I stand by what I said earlier in this thread and what W2TB agreed with me on....launching yourself like a missile is not how football is supposed to be played nor is it taught......legendary coach Fred Stengel agrees:
Fred Stengel says it's not so. The legendary coach, who retired at national power Bergen Catholic after 41 years on the high school sidelines, disputes the notion that kids have been taught to tackle by leading with their helmets.
"They've been taught to make contact with their chests, not their helmets," said Stengel, who coached seven future NFL players, most recently Houston linebacker Brian Cushing. "Do they aim? Yes, I'm sure that's probably accurate but in terms of the actual contact, no high school coach that I know of has ever proposed that you make contact with your helmet as your primary source."
The issue has been spotlighted by the tragic injury to Rutgers linebacker Eric LeGrand, followed by a spate of incidents in the NFL Sunday, which has the league cracking down on helmet-to-helmet hits.
Stengel, a good friend of Colonia High School's Ben LaSala, who coached LeGrand, is personally familiar with the risks involved in playing the game.
"The first play of my high school career in 1972 against Scotch Plains . . . I was an assistant at Union at the time . . . a kid came down on the kickoff and broke his neck and he's been a quadriplegic ever since," Stengel said. "You want to talk about a coach in a nightmare, having witnessed that or having had that happen to one of their players. I coached for 41 years and that's something I always lived in fear of."
That impression turned Stengel into a stickler for proper tackling technique.
"Is it impossible to take your head completely out of it? Of course it is," Stengel said. "But the way it's taught is chest on chest and wrap your arms up under his armpits. What you're specifically doing is trying to put your nose right on his breastplate and then slide your head to one side or the other. No one said, ‘aim with your head make contact with your head.' That's insane."
It's "very evident" to Stengel that the "real problem" is with players who launch themselves like flying missiles.
"That's just plain stupid," he said. "You see that on kickoffs all the time. The game is so competitive and on special teams, those guys are vulnerable and they're running from such distances at such velocity, that's where the primary shots like that are going to occur. I don't understand why anybody in their right mind would do that and don't tell me there's ever been a coach who's taught it."
The solution, Stengel says, is to actually work on tackling technique in the pros as much as they do in high school.
"I just think the tackling in the NFL is so pathetic," he said. "They spend so little time on tackling and the reason is they're so scared to death in practice of getting anybody hurt. They don't work on technique and it's a shame.
"It's because these guys are an investment," he said. "They don't want to get them nicked up and these assistant coaches are scared to death to keep their jobs. If something happens where a guy gets hurt in a drill, who they looking at? Are they looking at the player? They're looking at the coach."
http://www.nydailynews.com/sports/h...tengel_disputes_that_kids_are_taught_to_.html