San Francisco coach Kyle Shanahan never allowed his players to participate in the education field, believing that the threat of injury outweighed any advantage. But this year would possibly be different.
Shanahan said that in the absence of pre-season matches, he would possibly have to allow tackles in the camp, as otherwise it is difficult to assess positions such as back media and kick returns.
“It’s hard to know how well a guy will break the shots until you see the boys looking to face each other,” Shanahan said. “A kick throw, things like that, I think, just in the last two days of discussion, is going to be a little harder to evaluate. We don’t know exactly how we’re going to do it, but we’ll have to see if we can’t make a decision. There will be some things in practice that there may also be collisions. I’ve never made a decision before, I never expected it. Nor do I think NFL players deserve to simply attack to prepare them to attack. There’s a way you practice our boys knowing how to hit and play bass and fly a guy without bringing him back to the ground. Taking the boys to the ground, for me, is where the boys get hurt and you don’t want to do it until game day, however, there will possibly be some workouts and things you want to put in place. There will be some guys on this team where he’s headed, it’s neck and neck and he was given to play and as a training team we’re going to have to figure out how to put those guys in that position, which will be new to us. »
Preparing for a normal, unseasoned season will be a new delight for NFL coaches, and they’ll have to innovate. Shanahan is in a position to make some changes.
3 weeks of padded practices isn’t much time to prepare for a season. I think not going down in all those three weeks will result in more injuries in the first few weeks of the season. Prepare their bodies for contact with the NFL. It’s not the Ice Capades.
If you don’t allow full innings on the court during those 3 weeks, you’d better tell your players to speed up and “hit” hard. Not that coaches don’t need players to fall to the ground during training. Kids hit the ground a lot when you attack.
Coaches know that some of these padded practices have to update pre-season games and will become intense starting in mid-August.
Okay.
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