982 for recruiting violations.
Regardless of results on the football field, Rich Brooks changed the culture of the football program. They went from helpless and happless and lost in the wilderness of what sound football is to becoming a more discplined porgram.
By 1989, Oregon earned its first bowl game in 24 years (Independence Bowl loss to Tulsa, 27–24).
At that time of Oregon fotoball, the attendance for games were loss than 30K. Fast forward to today and standing room only can get over 60K. The fanbase grew along with the quality of football play and football spend investment.
Thus, Oregon went from 49 points in conference play games in 1974 to having a 9–3 season in 1994, winning the Pac-12 title. From 1966 to 1985 Oregon was ranked once.
Mike Bellotti was promoted from offensive coordinator to head coach in 1995.
The momentum in the football program was already there when Mike Bellotti took over as head coach and during his 14 seasons as a head coach, he had 13 winning seasons and made it to 12 bowl games.
That was the start of consitent football success.
Oregon eventually went on and won Pac-10 titles in the early 2000 and in 2000. Remember the name of the Heisman finalist? Joey Harrington.
The 2001 team went 11–1, ranked No. 2 nationally, and won the Fiesta Bowl but was snubed from the BCS National Championship due to ranking algorithms. It was that snub that chanced CFB post season.
Bellotti retired with 116 wins.
Oregon's breakthrough stems from factors that go past Phil Knight's money. Yes Phil has given more than $500M, but, again, that isn't the only reason for Oregon being who they are today.
Nike's uniform innovations (over 100 combinations since 1997) made Oregon "cool." The "O" logo has been built to become a national brand.
In today's world of college football, Oregon has had many players drafted in the early rounds of the NFL draft and star players in the NFL.
At the end of the day, Oregon invested. They changed who they were. They were able to sustain success. They marketed their brand. They continue to care. They continue to invest. They have good alignment. They are spending on football, for football success, and have been steadfast and able to prevent a fallback.
In the last 20 years of college football, Oregon ranks in the top 10 nationally for most wins.
Up next for Oregon football - A national title.
Is this the season?

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@JacksonTweetin @MidwestGolfJake This is true. I live like 3 hours away and I’ll drive down in the morning to play and come back later that night. However, staying on property is a lot of what makes Bandon so great
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@MidwestGolfJake Apparently you can show up to Bandon (the city) via VRBO and get on the courses fairly easily? Is this true?
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@bullfrog111 @LoudestLooper I think we need it to be LoudestLouper… just through it out there
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@gomergolfs It’s a bucket list course, super awesome. Bandon vibes on the course, property not as fun. The Irish is also good and so is black wolf run



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@TansuYegen Pretty sure you mean “Glendoveer Golf Course.” There isn’t a Greenover course that I know of in Portland city limits, or the surrounding for that matter, and it looks just like Glendoveer
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@AugustusMcCra12 I’ll die on this hill with you buddy. It’s a money grab and ego roll for parents
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