Archive for April, 2011

NFL Kickers Instructing at Ray Guy Prokicker.com Camp in Tampa

ProKicker.com Media Release

For Immediate Release / April 25, 2011

Contact – Jana Torgrimson/jana@prokicker.com

 

NFL KICKERS TO TEACH  AT RAY GUY NATIONAL KICKING CAMP  IN BRADENTON, FLORIDA AT MANATEE HIGH, MAY 7-8.

Bradenton, FL NFL players Graham Gano, (kicker for the Washington Redskins and Lou Groza Award winner at Florida State University) and Brandon Fields, (punter for the Miami Dolphins) will be instructors at the Ray Guy Prokicker.com Academy being held May 7-8 at Bradenton Manatee High School.  Gano and Fields will be providing instruction both days of the Prokicker.com Academy.

This two-day event is open to kickers, punters and long snappers of any age level and will provide concentrated instruction for the specific skills of kicking, punting and long snapping. Those who attend will train to improve their skills using professional demonstrations, video analysis, developmental drills, and individual instruction.

 “Most athletes do not have a coach or anyone that knows how to teach them,” says Ray Guy- NFL Legend and 75th Anniversary All-Time Team member. “We teach athletes to be self-reliant and to start taking charge of their own skill development. From the very moment training with our professional staff begins, the athlete learns and develops the skills and techniques necessary for coaching himself.”

Personal evaluations of the camp attendees are provided and information on top prospects will be made available to every college football program in the nation for recruitment and scholarship opportunities. The Prokicker.com exclusive national ranking system remains the most trusted source of information for college coaches around the country.

There are 707 alumni on college rosters and 18 alumni active on NFL rosters. There is no other camp program even close to having more players who have earned scholarships to colleges or who are actively playing professional football. There have been three Lou Groza Award winners and numerous named to All-America teams. A total of 151 Prokicker.com Alumni were on rosters in all 35 2010-11 College Bowl games, including the Auburn-Oregon BCS Championship.

Applicants must pre-register to ensure acceptance. Due to the overwhelming number of requests for each camp enrollment is limited and exclusive to insure individual attention to each participant.

To register, contact ProKicker.com, P.O. Box 1884, Ashland, Ky., 41105-1884, or download a form at www.ProKicker.com Please call 606-327-0051 for more information.

For media requests contact Camp Director Rick Sang at 606-327-0051.

—ProKicker.com—

Ray Guy Prokicker.com Academy Houston 2011 Results

–HOUSTON 2011 RESULTS–
Long Distance Field Goal Winner- Ryan Parker
Long Distance Kickoff Winner- Patrick Sohrt
Hang Time Punt Winner- Patrick Sohrt
Out of Bounds Punt Winner(L)- Zack Rosenberg
Out of Bounds Punt Winner(R)-Marshal Legard
Fastest Single Snap- Zach Dunn
Most Acurate Snapper- Zach Dunn

#1 Long Snapper – Clark Gardner

#1 Kicker, Punter and Combo Specialist – Patrick Sohrt

http://www.prokicker.com/

Timing is everything – when it comes to the kicking game!

A KICK IS BLOCKED!  It’s recovered by the defense on your side of the 50 or even worse, it rolls into the end zone for an easy opponent touchdown.  It may even be an extra point or a field goal that cost you a game.  We are sure of one thing.

It must have been the kicker!

After all, it is called the kicking game so the problem must be the kicker.  That’s what every one automatically thinks.

EVEN THE COACHES!  The actual truth is the kicker is not at fault most of the time – yet he gets the blame almost 100% of the time.  The true Special Teams Coach realizes the kicking game, both punt and kick, includes many elements and the actual kick is only one of them.

ELEMENTS OF THE KICKING GAME

  • THE SNAP
  • THE HOLD
  • THE PROTECTION
  • THE KICK

It’s easy to see that a blocked kick or punt could be the result of many problems.  One of the definitions of COACHING is the identification and correction of mistakes.  So before you can correct a problem you have to properly identify it.

IT’S NOT ALWAYS THE KICKER!

Actually most times its not.  This is why the stop watch is a critical piece of equipment for the Special Teams Coach.

The clipboard and the whistle have long been accepted as standard coaching equipment but the stopwatch has achieved equal status in the modern world of High Tech Football.  Coaches have long been aware that one of the best ways to spice up practice and drills is to add a stopwatch and the element of competition against time.  Special Teams Coaches who have to deal with concepts such as hang times and get off times have learned the value of constant practice timing.  A precision kicking game demands it.

Most coaches don’t actually know what a good “get off” time is for punts or kicks.

KICKERS

The total time from snap-to-kick should be 1.25 to 1.4 seconds for high school.  1.25 to 1.3 for college and pro.

PUNTERS

The optimum time for punting includes:

Center Snap .8 seconds seconds for high school.   .7 to .75 for college and pro (15 yards).

Handling Time (hand to foot)   1.3 seconds for high school.  1.2 to 1.3 seconds for college and pro.

TOTAL Get-Off Time 2.1 seconds for high school.  2.0 to 2.1 for collge and pro.

Like everything else in the game it becomes a matter of awareness through proper practice.  Most coaches don’t even know the proper manner to time their kickers and punters.

Kickers and punters should be continually timed, not only to get the ball away quickly, but also to enable them to develop a proper rhythm and thus improve consistency.  The goal is for OPTIMUM times. There is such a thing as getting the ball off too quickly when it is not necessary. Why put the football in the hands of a great returner too quickly before the coverage team has a chance to cover? Punters, like Quarterbacks, can develop a sense for feeling pressure.  There may be times, when a receiving team has a return on, and the punter can even delay to allow his coverage team more time to spread and cover.  If kickers and punters are timed regularly, they will know what their ideal time is and therefore maximize their effectiveness.

If you don’t have a coach to do it you can use a manager or injured player equipped with clipboard, charts and stop watch.  Just follow kickers around practice from Specialty Period to the final whistle and time and chart each and every kick.  The same people should be utilized as game timers.

The coach can then evaluate charts from the comfort of his office when time permits or immediately see the results after a play during the game.

Remember, you must have a stopwatch as your constant practice companion.  In the Army it’s your rifle.  As a practice coach it’s a whistle.  (Some coaches feel naked if they ever found themselves at a practice without a whistle).  For the special teams coach it’s a STOPWATCH!  It should be around your neck at all times just like your whistle.  Factions of Kicking Game Times should be constantly and consistently charted until they become as familiar as your offensive and defensive terminology. Hang Times, Get-Off Times, Hand-To-Foot times, Snap-To-Kick Times will become second nature to you and your kickers.

Continued timing and charting during games will let you know right away the real reason why a kick is blocked.  The head coach should have someone timing the kicks at ALL Times in order to insure proper timing and to determine if there is a problem in the kicking game and where to find it. (An opponent may even be exposing a weakness - so make sure they are being timed too). A slow get-off time may prove the kicker was at fault – while an optimal get-off time (and a near block of the kick) may prove there was a breakdown in the protection. The quicker the real problem can be identified the quicker coaching can begin and game changing mistakes can be eliminated!

Excerpts from the book Getting a Kick Out of Practice by Coach Bill Tom Ross and Coach Rick Sang

Prokicker.com

Prokicker.com Kicking Camps

Ray Guy/Prokicker.com Kicking Academy Dover/ Wilmington, Delaware Area Summer 2011 Football Kicking Camps

Dover/ Wilmington, Delaware Area
Football Kicking Camp

Dover, DE

August 6-7

Wesley College

(One-day and Skill Charting Only Camps held August 6)

 
Two-Day Academy
9am-4pm (1st day)
8am-3pm (2nd day)
$425

One-Day Camp
9am-4pm
$300

Skill Charting
Only Camp

12:45pm-4pm
$175

Prokicker.com Dover/Wilmington