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Coach Jimmie Tyson is back. The DC at Dothan High School in Alabama returns just weeks after his first appearance because there was unfinished business: hot pressures. In this film-heavy session, Coach Tyson breaks down how he couples six and five-man pressure paths with hot coverage, why self-scouting data pushed him away from zero coverage, and how a modular system lets him run the same pressure with man, fire zone, or quarters behind it.This is a clinic. Coach Tyson pulls real film from games against some of the top programs in Florida and Alabama and walks through the concepts live. If you coach defense at any level, this one is for you.This episode is brought to you by Sideline HQ. Stop losing gear and start tracking your program's equipment all on your phone. Save time and money at sidelinehq.co.TIMESTAMPS0:00 Welcome back and Sideline HQ sponsor read1:13 Coach Tyson returns: why hot pressures were left on the table2:56 Self-scouting data: why explosive plays killed their zero pressure game plan10:09 Run game fit with hot coverage and the eight-man box advantage10:58 Eye technique players: reads, alignment, and front shoulder keys13:00 Corner technique: catch and carry, seven to nine yards off14:33 Five-man pressures with two under four deep (quarters) behind them18:02 The Utah drill for teaching eye players43:09 The flinch effect: how hot coverage takes the quarterback off his spots44:10 Scrambling quarterbacks and plastering technique45:19 Adjusting hot pressure usage against athletic quarterbacks46:45 How hot coverage turns explosive plays into manageable gains51:38 Attacking bubble screens with everyone's eyes on the quarterback55:35 Stemming pre-snap to prevent protection checks57:06 Triple A-gap pressure paired with hot quarters coverage59:32 Corner pressure with hot coverage: bringing the boundary corner1:00:02 Bear front with nickel off the edge versus zone read1:01:20 Selling skeptical coaches on multiple-gap pressures1:05:17 The Flores/Minnesota blitz: seven-man pressure with pop technique1:08:27 Pop technique evolution and how they adapted it for high school1:17:05 Using the pressure in a playoff game to take empty off the table1:24:47 Situational usage: when to call hot pressure and when to stay away1:25:29 The Tango tag: four under two deep as another coverage option1:26:33 Coach Tyson's favorite blitz path1:29:34 Scripting the first 12 defensive plays to give offenses fits1:33:12 Building a Thursday exotic script to prepare for wrinkles you have never seen on tape1:36:21 Closing thoughtsSubscribe for more coaching content at www.boarddrill.com. We post new episodes weekly and have a growing video and article library built for coaches at every level.
By Kyle Bradburn, Matt Dixon5
1717 ratings
Coach Jimmie Tyson is back. The DC at Dothan High School in Alabama returns just weeks after his first appearance because there was unfinished business: hot pressures. In this film-heavy session, Coach Tyson breaks down how he couples six and five-man pressure paths with hot coverage, why self-scouting data pushed him away from zero coverage, and how a modular system lets him run the same pressure with man, fire zone, or quarters behind it.This is a clinic. Coach Tyson pulls real film from games against some of the top programs in Florida and Alabama and walks through the concepts live. If you coach defense at any level, this one is for you.This episode is brought to you by Sideline HQ. Stop losing gear and start tracking your program's equipment all on your phone. Save time and money at sidelinehq.co.TIMESTAMPS0:00 Welcome back and Sideline HQ sponsor read1:13 Coach Tyson returns: why hot pressures were left on the table2:56 Self-scouting data: why explosive plays killed their zero pressure game plan10:09 Run game fit with hot coverage and the eight-man box advantage10:58 Eye technique players: reads, alignment, and front shoulder keys13:00 Corner technique: catch and carry, seven to nine yards off14:33 Five-man pressures with two under four deep (quarters) behind them18:02 The Utah drill for teaching eye players43:09 The flinch effect: how hot coverage takes the quarterback off his spots44:10 Scrambling quarterbacks and plastering technique45:19 Adjusting hot pressure usage against athletic quarterbacks46:45 How hot coverage turns explosive plays into manageable gains51:38 Attacking bubble screens with everyone's eyes on the quarterback55:35 Stemming pre-snap to prevent protection checks57:06 Triple A-gap pressure paired with hot quarters coverage59:32 Corner pressure with hot coverage: bringing the boundary corner1:00:02 Bear front with nickel off the edge versus zone read1:01:20 Selling skeptical coaches on multiple-gap pressures1:05:17 The Flores/Minnesota blitz: seven-man pressure with pop technique1:08:27 Pop technique evolution and how they adapted it for high school1:17:05 Using the pressure in a playoff game to take empty off the table1:24:47 Situational usage: when to call hot pressure and when to stay away1:25:29 The Tango tag: four under two deep as another coverage option1:26:33 Coach Tyson's favorite blitz path1:29:34 Scripting the first 12 defensive plays to give offenses fits1:33:12 Building a Thursday exotic script to prepare for wrinkles you have never seen on tape1:36:21 Closing thoughtsSubscribe for more coaching content at www.boarddrill.com. We post new episodes weekly and have a growing video and article library built for coaches at every level.

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