Tom Wilson Youth Football Training Video Out in Time for Christmas!!
Coaching a Youth Team and Having to Tell Them Good Bye!
This next weekend will be the toughest thing for me to do. I have to tell these kids they may never play football together again. With being a Greene County program these kids will go to different schools next year. They have blended well as a team over the last 3 years. Became very good friends and teammates. When they go to basketball tournaments and play baseball against each other, they are still friends.
Us as a coaching staff have try to make a positive impact on these kids not just in football, but life in general. We do team building drills, a couple of these were.
1. Playing patty cake when they didn’t want to hit. They look back now and laugh.
2. We took a tube of tooth paste and each kid squirted it on to a plate. Next with their spoon they had to put it back in the tube. As you might know the tooth paste won’t go back in. When you say something to a teammate, family member, or classmate you can ask them for forgiveness, but they will always remember this.
3. Team hotel events after the season. Plus a haunted house. You really find out who is the toughest pretty fast.
The last point that I want to make. I care about everyone of these kids. I will be there for them no matter what. We are 15-0 in the regular season the last 3 years and 0-2 in the playoffs. I would trade any of this to see these kids be leaders in their communities the rest of their lives.
The last 2 weeks have been really tough with my son Daric going down with a broken bone in his arm. He was a big part of our team. He worked very hard everyday. Played QB and was one of the defensive leaders. I feel really bad for him. Football is his favorite sport and is very disappointed that he cannot play this next weekend. But I really think this has helped me sit back and be more relaxed as a coach.
On to the playoffs for these kids I am very proud of how hard they work, the passion they play with, and the respect they treat each other with.
I pray that these kids grow up to be great citizens of this wonderful country we live in.
I will let you know how this goes next week.
God Bless
Doug Whipple

Thanks for being such great kids!
Andy Pollock – Perspective on Coaching and Parenting Youth Athletes
Who I am
Talking about football and coaching, can it get any better than that? I guess I should probably introduce myself so you can decide for yourself if you want to read on-
My name is Andy Pollock, the proud father of 2 little girls, and husband to my wife (and high school sweetheart) of over 6 years. I am a Financial Advisor in Des Moines, IA, sing in my church choir, and for the purposes of this blog, coach sophomore football at Dowling Catholic High School in West Des Moines.
My coaching style has literally been impacted by about every coach I’ve had since I started playing sports in second grade. I’ll never forget in 4th grade when the late Bill Dohrn (who coached every level of baseball in Aplington, IA from 2nd grade T-ball through Varsity, also jr high volleyball and 2x state champ Boys basketball) sent me home from third base while the pitcher had the ball in his hands because with 2 outs, I waited at 2nd on a fly ball to the outfield. Better to learn that lesson in 4th grade than in a substate playoff game 8 years later, and he knew that. A few of the guys I’ve learned from- Randy Merhl (Southeast Polk HS), Scott Heitland (Dallas Center-Grimes, HS), Luke Meadows (South Dakota St), Mike Tressel (Michigan St.), Eric Koehler (Grand Valley St.) Tim Morrison (Wartburg), Rick Willis (Wartburg), Jim Williams (ex Iowa St and Simpson, current Dowling). I’ve even picked up a thing or two from my younger brothers, Alex, who coaches college football, Grant, who has coached HS soccer, and Tim, an 8th grade 4-sporter/musician.
2 guys that have impacted me more as a coach than anyone, the late Ed Thomas (Aplington-Parkersburg) and my own father, Dr Tom Pollock. Dad spent countless hours playing catch, kicking, tackling, shooting hoops, hitting… pretty much anything but playing golf (and he is horrible at that). Dad will be 50 in a couple weeks and still thinks he can play in the “Greenbean Casserole Bowl,” Our family’s annual Thanksgiving football game. Come to think of it, it’s probably me who should think about giving that up. Last year’s game found me quitting early with a cracked rib after getting lit up by dad when going up for a pass across the middle. For the record, I held onto the ball, and it was a first down. But I digress.
Unlike a lot of youth nowadays, I didn’t start playing football until 6th grade when our 2 small towns, Aplington and Parkersburg joined together. Even then, it was only flag football, the pads didn’t go on until 7th grade. The wing-T quick huddle system that the Varsity used and had been so successful with was the system we were taught from the get go. Football was a huge part of my life throughout high school, but it was far from the only thing. I played 4 sports, sang in the choir, played in the band, competed in speech—the whole shebang. At a small school if we didn’t get involved, those activities wouldn’t exist. Coaches encouraged us to participate in all we could and I took that to heart.
The love of getting involved in a lot of activities took me to college at Wartburg College in Waverly, IA. It is a small NCAA D3 liberal arts school. Played football and sang in the choir there and spent my Friday nights as the football play-by-play voice of a local radio station.
I really didn’t have much intention of coaching football. I always figured I would be the radio voice of the Cyclones, but the opportunity came up a couple years after college when Tom Wilson, the coach of our rivals in high school(Dike New-Hartford, still don’t like’em), took the head coaching job at Dowling Catholic High School in West Des Moines. I got an email from him gauging my interest, and ever since I have been hooked. I coach the sophomore offensive line at Dowling and our job as a sophomore staff is to prepare the kids for what they will face at the Varsity level. We take great pride in the preparation that we provide for them and do our best to give them the confidence that will ideally lead to success at the next level of football, and life. We have been blessed to have some great kids in my time coaching, and at the time of this writing have a 26-game sophomore win streak, and an undefeated Varsity team ranked second in the largest class of high schools in Iowa.
Questions? Comments? Willing to talk about pretty much anything. Nothing’s a secret unless we are playing you this Friday.
Next Time- Setting your kids (and yourself) up for success.
Final 4 Steps of Being a Great Team
Motivation
“The team is the star, never an individual player.”
Motivation will grow only through an open atmosphere, acceptance, and support for each other.
Cliques, excuse making, unaccountability, individual agendas, etc. will ruin a team.
Persistence
Throughout a season, there will always be problems with winning, losing, injuries, sickness, etc.
Great teams overcome, keep a positive attitude, and bond together to get the job done. Understanding their role.
“The strength of the wolf is in the pack and the strength of the pack is in the wolf.”
Rudyard Kipling
Not everyone can be a starter.
Everyone in our program is important in the role that they fill within the team. If a player is discouraged by playing time, they have to prove they deserve more. Pretty simple concept.
Positive Attitude
Attitude is a choice.
Attitude can certainly help/hinder the opportunity for an expanded role in the program.
This attitude is not just a football thing. Classroom, community, etc.
I want to thank Tom Wilson of Dowling Catholic in Des Moines. He has given me a great insight of youth coaching.
http://www.dowlingcatholic.org/tom_wilson%2c_head_football_coach.aspx
Doug Whipple
Head of Wrestling Development Steve Hamilton
Hello, my name is Steve Hamilton I am the head of wrestling development
at ChampionshipSportsTraining.com. The question you might be asking
is:Â What do we do?
Our website provides a variety of tools that young athletes can use to
improve their skills in both the mental and physical aspects of their
given sport.
One aspect of our program is video analysis. Our team of coaches
evaluate and critique videos of our athlete’s recent competitions. From
this footage we will analyze the athlete’s strengths and weaknesses and
provide a program or training itinerary that will improve and expand
their skill sets.
One of the tools we use to improve our athlete’s retention and speed the
development of certain skills is, side by side analysis.
Using side by side analysis the athlete is able to see their skills
compared to another athlete or coach who has mastered the movement or
technique. This allowed the athlete to compare their skills to that of
a master technician.
Our coaches will provide insights and suggestions during the side by
side analysis that will help the athlete gain a better understanding of
the areas where they need improvement.
This format provides a visual comparison that we have found to be very
affective in correcting and improving different movements and
techniques.
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