@@POWLAX I've found the wing dodge that begins with the dodgers back to the sidelines is very difficult for your standard youth / high school player to guard. My guys get over the top or to the pipe rather easily. Much less so than when they try the standard alley dodge starting from up top. then the interior guy just mirrors and he is also frequently left alone. Then the guy at X sneaks the weak side and he is frequently lost in the shuffle. I've also discovered good looks if you pull the top guy all the way up to midfield and pull the 4 guys across very low, like almost GLE, then you run a dodge from midfield (with a speedster). It's an unusual play and defenses usually don't play it right. Generally the speedster ends up with an 8-10 yard step down.
Great video. I love the 141 because it is very difficult to guard.
I’ve always run things that shift into and out of it. Which parts do you find are so hard to guard when they’re coached and executed well?
@@POWLAX I've found the wing dodge that begins with the dodgers back to the sidelines is very difficult for your standard youth / high school player to guard. My guys get over the top or to the pipe rather easily. Much less so than when they try the standard alley dodge starting from up top. then the interior guy just mirrors and he is also frequently left alone. Then the guy at X sneaks the weak side and he is frequently lost in the shuffle. I've also discovered good looks if you pull the top guy all the way up to midfield and pull the 4 guys across very low, like almost GLE, then you run a dodge from midfield (with a speedster). It's an unusual play and defenses usually don't play it right. Generally the speedster ends up with an 8-10 yard step down.