Tempo new priority in practice
Jeff Walcoff, Staff Writer
08.03.2007
web page There have been a couple new features of Browns training camp practices in 2007 thanks to an ambitious coaching style on the part of the team's new offense.
At the edge of the practice field each day is a play clock, just as you would see during a live contest. Meanwhile on the sidelines, quarterbacks coach Rip Scherer dons a headset -- something a coach would normally only use during an actual game.
They're both installations of new offensive coordinator Rob Chudzinski. His idea is to prepare the team best for its upcoming season by bringing as many aspects of the game to the practice field as possible.
In this case, rather than simply informing his quarterback of the play, he tells it to Scherer, who relays it through his headset into the quarterback's helmet speaker. Then, the offense is given a limited time to get off the play.
"If you don't work on these types of things, then when you get into a game the clock owns you and it affects how guys think under pressure," Chudzinski said. "So it's just something to try and acclimatize them for those sorts of situations."
The team, especially the quarterbacks, has welcomed the change. While they're now challenged during practice far more than usual, they know they'll be better off come the season if they get used to game tempo now.
"We're trying to get up on the ball, get the play off and get to the line of scrimmage with as much time as we can to shift and motion and confuse the defense," quarterback Derek Anderson said. "They've got 14 seconds on the clock for us now. When we get into the game and we have a real play clock it'll seem like a lot longer for us hopefully."
It's especially important to take part in this exercise because of the large amount of pre-snap reads and movement made in Chudzinski's offense. The offense moves players around before the snap to create mismatches and confuse the defense.
"It keeps the defense guessing because they can't say, 'In this formation they're going to run this play,'" offensive lineman Lennie Friedman said. "It keeps them guessing."
But more pre-snap movement means more time needed at the line to make those moves. And more time needed means everything needs to be quicker -- from the relaying of the play to the quarterback to the breaking of the huddle to getting set at the line.
To prepare for this, it's logical that timing and tempo would be integrated into practice simply to get the players used to the pace needed to get these things done.
"We're trying to get to the line so we can get our calls out and have the defense set on us instead of giving them all day to do it," Friedman said. "You have to be on top of your game and know your plays and not have any doubt so when you get up there you're prepared."
Tight end Steve Heiden explained the eventual benefits.
"It tires down the defense and wears them out," he said."When you get in the rhythm of the game you can definitely tell they are a little more tired than we are. The speeding up of everything is going to help the consistencies and the atmosphere of the huddle."
Even beyond simply preparing for running the new offense, the clock and headset communication are part of an effort to increase the tempo of practice so it's upbeat, fast-paced, and more efficient.
"Chud has brought an up-tempo game," Heiden said. "That's what camp is all about and it's going to help us down the road."
In the end, Chudzinski, head coach Romeo Crennel, and the rest of the club hope it translates to better, more efficient workouts, better concentration, and, eventually, better results on the field.
"The whole idea of practice is to make things as much like the game as you can get them," Chudzinski said. "This is more like a game condition than a leisurely pace. The effort is to try to make it like a game-like situation in terms of the communication that needs to happen."
I have to say I'm shocked this hasn't been a part of the regimen all along in every camp with every team. With as many problems as we've had with the game clock in the past, this is definitely a welcome addition. Also, I like what I'm hearing about all the shifting... we might be able to force the defenses into more man-coverage and get them out of their zones.... I would think that should soften things up a little.