I was taught the exact same thing
JSmith was and it's funny, because at one practice we were working on our passing game and all of us - WR's, TE's, RB's -
ALL of us were dropping passes left and right. It was just one of those days where nobody could catch a cold in
Alaska! So our coach gets extremely irritated and tells us that the next dropped pass is going to result in the entire group of receivers running laps. Now we had a huge area where we practiced - not just
100 yards - and "laps" meant we would be running - in full gear - for roughly an hour or so!
So the first play he calls after making this statement is a pass for me! Great, I think... no pressure here. I run a corner route and the QB lays it right in my hands, but, w/ the day being what it was, sure enough the ball goes right through my hands, ricochets off the top of my helmet and all I could think was: Start running your laps now! You have about a
25-30 yard head start!!!
So as I turn to begin my "lap" running, the ball, having bounced off my helmet is just floating in the air and I reach my hands out and catch it!!! And as I was running to the end zone - something we always did too - I was laughing my ass off because I know my coach is going to be mad that I didn't catch it clean but also because of the way I caught it!
When I finally get back to the team the coach tells me that I am the "luckiest son-of-a-bitch alive" and practice continues. And for whatever reason, that funny moment loosened everyone up and nobody dropped another pass. But yes,
JSmith and I were taught the exact same thing. I think, deep down, coaches knew we wouldn't catch every single pass, but they wanted that mentality in our heads.
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