The Board Drill Podcast

Kyle Bradburn, Matt Dixon

Join seasoned coaches Kyle Bradburn and Matt Dixon on The Board Drill Podcast, a dynamic journey into the intricate world of high school football. With a passion for the game that extends beyond the field, Kyle and Matt delve deep into the challenges facing coaches today. This podcast is more than just X's and O's; it's a guiding light for high school coaches nationwide, offering valuable resources and insights to empower them on their journey to becoming better, more effective leaders on and off the field. Tune is for engaging conversations on football with The Board Drill Podcast!

  1. 13 MAY

    Coach Kurt Hines: Why Programs Are Built On People, Not Schemes

    Coach Kurt Hines joins Kyle and Matt for a wide-ranging conversation on program development, hiring, delegation, and what it really takes to build a culture that lasts. With 29 years on the sideline and head coaching stops in New Hampshire and at Coronado in California, Coach Hines breaks down why programs are built on people first and schemes second.We get into his interview process for assistant coaches (and why he sets a timer to talk about anything BUT football for the first 30 minutes), the failures that taught him how to delegate, the flight to Mississippi that flipped his perspective on empowering staff, and the discipline story from his first year at Coronado that defined who he was as a head coach. Coach Hines also shares the story behind one of his most viral videos and offers honest advice for coaches who just got let go.If you are trying to build something that outlasts the wins and losses, this one will hit.TIMESTAMPS00:00 Intro and welcoming Coach Kurt Hines02:32 Why program development is about people, not schemes07:11 The right way to hire assistant coaches17:48 Delegation and giving coaches skin in the game22:32 The flight to Mississippi that reshaped how Kurt leads26:49 Failure as the best teacher32:11 Building controlled chaos so players learn to fail36:14 The Coronado story and holding the line on discipline43:14 Going viral and using social media the right way52:14 Community service and the final question54:45 Advice for coaches who just got let go==========================SPONSOR: SIDELINE HQThis episode is brought to you by Sideline HQ, the equipment tracking app built for coaches. Tired of slow checkouts during spring ball and missing gear in the fall? Sideline HQ lets you manage your inventory and track your equipment right from your phone.Try it free for 30 days at sidelinehq.co.==========================Subscribe for more coach-to-coach content and find every episode at www.boarddrill.com.#BoardDrill #FootballCoaching #XsOs

    1 h 1 min
  2. 29 ABR

    How Denton Ryan Builds a Weekly Defensive Game Plan with Coach Will Cockerill

    How Denton Ryan Builds a Defensive Game Plan with Coach Will Cockerill Denton Ryan DC Will Cockerill is back on the pod. In two seasons as the defensive coordinator at Ryan, he has gone 25-5, finished number one in scoring defense in the Dallas area at just over 12 points per game, and posted a 70 percent third down stop rate back to back. This episode is not about scheme. It is about the process of getting 16-year-olds to execute at a high level from one Friday night to the next. Coach Cockerill walks through his entire weekly system: the post-game summary he sends to his head coach Saturday morning, the position-specific Google Docs that structure his Sunday staff meeting, how he scripts and sequences practice Monday through Thursday, how he organizes film in Huddle for players and coaches, and how he builds a call sheet that leaves nothing to chance on game night. Kyle and Matt break it all down with him. If you are a coordinator trying to build a more organized weekly structure, this one is required listening. 0:00 Introduction and welcome back to Coach Will Cockerill, DC at Denton Ryan 2:00 16 years in Texas, a 25-5 record as DC, and the three keys to success at any program 5:30 Defensive metrics, stop rate, havoc rate, third down efficiency, and the Sons of Ryan identity 9:09 Game planning philosophy: target their best, attack their weakest lineman, make them go left-handed 12:00 The Friday night to Saturday routine: grading, player stats, and the game summary to the head coach 15:30 The defensive awards system: BGO, Honey Badger, Ball Hawk, and building the templates to save time 19:54 How the sideline trash can dunking tradition changed their takeaway numbers 21:00 Saturday scouting: bucketing run schemes as zone or gap and how that simplifies the whole week 26:00 The staff Google Doc: four position-specific questions that structure the Sunday meeting before anyone walks in 31:00 Sunday staff meeting, finalizing the scouting report, and getting it on Huddle and the facility TVs 34:00 Monday practice: helmet only, tackle circuits, bread and butter run scheme, and team tempo 39:00 Tuesday is third down day: scripting every situation with the opponent's actual plays 44:00 Wednesday is red zone day: scripted from plus 20 to inside the five, and scouting next week starts now 48:30 Thursday: trick plays, situational football, and finalizing the call sheet 52:49 The WAR Cut-Up explained: Winners Are Relentless, a three to five game sample, and how film is shared in Huddle 57:57 Call sheet breakdown: fronts, movements, hash-based tendencies, and built-in answers before Friday 1:03:00 Why Coach Cockerill says process and teaching matter more than scheme 1:11:10 Unique program differentiators, short practices, giving players the answers all week 1:13:51 Community, purpose, and what it means to coach kids who need you 1:14:49 The pancake brigade and why nutrition is the next real competitive edge This episode is brought to you by Sideline HQ, the easiest way to manage your program's equipment. Stop losing gear and start tracking it from your phone. Check it out at sidelinehq.co! Subscribe for new episodes every week at www.boarddrill.com.

    1 h 15 min
  3. 22 ABR

    Spring Install Plan and Red Zone Offense with Coach Josh Jones

    Coach Josh Jones is back in the board room for his second appearance on the Board Drill Podcast. Jones is the assistant head coach and offensive coordinator at Knoxville Catholic High School in Tennessee, bringing over 30 years of coaching experience to the table. In this episode, Coach Jones walks through his full spring install plan and breaks down several red zone concepts he has relied on at every level of high school football. Topics covered include the 3-day install structure, how to build repetition before players ever set foot on the grass, adjusting the offense to your quarterback's skillset, coordinating with your defensive staff during spring, and specific red zone concepts for high red, low red, and goal line situations. If you coach offense at any level of high school football, this one is worth your time. This episode is brought to you by Sideline HQ. Sideline HQ is the easiest way to manage your program's equipment. Stop losing gear and start tracking it. Built for coaches, by coaches. Visit www.sidelinehq.co to learn more. Subscribe for more coaching content at www.boarddrill.com TIMESTAMPS 0:00Intro, guest welcome, and sponsor read 1:17Spring install overview: staff meetings and personnel evaluation 8:50The 6-week pre-spring install schedule and repetition structure 13:05Why repetition works: the walk-on quarterback story 13:16Building the offense around your quarterback's skillset 15:34What Georgia Tech film taught Knoxville Catholic this offseason 18:38Spring focal points: scheming for your league and early opponents 19:04The 3-day install menu: run game, quick game, drop backs, and red zone 24:34Why Jones practices red zone every single day of spring ball 27:14Offensive and defensive coordination during spring practice 31:32Red zone philosophy: run the football and QB critical factors 35:01QB coaching points: KYP, KYS, and Jones-isms that stick five years later 37:03High red zone: double under concept and pre-snap read process (SOCK) 43:01Low red zone: sprint snag and reading the flat 46:57Boundary mesh: a universal red zone concept that works against all coverages 59:52What makes Knoxville Catholic different from every other program

    1 h
  4. 8 ABR

    Pressure Without the Risk | Coach Jimmie Tyson on Hot Coverage and Six-Man Blitz Paths

    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.

    1 h 38 min
  5. 1 ABR

    QB Influence and Third Down Success with Austin Herink

    In this episode of The Board Drill Podcast, Kyle and Matt sit down with Austin Herink, Senior Offensive Analyst at UCF, for a film-room-level breakdown of quarterback influence on third down success. Coach Herink shares the self-scout study he conducted after UCF finished 118th nationally in third down conversion rate, comparing the Knights' approach against the best and worst offenses in college football and the NFL. From distance-to-gain data, to QB archetypes, to play design principles from Indiana, Vanderbilt, Utah, and the Chicago Bears, this episode is a clinic on how to think about third down from the inside of a Power Five program.Whether you are a high school coach looking to improve your self-scout process or a coordinator rethinking your third down package, this one is built for you.Timestamps: 0:00 Welcome and introductions2:13 Why Herink ran this study and how he built the methodology5:30 UCF self-scout: 34% conversion rate, distance to gain, and what the data revealed10:04 Drop eight, run efficiency, and what third and long actually looks like for most offenses16:48 Best offenses compared: the full table, QB archetypes, and what Indiana, Vanderbilt, Utah, and the Bears did differently21:45 Short yardage principles: identity concepts, personnel, and planning around your weaknesses26:00 Third and medium film: Vanderbilt's run-pass marriage, Belly G lead, and plays on plays33:53 Condensed splits, stacks, and bunches: forcing defensive communication to create easy throws39:00 Indiana's deep ball philosophy, Fernando Mendoza throwing into the teeth of the defense, and trusting your reps44:50 Three level floods, Bird 3 screens, and how the best teams approached third and extra long50:38 Key takeaways: situation, personnel, and why first and second down decides third down53:01 Studying the worst offenses and what bad third down football looks like in reverse1:09:11 Identity in game planning, Mike McDonald's Seahawks, and coaching technique over assignment1:13:27 Mind Time at Washington: cross-unit connection and building the tightest roster possible1:15:45 Playing football in Vienna, Austria, closing thoughts, and sign-offSubscribe at www.boarddrill.com for episode releases, coaching articles, and more content from coaches at every level.

    1 h 20 min
  6. Why the Best Defenses in Football Are Getting Simpler with Cody Alexander

    25 MAR

    Why the Best Defenses in Football Are Getting Simpler with Cody Alexander

    Cody Alexander ( @MatchQuarters ) joins Kyle and Matt to break down why the best defenses at every level are stripping things back to the basics. From NFL case studies to high school application, Cody explains why schematic bloat is killing defenses, how technique should drive your scheme, and what Mike McDonald's modular defense concept really looks like when you peel it apart. If you have ever felt pressure to add more to your playbook just to keep up, this episode is your permission slip to simplify.Visit www.boarddrill.com to subscribe and never miss an episode.0:00 Intro and Cody Alexander's impact on The Board Drill2:03 The trend toward defensive simplification at every level3:50 Why defenses bloated: disguise culture and mental load5:56 McDonald's modular defense and the Ravens 2.0 system7:46 How NFL technique translates to the high school level8:43 Super Bowl pressure breakdown and nothing new under the sun10:54 Vikings and Seahawks edge schemes and hash adjustments12:38 Half-field zones, condensed set checks, and palms pressures15:07 Where weak rotation Cover 3 and quarters overlap18:12 Using seven-on-seven as a sandbox for pressure development20:00 The whiteboard exercise: put all your calls up and face the truth22:34 Rewriting your playbook as a staff and clinicking each other25:13 The telephone game on your coaching staff and how to fix it28:44 Teaching the whole player, not just one piece32:45 Modular practice structure and half-line work from the flexbone34:38 Summer pods and structuring your 12 offseason sessions37:43 Why linebacker coaching is the weakest link in the chain40:18 Need vs. want: if it does not work by Wednesday, drop it42:54 The litmus test for schematic bloat and weekly self-scouting46:11 Three must-haves for any DC taking over a new program48:35 Unique thing: no-agenda team cookouts for culture building

    52 min
  7. 11 MAR

    Being Multiple and Changing the Picture Week to Week with Coach Jimmie Tyson

    In this episode, Kyle sits down with Coach Jimmie Tyson, the new Defensive Coordinator at Dothan High School in Alabama. Coach Tyson brings over 20 years of coaching experience, including six years at Florida A&M University and nearly a decade as Defensive Coordinator at Lincoln High School in Tallahassee, one of the top programs in the state of Florida. Coach Tyson walks through how a post-practice conversation with his offensive coordinator changed the way he called defense, how studying Mike McDonald's work at Baltimore and Seattle led to building a coverage matrix, and how his staff developed a one-word call system that lets them run the same blitz path with completely different coverages week to week. Topics covered include non-traditional Tampa 2 with the nickel as the hole runner, dropping ends as hook players, disguising zero coverage while dropping into Tampa, changing assignments based on opponent tendencies, stem work, cadence reads, player buy-in through ownership of pressures, and why every player on the defense needs to understand every role. Coach Tyson also closes the show with two of the most unique things he has seen done at the program level, including a staff development system he brought from college and a team competition model at Dothan that produced 95 percent summer attendance last year. If you coach defense at any level, this one is worth your time. For more content, visit us at www.boarddrill.com.

    57 min
  8. 4 MAR

    How Coach Nguyen Uses Unbalanced to Win the Numbers Game

    Coach Jimmy Nguyen (OC/QB, New Canaan HS, CT) hops on the Board Drill Podcast to break down unbalanced formations and how they’re using them to steal numbers in both the run game and pass game without turning the offense into a special package the kids cannot own.We talk tackle-over, WR unbalanced (X Over), jet/toss/boot sequencing, and how tempo plus presentation forces defenses to either over-rotate or play vanilla. If you want easy ways to stress rules and communication on Friday nights, this one’s a clinic.Chapters / Timestamps00:00 Intro + meet Coach Jimmy Nguyen01:03 Why unbalanced (run + pass) at New Canaan03:20 Using weekly formation variation to stress defenses04:16 Culture + players taking ownership of the program06:05 Types of unbalanced + how they label/call it07:25 Tackle-over math: extra gap advantage + what defenses waste09:00 Biggest pass-game advantage off unbalanced (confusion + hiding guys)10:16 Jet sweep/jet pass as an opener from tackle-over12:57 Tempo and sugar huddle to prevent defensive checks13:40 Formation into the boundary + tackle-over examples17:05 WR unbalanced: X Over + nasty/condensed splits20:01 Coaching the toss: RB landmarks + getting downhill fast22:58 Boot off toss: sequencing the over-rotation25:49 Under-center unbalanced with 4 on the LOS (how teams align)27:54 Bride & Groom tag: RB as #1 receiver + rule stress34:59 Building the screen game off unbalanced looks36:06 Play sequencing cut-ups (quads/diamond quick screen, years apart)45:56 Unique program piece: varsity giving back to the youth program48:58 Wrap-up + closing thoughtsQuick TakeawaysUnbalanced is not trick. It is a weekly numbers tool if your tags stay simple.Defenses tend to over-commit to the gap problem, which opens up jet, screens, boot, and quick game.Pairing unbalanced with tempo and sugar huddle can force opponents into vanilla calls.Board Drill resources and articles:https://www.boarddrill.comFollow Board Drill:Twitter/X: @boarddrill

    50 min

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Join seasoned coaches Kyle Bradburn and Matt Dixon on The Board Drill Podcast, a dynamic journey into the intricate world of high school football. With a passion for the game that extends beyond the field, Kyle and Matt delve deep into the challenges facing coaches today. This podcast is more than just X's and O's; it's a guiding light for high school coaches nationwide, offering valuable resources and insights to empower them on their journey to becoming better, more effective leaders on and off the field. Tune is for engaging conversations on football with The Board Drill Podcast!

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