I looked it up, and the video I saw made me think of the “sweep the knee” tactic in the final scene of The Karate Kid. The hip-drop looks to me like an attack move.
Back in the 60s there were few rules for high school football. We linemen were trained to aim our helmet at the opponents forehead; and in Canadian football there is a yard between the lines; so we hit the defence with a lot of momentum. Most of our training was neck exercise. Cross-body blocks were my favorite.
duggersd Premium Member 27 days ago
Maybe they should just put flags on the hips of the players and have the player be considered down when the flag has been pulled.
Ellis97 27 days ago
That’s gonna be painful.
baskate_2000 27 days ago
Right — start the injuries when they’re young!
RobinHood 27 days ago
World Series Game One. It’s Halloween season and last night ghosts of Richie Phillips, Jeffrey Maier, and Kirk Gibson seemed to surface.
Bob Blumenfeld 27 days ago
I looked it up, and the video I saw made me think of the “sweep the knee” tactic in the final scene of The Karate Kid. The hip-drop looks to me like an attack move.
Is that the direction the NFL is moving in?
notmoving Premium Member 27 days ago
Asinine coach.
bobtoledo Premium Member 27 days ago
And so it goes; the coaches are more interested in their own success that the welfare of the players. (Well, not the Detroit Lions coaches).
Geophyzz 27 days ago
Back in the 60s there were few rules for high school football. We linemen were trained to aim our helmet at the opponents forehead; and in Canadian football there is a yard between the lines; so we hit the defence with a lot of momentum. Most of our training was neck exercise. Cross-body blocks were my favorite.