The offseason is upon us here in Prague. The junior season finished a month ago
and, while preparations are being made, the senior season has yet to begin in
earnest. So what does a young
football coach do with all of that time off? Nabor.
Nabor is an interesting Czech word with really no English
equivalent. If you type it into
google translate, the word will not be translated. As far as I can understand it, Nabor is a series of
practices that combine recruiting and tryouts and basic skills development, as
well as some physical fitness. At
this point, the people attending Nabor are almost fully committed to the
program. Nabor practices started
during the junior season, so some people have washed out.
Our goal is to provide a base of skills that the new players
will need once their respective teams begin organized practice. We generally have all players do all
drills. We are not position
specific yet. Everyone works on
blocking, tackling, catching, backpedaling, running the ball, and whatever
other skills that are necessary to learn.
This also gives us a chance to evaluate players and see where they may
fit best on the football field, as well as if they fill a position where our
various teams need depth.
Some guys are easy to evaluate. Linemen are linemen, from size to personality. This is cross-cultural. A tall guy with some speed will
inevitably end up playing receiver.
The tougher positions to evaluate and decide whom to put where are the
linebackers, running backs, strong safeties, tight ends, and a few defensive
back positions. While in America
we can generally look at a guy’s size and speed and determine which of those
positions he should play, those boundaries are not so static here. I can kind of understand how a junior
high coach feels or a high school coach with a new batch of freshmen feels during
the first couple weeks of camp.
Lately I have been the only coach to come to the
practices. On one hand, it is nice
because I can coach proper technique for blocking and tackling. On the other hand, I also need to coach
other skill sets that I am not as familiar with. Nabor is certainly a learning experience for all involved!
One of the biggest challenges for me is that we are
recruiting for three different teams.
In addition to the junior team (high school age) and senior team (ages
18+) that I have written about in the past, we are trying to add a cadet team,
which would serve roughly junior high aged kids. So we have a wide range sizes, ages, and physical
developments at Nabor. For drills,
it is easy to simply divide them up by size. Most of them have a similar knowledge of the game, no matter
the age group.
One observation that I do have is that the younger players
tend to learn the skills quicker during practice and retain what they have
learned so that they can build on those skills in the next practice. The older players tend to be more
focused, though.
In addition to preparing these guys for the football season,
I also get the rare opportunity to mix with them before the season and before
they get absorbed into their various teams as a whole. I see this as a great ministry
opportunity. I have been able to
meet and get to know quite a few of them.
I can try to lay a good ministry foundation before football and the rest
of the team distract them.
Football can be an overwhelming sport, especially for beginners, so for
guys to know me from the beginning is good.
















