Gambling to survive 動画

  


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One of the first things I noticed in Japan is what seems to be a general aversion to risk; it appears to be the case on the gridiron and off. This culture of doing things in a safe and predicable manner is probably obvious to non-natives. As far as football is concerned, there’s a certain irony in enduring rigorous training, strapping on a gladiator’s armor, only to revert to being careful. I'd always thought the purpose of stepping out onto  the gridiron was to boldly impose your will on the opponent. 

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A motley crew (2009 - 2010)
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By late 2008 we'd finally acquired enough players to field a team. In addition to the six inexperienced players from the previous year, there were eleven new tenth graders bringing our roster up to seventeen total. Poor kids, they had no idea of what was in store for them.
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.Johoku alumni game 
In blue are the new incoming players (9th graders). The first two on the left in the front row are seniors who'd just finished their eligibility. The other six in the white uniforms were 10th graders at the time this picture was taken.
Johoku field - Hiroshima, Japan - December (2008)
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I had no illusions of running the table with a hand full of green, undersized, kids, but I wouldn’t allow conventional thinking be a factor, either. I had no clue about any of our opponents, but I knew exactly what we'd do to them. The only chance we had to be competitive was if the players could gain confidence in themselves and that would come from physical and mental preparation and game experience. Naturally, the kids would have to take some lumps while gaining that experience.
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.Johoku H.S. vs Osaka Kindai Fuzoku H.S. 
We had sixteen players that day, of whom, eleven were
first year players. The other five were juniors.
Osaka Kindai had thirty six players and they jumped out 
to a 19 - 0 lead before half-time.
Osaka, Japan (2010)

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Everyone wants to win; it's doing what's necessary to do so where they usually fall short. Initially, the kids were resistant to the difficult training and the physical regimen. It took a thrashing or two at the hands of stronger teams before they realized it took more than desire to win. After those early losses I had their full attention. Although, for this group, it seemed the lessons would always have to be retained the hard way. There's nothing like the physical and emotional trauma of a good old butt kicking to add clarity.
Being forcibly humbled was the player's biggest motivation. Witnessing them take a beating also forced me to elevate my own game. When queried about their reasons for joining the football team, many of the players expressed wanting to improve themselves physically. Some said they wanted to be better people. I cautioned them about perseverance and the numerous changes they'd have to make in their habits. They seemed sincere so I accepted their wish as my official charter. Naturally, I'd have to remind them later. 
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.Johoku vs Sotoku
Getting beat at the hands of a physically stronger team got the young guys attention.
Koiki Koen - Hiroshima, Japan (2009)

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Initially, the young Johoku players understanding of the game itself was very low. In Japan, other than right after New Years Day, there are no televised football games for kids to emulate. The few games that do get broadcast only involve Japanese teams, who typically play a very different brand of football.
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In Japan, American football is regarded as the "red headed step child" of sports, and doesn't enjoy anywhere near the popularity, or resources, that baseball does. Despite having gained a small following, football is relatively undeveloped compared to the United States. As a result of this, the young Johoku players were inclined to play cautiously and conservatively. From the first time they put on their football helmets as sophomores, all of my efforts were intended to change this mentality.
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Young folks are often keen on responding to what they see firsthand as opposed to doing what they're told. As I had no hope of getting through to them with my mangled Japanese, I decided to show them a series of handpicked NCAA football games, every week during meetings. The American style of play is much more dynamic, and has the added benefit of multiple camera angles and instant replay. The NCAA games had an enormous effect on them. The players hooted and hollered as they watched the NCAA highlights, and afterwards, just like my young friends and I did as kids, they went out on the football field and did it themselves.
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Having established the all important mental precedent of possibility, I went about the task of addressing the physical aspect. How does one get sixteen beginners to perform athletic feats deemed impossible in the local mentality? I merely reverse engineered the most difficult and dynamic aspects of offensive, and defensive skills, and drilled them into my players in a repetitive manner. The unique aspect of our practices was that everyone was required to execute everything, regardless of position. Naturally, we adjusted certain factors (distance, speed, angle, ball trajectory) within the drills to emulate game day variables.
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To me, it seems fundamentals, though essential, can, at times, be limiting. In football, big plays often come as a result of combining the fundamentals with a little something extra. At Johoku, we added that "little something extra" to the practice menu. Accepting the norm as a goal makes no sense, especially, when facing exceptional odds.
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Easy? Hell no. Endless, tedious, work? Of course. A high bar for the young fellows? Absolutely; the ultimate exercise in preparation.
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.Johoku vs Kobe Rokko
A hard lesson about details and communication.
After being down 13 - 0 in the second half and dominating the 4th quarter,
we botched two different two point conversion attempts. 
Final score Rokko 13 Johoku 12.
Kobe, Japan (2010)
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When gambling is survival...
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As a result of having sixteen kids on a good day I resolved to be extremely aggressive in play calling. I knew that if we played conservatively we’d get worn down by man power alone. I realized I’d have to build the team based on deception, misdirection, and plain old physics. Audacity was our calling card.
Early in games we’d bait opponents into mental traps, only to ensnare them with them later. I rarely adhered to convention. The kids thought I was nuts initially. Aside from my players, nobody in the stadiums ever knew what to expect; that’s just the way we liked it.
Our offense was fairly complex. We operated primarily out of the shotgun spread and our passing game allowed for two check downs. Our shotgun triple option meshed like a Swiss watch and was a beautiful thing to behold. When viewed from the defense's perspective our elfish backs would dart every which way and would seemingly vanish behind the offensive line. The skill position players each had different strengths which were taken into consideration in play calling. Our line was small which dictated our finesse approach as knocking folks off the ball wasn’t our strong suit.
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Each of our skill position players played all the receiver and back positions. We had three quarterbacks, of whom, two were starters at other skill positions. Player interchangeability was the strength of our team. Each quarterback saw action and the offense never missed a beat. On defense we blitzed and moved around so much the opposing offenses got dizzy. Field goals didn't exist and we always went for two after touchdowns.

.Johoku vs Osaka Kindai Fuzoku
A late touchdown drive.
Osaka, Japan (2010)
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Execution in clutch situations is where Johoku excelled; although, our high rate of success was probably more a result of the conservative culture of football in Japan than our skill. We had three pass plays from our punt formation with an outrageous 80% conversion rate.
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Another reason for our high success rate was probably due in part to always using experienced quarterbacks as a punters. Our punt team had exactly the same personnel that the offense did, with the exception of the starting quarterback. Our punter, unbeknownst to the opponents, was also a quarterback and we practiced converting "fourth and ten" situations from punt formation as a normal part of our offense. It had become a long running joke among Johoku players that "fourth and eight" was no different than "third and eight." We’d even become so brazen that we called time outs, in obvious punting situations, just to make adjustments.

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Down 19 - 0 at halftime...


.Johoku vs Osaka Kindai Fuzoku - Part 1
Osaka, Japan (2010)
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.Johoku vs Osaka Kindai Fuzoku - Part 2
Osaka, Japan (2010)
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Final: Johoku 26 - Osaka Kindai Fuzoku 25

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Johoku executed the extreme angle onside kick with impunity. We always lined up in the same formation for normal kick-offs so there was never any commotion or huddle to give away our intentions. The team operated off of a covert signal delivered just before the referee’s whistle. Out of ten onside attempts five were recovered by us, two were recovered by the opposing team, and three went out of bounds. We could have converted more but for some kids it's just too much pressure to go after a live ball. I've witnessed onside attempts where both teams danced around a live ball as if it were a cornered rattlesnake.
Most of the time other teams suspected the onside kicks were coming, but seemed unaware of how to play them. Our brazenness seemed to have caused a kind of paralysis. I can only remember seeing one adjustment by an opposing team. We’d just scored a touchdown and were preparing for an obvious second on side attempt when inexplicably the opposing team’s coach ordered his whole team to the area just in front of their bench where the previous onside attempt had sailed out of bounds. They left 50% of the field uncovered.
Our high success rate with deceptive plays was probably due to cultural differences in how the game is played in Japan. The rules of engagement are somewhat different here. I remember officiating a scrimmage one day and the team on defense asked the other team's offense if they where going to "gamble" on fourth down. The offensive team said "yes" so the defense huddled and prepared. Apparently, in Japan, football is a gentleman's sport.
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In general, kick returning in the Japanese archipelago leaves much to be desired. Punts often go unfielded, or fair caught, with no coverage threat within the same zip code. Not fielding a punt on the run is blasphemy where I come from; I doubt if we even knew fair catches were possible.
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I forced my young kick returners catch everything; in the air, off the bounce, in traffic, and on the run. When the guys inquired about fair catches I feigned ignorance. Even the back-up returners had to prove they were willing and able to field balls in traffic under hostile conditions. To return kicks for Johoku you had to be a proven daredevil.
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My players were able to understand my butchered Japanese in everyday situations; however, in the heat of battle when precise situational instructions were needed off the hip I was helpless. Also, as a result of having so few players on game day, we didn't have the luxury of using a substitute to run in new plays. If I was lucky enough to have a spare player next to me on the sideline, they were usually terrible at English. A couple of the guys even seemed incapable of understanding Japanese. 
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Our language dilemma necessitated that we prepare and rehearse for every possible scenario ahead of time. I used a system of colored cards, Spanish, coded Japanese, and numbers to communicate with my players from the sideline. If anything unrehearsed were to occur, we were dead in the water. 
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Although, nothing that occurred here is new, or revolutionary, in football, this was all accomplished by eighteen beginners at an academic school on Galapagos.
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