Machota: Cowboys TE coach Mike Pope has 478 strange ways to ‘create distraction

Cotton

One-armed Knife Sharpener
Staff member
Joined
Apr 7, 2013
Messages
120,480
Dallas Cowboys TE coach Mike Pope has 478 strange ways to ‘create distractions’ in post-practice drills
By Jon Machota jmachota@dallasnews.com
3:42 pm on July 31, 2014 | Permalink

OXNARD, Calif. – Watching the tight ends go through drills after practice has been arguably the most entertaining part of Dallas Cowboys training camp.

New tight ends coach Mike Pope has a weird way of making things interesting.

The 72-year-old has more than a few tricks up sleeve. Well, he has 478 to be exact.

A couple of the strangest have been on display the last two days. Pope had the tight ends catching passes shirtless while he hit them with buckets of ice water on Tuesday. After Wednesday’s practice, the group caught passes with what appeared to be white laundry bags over their heads.

“One of the things I really concentrate on teaching and getting them to understand, because they don’t really believe it, is that when the ball comes and something really abnormal happens, they flinch,” Pope said. “They temporarily close their eyes. It’s an instinct. Sometimes it’s uncontrollable. Hitting them with the ice water, they all flinch.

“I told them all, if I bet you your car [that they won't flinch], they’d all be walking because that ice water hits them and it’s such a shock to their body. Any of those things that you can do to try to distract them is a decent drill.”

Pope’s goal is to get the group to concentrate on the ball. At their position, defenders are always around. Defensive linemen, linebackers and safeties bump, grab and pull at the tight ends while they’re running routes.

Pope, who won four Super Bowl rings as a position coach for the New York Giants, says the defenders don’t care about getting a flag if it means saving a big play. The grabbing is going to happen. Pope wants his guys to be prepared to fight through it.

And the worst thing they can do is complain to Pope if a flag isn’t tossed.

“I tell them they can get a cup and get on the corner with a cane if they’re going to beg all the time,” Pope said. “Don’t beg. Beat the coverage. Catch the ball. Don’t be distracted by what happens to you, so they have to play through that mentally.

“It’s good for us to have that kind of treatment in practice because it gets us ready for the game.”

Pope’s had his group laying on the ground while he fired footballs at them. He throws passes holding the ball in different ways so they don’t know what angle it’s coming from.

Pope also has individual players hold a ball and turn their backs to him. When he says turn, they throw the ball up in the air, catch the one he fires at them and then catch the one they just tossed.

Pope wrote all of his drills down one time and came up with 478.

“Can’t remember all of them because I’m getting a little older,” he said. “It’s foolish to practice on air because we all know that has nothing to do with the game.

“To be more realistic, you have to create distractions in order for them to build that in the game, heat of the battle technique to move their head and see the ball hit their hands.”
 

Clay_Allison

Old Bastard
Joined
Apr 8, 2013
Messages
5,488
We should make him the head coach and just let him do crazy shit to the players in practice all the time. We wouldn't be any better, but at least it would be funny.
 

Cotton

One-armed Knife Sharpener
Staff member
Joined
Apr 7, 2013
Messages
120,480
We should make him the head coach and just let him do crazy shit to the players in practice all the time. We wouldn't be any better, but at least it would be funny.
Now, THEN I would actually be entertained.
 

jsmith6919

Honored Member - RIP
Joined
Aug 26, 2013
Messages
28,407
We should make him the head coach and just let him do crazy shit to the players in practice all the time. We wouldn't be any better, but at least it would be funny.
I would be entertained :towel
 

Cotton

One-armed Knife Sharpener
Staff member
Joined
Apr 7, 2013
Messages
120,480
Cowboys TE coach offers up off-beat drills
August, 1, 2014

By Todd Archer | ESPNDallas.com

OXNARD, Calif. – At one point Mike Pope made a list of all the drills he has had his tight ends do over 32 years in the NFL, and it totaled 478.

"I can't remember all of them because I'm getting a little bit older," said the 72-year-old Pope, "but they're just common sense more than anything else."

Like throwing ice water at shirtless tight ends, wearing a helmet? Like having the tight ends wearing swim goggles to cut down on their peripheral vision? Like having tight ends attempt to catch passes with a bag over their helmets? Like having tight ends catch a passed, draped over another tight end while a third tight end is holding down his feet? Like having the tight ends do a duck walk with a medicine ball? Like having the tight ends toss a ball in the air, turn and catch a pass from Pope and then catch the ball they tossed in the air?

Who thinks of this stuff? Pope does. He said he has no interests outside of football.

"No, I don't take credit for them," said Pope, who joined the Cowboys' staff in the offseason. "You see something in the game and say, 'How can I make a drill out of that?' A lot of them are things like end zone drills and you just see something happen and a player has to do something out of the extraordinary to make a catch, make a play. How does he do it? He's off balance, he's on one foot somebody has got him by the shirt. He's trying to run and he can't run. You just see those in the game and then you just come out here and put them together. It's not that hard."

James Hanna has figured out the "why" behind the drills, so he has not responded with, "We are doing, what?"

"He wants us to think about coming from the ground, that's why we do the duck walk stuff, like raising up as opposed to reaching out," Hanna said. "That's how you get in bad position."

The receiving drills are all about concentration. Most of the catches by tight ends are contested. They have to battle a linebacker or safety in tight coverage.

"There's someone always knocking us around, particularly when you get the credentials that a Jason Witten has," Pope said. "You think they're just going let him run down and catch the ball? I don't think so. We want to get them on our schedule if they do."

He admits the ice-water drill is more about the fun he gets from dousing his players.

"But we put that camera up real close and one of the things I really concentrate on teaching and getting them to understand -- because they don't really believe it -- that when the ball comes ,when something really abnormal happens they flinch," Pope said. "They temporarily close their eyes. It's an instinct. It's uncontrollable. So hitting them with the ice water, they all flinch. I told them all, I said, 'If I bet you your car, you'd all be walking,' because that ice water hits them and it's such a shock to their body. Any of those things that you can do to try to distract them -- so anything you can do -- is a decent drill."

He does not tell the tight end what's coming, but by now they know it will be something strange. Pope said there have never been any complains in his career, from Pro Bowlers like Mark Bavaro, Ben Coates, Jeremy Shockey and Stephen Alexander to players like Martellus Bennett, whom he coached with the Giants in 2012, to his current crew.

"They look at me like I'm Hannibal Lecter or something like that," Pope said. "But now, they get the gist of it."

Training camp is young. Pope has plenty more left in his repertoire.

"It's a lot of stuff I've never done before, but I've reflected a little bit on it and it seems like pretty practical stuff," Hanna said. "So that's good."
 
Top Bottom