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Spring Practice

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Spring Practice

Can you explain why?
I've been taught and seen it almost universally accepted as the weak point of blocking when your elbows are point out. So when your thumbs are pointed inward.
- What I've been taught and mostly seen over the years is thumbs up = elbows down. Harder for the DL to disengage and break the arms.
- I've also seen the double-under approach or now what's classified as the Tip of the Spear model. Thumbs out in a W, still, elbows are not out, and creating lift, displacing the momentum of the defender.

I've heard very few talk about hand placement as thumbs in. I've seen a few equate it as how would you stop a door?

My personal preference and opinion is to keep elbows from point out as it's easier to collapse your arms and defeat the block. That's just me.
 
I've been taught and seen it almost universally accepted as the weak point of blocking when your elbows are point out. So when your thumbs are pointed inward.
- What I've been taught and mostly seen over the years is thumbs up = elbows down. Harder for the DL to disengage and break the arms.
- I've also seen the double-under approach or now what's classified as the Tip of the Spear model. Thumbs out in a W, still, elbows are not out, and creating lift, displacing the momentum of the defender.

I've heard very few talk about hand placement as thumbs in. I've seen a few equate it as how would you stop a door?

My personal preference and opinion is to keep elbows from point out as it's easier to collapse your arms and defeat the block. That's just me.

A person is naturally stronger with elbows tucked in and a neutral grip (thumbs up, palms facing each other). Additionally with elbows in, your shoulders cannot rotate creating disengagement.

Tuck your elbows into your lats and try and rotate your shoulders. Now elbows out and try and rotate your shoulders.
 
A person is naturally stronger with elbows tucked in and a neutral grip (thumbs up, palms facing each other). Additionally with elbows in, your shoulders cannot rotate creating disengagement.

Tuck your elbows into your lats and try and rotate your shoulders. Now elbows out and try and rotate your shoulders.
Exactly. Plus I put most of my trust in what I've learned from some of the best to ever do it, and the way they teach it, is ultimately elbows down. You can't do that with thumbs in. Scarnnechia, McNally, Flood, Hand, etc...
 
Exactly. Plus I put most of my trust in what I've learned from some of the best to ever do it, and the way they teach it, is ultimately elbows down. You can't do that with thumbs in. Scarnnechia, McNally, Flood, Hand, etc...
Any idea what Hiestand teaches?
 
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