Assuming there are other essays that discuss the importance of having one sideline voice using simple language, I’ll take a slightly contrarian approach to the topic: there’s not much you can really accomplish from the sideline during a game. Put more accurately, the best you can hope for from your sideline is to help remind the players on the field of what they already know. Defensive blocks are created by players executing the strategy they decided on before the point. Sideline information rarely generates a block and, much more often than not, can actually serve to undermine the preexisting strategy. There is little hope that someone on the sideline can “joystick” a player on the field into a block; but he/she can certainly joystick a teammate out of position.
Take, for example, the mark, which is where communication from off the field is standard. As far as I could tell, 2010 was the year of the rotated mark. On Team USA we employed it all the time, shifting the sideline trap mark at stall 5 or so to take away the dump, then having the dump defender play the upline cut. On PoNY we saw this defense all season, and really only figured out how to beat it on Sunday at Regionals. It’s a very effective strategy when everyone’s on the same page.
And when was it less effective? More often than not, when the mark would jump back out of position because someone on the sideline was giving them too much information.
So, what did successful sideline communication look like in this case?
Stall 1-5: “No break…No inside…No around”
Stall 5: “Rotate!” or “90!” or whatever term you have for the mark taking
away the dump
Stall 6-10: (Calmly) “Hold it…steady…take a step back…no foul”
The unsuccessful version?
Stall 1-5: “No break…No inside…No around”
Stall 5: “Rotate!” or “90!” or whatever term you have for the mark taking
away the dump
Stall 6-10: (Frantic) “NO LINE!!! NO INSIDE!!! EVERYONE FREAK OUT!!!!”
If the sideline starts to flood the player on the field with too much information, and information that’s out of sync with the overall strategy, the mark gets jumpy, gives us a cheap foul, and all of a sudden the thrower or the cutter can find a bail-out for him or herself at the last second.
The point is, trust your preexisting game plan, the one you developed when everyone was calmer and more reasoned. Don’t expect a player to be able to process your information, stray from the strategy, and make a play all in real-time. If the wing in the zone’s number one priority is to take away the line as it swings, just make sure that you’re reminding them to do so. If you’ve decided to front a particular player on the other team, spend the point telling his defender “front…front…front”. Keep it simple, and keep it consistent. It may not be the most enticing way to communicate from the sideline, but it’ll pay dividends over the course of a long game.
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