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Archive for September, 2010

Kicking off the Ground in High School – TKS Blog Post

September 28th, 2010

You just hit a 45 yard field goal in your last high school football game, hit five touchbacks including one that went thru the uprights, and you have not missed an extra point since last year.  The good times are rolling…

San Diego Football Camp

A college coach contacts you after homecoming and asks the questions, “Do you have any film of you kicking off the ground?”  And you think to yourself for a second why he would want that and you answer, “sure I can take some video this week and send it to you, as soon as possible.”  After small talk you hang up the phone and are motivated to go out the next day and kick a few field goals off the ground. You line up your first field (of course using your Wizard Kicking Eazy hold)  and you try to kick one.  And then it dawns on you that you have never tried this before and have been using a one of two inch tee since you can remember.  But you stand confident and things are going so well, how hard can it be?

You approach and make contact with the ball, if feels good, but your look up and the ball travels 15 yards left of the uprights and barely gets off the ground. You almost hit you athletic director in the head and your teammates start to question if you were out late last night.  You decided to try another. Different result, the ball travels 20 yards right and is in the middle of cheerleading practice. You feel you are making good contact, after further investigation and looking at the ground where you set up the ball and realize you have making more contact with the ground more than the football. If you are the competitive one, you decide to try four to five more kicks, maybe making one of two of them but all looking similar to kicks you used to kick in Pop Warner and now you are starting to make some enemies with cross country runners running around the track.  You have hit a wall and ask yourself, “What do you do?”

Unfortunately, you are like most high school kickers utilizing the field goal block to its fullest potential.  You are a senior and still using a two-inch field goal block and never really tried to kick off the ground. In fact your head coach never even mentioned it to you that college kickers don’t use a tee.  Normally as a junior or senior you should be using a once inch tee and most of your offseason work should have been kicking of the ground. Here are some simple tips to help you improve your field goals off the ground:

1)   Look at your plant foot – Depending of the tee you were using, your plant foot needs to be deeper. As a general rule of thumb your ankle will be even or deeper than the ball. There are many kicking coaches out there that like a very deep plant foot, it just depends on what you like. Works what is best.

2)   Start kicking off the ground between sophomore and junior year. If you are already a junior, most of off-season will be kicking off the ground. Try a few the first day and build your program to have all your kicks off the ground by mid-spring  of junior year.  College coaches want to see you kick off the ground in college summer camps. Even though they may allow you to use a tee in the camp they will be more impressed seeing you kick off the ground.

3)   Cut down the front two cleats of your kicking shoe. Often times, when you start to kick of the ground, you may actually kick the ground more than the ball., In order to help facilitate the process shave down the front two or three cleats close to you toes. It will allow you more clearance to make contact with the ball.

4)   Buy new shoes!  All the time I see kickers kicking with shoes that a size or two to big. When you start kicking of the ground you cant make proper contact because your shoe gets in the way. Find some tight, snug shoes – usually a soccer shoe will be best. (Although, Wizard Kicking does have the T3 Kicking shoe that is specifically designed for kickers and punters)

5)   Try to kick a few no-step or one-step kicks to get used to the new plant foot. Starting small will help make the process easier, don’t go and try to kick 50+ yard field goals. Short fields will help your confident as you try to prefect your trade.

Remember kicking off the ground is a whole new mechanic for you, don’t expect things to improve overnight. You will loose height and distance when you start but once you get the technique down you’ll ask yourself how you used to kick off a 2” tee.

Lastly, create some video prior to you senior year kicking off the ground, in order to show college coaches and scouts. Showing a college coach that you can kick off the ground prior to you senior year speaks volumes.

John Matich

The Kicking System

www.kickingsystem.com

Davey Last, TKS San Diego Kicker, kicks one for the ages! GW over Los Alamitos

This is an excerpt from the North County Times.

VALLEY CENTER — David Last was just a kicker last season, and a darn good one.

This season, Last has added a few things to his bag of tricks. Kicking, however, is still his forte.

The Valley Center High senior booted a 47-yard field goal with 37 seconds remaining Friday night to give the Jaguars a hard-fought 31-28 victory over Los Alamitos.

The game, however, was far from over at that point as Los Alamitos (3-1), the No. 5-ranked team in the Division I bowl rankings according to Cal-Hi, drove to the Valley Center 28 and had one last-gasp pass with seven seconds to play. But Last stepped in front of a Dylan Lagarde pass to end the threat and seal the game for the Jaguars (4-0).

“Was that the biggest kick of my career?” said Last, who booted six kickoffs out of the end zone, averaged 38 yards on three punts and caught four passes for 61 yards. “Yeah, I’d say so.

“I had a feeling the way the game was going that it might come down to a big kick in the fourth quarter. I was confident I’d make it.

“I’m telling you, Los Alamitos is easily the best team we’ve played.”

Video:

www.kickingsystem.com

Opening Game Kicking Story – John Matich, Boston College -1996

September 14th, 2010

This post was for Mike Herman and his Kickology Blog:

Going back a few years… during my redshirt freshman year at Boston College, I was competing for the staring position with another senior kicker. All thru the spring we were pretty close in competition but he was the senior and our special teams coach was favoring him as the starter.  A week before the game, this senior kicker, tore a muscle in his quad, by default I was the kicker.   That year Boston College (1996) was going to open the season in Hawaii against the University of Hawaii. The game was not going as planned as we were down early. I connected on first field attempt from 27 yards and connected on my second field goal later in the third quarter. After some controversy at the quarterback position, Matt Hasselbeck (Seahawks) , brought us back and we had an opportunity to win the game on a 46 yard field goal attempt.  With six seconds left I kicked the ball and got tackled by all the guys flying in to block the kick. All I saw was Hasselbeck jumping up and down celebrating. I was flat on my back with two or three guys on me, I never saw the kick go thru. Best feeling I ever had besides getting marries of course.

John Matich

The Kicking System

www.kickingsystem.com

Categories: Uncategorized

Kicking In College: How Good Are You?

September 14th, 2010

If you are fortunate to kick more than five field goals in one season at the high school level, consider yourself lucky and buy a lottery ticket.  For most of your high school career you have been the starting kicker, either you worked really hard or in other instances the football team needed a kicker and you were the only that would volunteer for such a position.  You either have a very strong leg or a good enough leg that you kick better than most of you opposing teams kickers. Almost every day your teammates give you complements and think you are god with your foot and you can do not wrong.  Even you head coach tells you about how you should be kicking at the Division I level and kick his alma mater, which normally is a school such as Notre Dame.

You feel pretty comfortable, as there is no other kicker on your team that can even come close to your consistency and power. Mom and Dad buy kicking DVD’s and provide you tutors and tell you are an amazing son and even better kicker.

You start to wonder, “How good am I? Who should I believe?”

Start by doing your research, just as your science teacher told you. Gather more information, and today’s technological age its not that hard. First look at some kicking video on Youtube, or Vimeo, check out highlight tapes of some of the best kickers in your area or in the country. Compare yourself, how do you stack up. Normally if you are kicker and have highlight tape you want to play college and at least doing a decent job for you team. Many of them will post them, in order for college coaches to review them.

Secondly, find a former professional kicker or kicking academy in or around you area. (They is one in almost every major city in the US) Maybe get a private lesson or attend of their classes or camps, see how you stack up against the better specialists. Then ask for their honest opinion, if this coach or former athlete has been in business for than 10 years they will have a good idea what it takes to make it to the next level and how other kickers are performing in your area.

Thirdly, call or make contact with a college special teams coach. Either the coach can be locally (often times they may have all ready seen you kick and made their evaluation) You can send an email or call them –be persistent.  Most College coaches don’t really respect the kicking game and don’t want to take the time to talk to high school kicker unless they are highly recruiting them.

Bottom line, you need an honest assessment – sometimes it may not come from a private kicking coach, as they will try to tell you that you are good and need their services to get to college. (I know way to many of those)  Do your research!

www.kickingsystem.com

John Matich, MA,  Owner, The Kicking System

*  Kicker / San Diego Shockwave (ALL-NIFL) 2007
*  Kicker  / Omaha Beef 2010 (IFL)
*  Free Agent Signee of the Minnesota Viking (2001)
*  MA in Sports Management from the University of San Francisco (2007)
*  Awarded a football scholarship for placekicking at Boston College (1995-1999)
*  2nd place All-Time Scoring at Boston College
*  Camp Director for the SDSU Kicking Camp (2007,2008)
*  Kicking Coach to over 15 San Diego Schools and JUCO’s
*  Native San Diegan and former kicking standout from Mira Mesa High School (1995)
*  AFCA Member since 2006
*  Coach for the NFL Youth Program JPD, Junior Player Development
*  Speaker for the Frank Glazer Clinics & FCPGA
*  Speaker for Irvine Sports Clinic – National Football Foundation (2008)
*  Coach for the Champion Sports Academy (San Diego Hall of Champions) & USA Football Coach School
*  Scout.com & Rivals.com evaluator
*  Placed over 30 tduents to Ivy League, Pac-10, ACC and DI programs
*  Kicking Director of Darren Sproles Football Camp (2009)
*  Kicking Director of Eugene Amano Football Camp (2009)

Categories: Uncategorized

TKS Announces Two new Radio Shows

September 11th, 2010

TKS will have two radio show coming in the next 10 days. Be sure to place it on your calendar. This Sunday 9/12/10 6pm (PST) TKS Owner, John Matich, will talk  to local Southern California college and high school kickers. Also a ton of updates from around San Diego. Much more with kicking tips, and talks about his secret weapon for kickers and punters.

On Wednesday September 22nd, 2010 (11am PST), Joe Nedney, NFL Kicker for San Francisco 49ner, stops by TKS Radio to discuss the pre-game rituals, how much he kicks and his weeky routine. For more kicking related books and DVDs, visit the TKS Store. Hosted by John Matich of The Kicking System, www.kickingsystem.com

http://www.blogtalkradio.com/kickingsystem


Categories: Uncategorized

San Francisco 49ner Kicker, Joe Nedney, will be on TKS Radio Show 9/22/10

September 10th, 2011

TKS is pleased to announce San Francisco 49ner Kicker, Joe Nedney, will be on the TKS Radio Show 9.22.10 at 11am (PST).

http://www.blogtalkradio.com/kickingsystem

Tune in for more details!

John

Categories: Uncategorized

Brian Stahovich, SDSU Punter, gives advice at San Diego Kicking Camp

September 2nd, 2010

Recently at the TKS Summer Kicking Camp back in July, Brian Stahovich, SDSU punter, had to chance to demonstrate and give some advice to the local San Diego talent. Great video for a youth or High School kicker/punter.

Categories: Uncategorized

Raiam Santos, U of Pennsylvania, Punter, learns American Football

September 2nd, 2010

TKS had the opportunity to work with Raiam Santos, punter from the University of Pennsylvania,  this summer. Raiam who spent two years at San Diego HS, eventually landed at an Ivy League school. In this video, Raiam talks about his experience, and what it takes to make it in college football. Not to mention, what a Brazilian soccer player needs to do. Enjoy!

Categories: Uncategorized
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