

BLACKOUT- The Modern Multiple Defense
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@blackoutDsystem
18 HOURS of resources. https://t.co/nD9Hyi2FNQ. Other purchase options or info email [email protected]. Personal @coachhick




Coaches, celebrate your Spring Break with The Blackouts Base Defense Package Bundle for $99 (46% off) on @thecoachtube or by DM for Google Drive / Venmo Options. 7 volumes, 8 hours worth of video. Offer ends Monday April 6. #HeHasRisen #PalmSunday #Easter. Volume 1: Foundations Volume 2: Offensive Recognition Volume 3: Universal Terminology/Coordinator Stuff! Volume 9: Base Fronts and Creepers Volume 10: Country Cover 3 Volume 11: Cover 4 Volume 12: Shaded Fronts and Stunts coachtube.com/bundles/the-ba…

Understand this: The movies and shows about the crucifixion have been tame when compared to what He actually went through. Even The Passion Of The Christ was forced to hold back a little in order to avoid an X rating. Crucifixion was, and still is, arguably the most excruciating death someone can experience. The night before in Gethsemane, He was sweating blood. This is known as hematidrosis. This would have caused His skin to become extremely sensitive, thus making the beatings to come even worse. The fear He felt was the beginning of His feeling the weight of our iniquities being laid on Him. Yet - in this moment, He didn’t demand that the Father take it from Him. He only asked for the cup to pass Him over if it was within the Father’s will. Up next came the Cat of Nine Tails, or a Roman Flagrum. This was a weapon with long leather “tails”, each embedded with sharp bones and metal. He was flogged 39 times as Jewish law mandated “40 minus one”, because 40 was said to kill a man. This flogging wasn’t like being punished by your father’s leather belt. Every strike tore flesh, every strike exposed muscle. Every strike exposed nerve endings. Every strike tore flesh to the bone. This would be like getting struck with razor blades over and over again, leading to hypovolemic shock from blood loss. Oh, and the crown of thorns? These weren’t rose thorns. These were thorns which were 2-3 inches long. Beaten into his skull. These thorns would have pierced his skull, tripping the trigeminal nerve, thus causing unimaginable pain and even more blood loss from the dozens of head wounds. At this point, extreme nausea and dizziness would begin to set in. What came next? Carrying the cross. Which weighed around 300lbs. This would be like carrying two full kegs on your back. Splinters and wood grating against the open flesh on His back. And He had to carry it 650 yards, or close to a half mile. Imagine carrying a log on your back after being skinned alive. Up next? He was nailed to the cross with spikes 5-7in in length. Piercing His wrists - this no doubt pierced the median nerve, causing extreme burning sensations up and down His arms. A spike was driven through his ankles - severing nerves and tendons. This would have felt like standing on broken glass every time He pushed Himself up in order to breathe. He suffered for 6 hours. His chest muscles collapsing, making every single breath a fight for life. His shoulders were dislocated, His arms stretching unnaturally long. His heart was struggling to pump blood. He was extremely dehydrated, His lips cracking. His heart more than likely literally ruptured from the stress. And on top of all of that, He had to feel a separation with the Father for a period of time in order to REALLY bear the weight of our sin. He took up this burden for ALL sin before Him, and ALL sin which came after Him. HE DID IT ALL FOR US. To free us. To defeat sin. To give us a pathway to the Kingdom. Every sin we commit is exactly why He had to do it. And the real kicker? He knew what was coming when He rode into Jerusalem … and He didn’t turn around. He kept going. For us.


Those days of being just a downhill, run-only linebacker are over. You’ve got to play the run like a true LB and move like a safety in the pass game. #FreeGame


PROVEN at both the Small College level (#19 in all of D2 in Total Defense) AND the HS Level. In 2018, we took over a HS program that had three winning seasons in the previous two decades. By 2019, we produced a defense that held NINE opponents under 10 points and produced five shutouts. We won 10 games for the first time at the school since 1997. The following year, we were in the state quarterfinals. A losing program became a winner largely on the backbone of GREAT DEFENSE. Two reasons why this happened. One, good players. No one wins without them. And two, systematic organization and commitment to what we were doing. Below, you can see how practices are organized in the Blackout for both one and two platoon teams. The system is committed to not only X and O's, but also fundamentals and organization. Checkout other tweets for links on how the entire system can be found or DM for details. #blackoutD





Cover 4 exposes quarterbacks who are guessing instead of processing. On paper it looks simple. Quarters. Four deep defenders. Even distribution. In reality, it is a match coverage system built on rules, not static zones. Defenders read route distribution, key releases, and adjust responsibilities post-snap. That is where problems begin. If you do not understand who each defender is keying, your progression becomes unstable. The read you thought was clean pre-snap can close immediately because of match conversion or a Palms modifier. Now you are late, your base speeds up, and the decision deteriorates. In Quarters, the apex defender, the safety, and the corner are all tied together through rules. If #2 goes vertical, the structure changes. If #2 is out, the structure changes again. If you do not know the rule set, you are reacting instead of sequencing. This is Conceptual Intelligence in real time. Modifiers like Palms and Mini add another layer. They are not new coverages. They are adjustments within the same framework that shift leverage and responsibility. Good defenses do not call new plays. They adjust within structure. That is why the best Quarters teams major in it. They build repetition. They build communication. They build cohesion across all four underneath and deep defenders. The picture stays the same pre-snap, but the rules allow them to solve different offensive concepts post-snap. You must know: • Who is keying #1 and #2 • How vertical releases trigger match rules • Where your access throws exist before the concept develops If you cannot answer those questions, you are not reading coverage. You are hoping. And hope has no place in progression discipline.

As a Defensive Coordinator its your job to match numbers! FREE example below from Volume 3 now available on @thecoachtube. Use link below for 20% off to watch 59 minute video of COORDINATOR MUST and Football/ Blackout 101. coachtube.com/course/footbal… Coupon Code: KICKOFF


Let's LAUNCH into launch day tomorrow with some of our favorite plays from the 2025 season. Here, a great example of the pressure complementing the coverage and vice versa for a INT out of our Philadelphia 5-Man Pressure. #oldiebutagoodie #blackoutD


New era of Football at WCU 🐾🏈
