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Oklahoma drill

The Oklahoma drill[1] is an American football practice technique used to test and train players in confined full contact situations. The technique was developed by Oklahoma Sooners coach Bud Wilkinson.[2] It has many names.[3]

Description

The drill has several variations. The most common involves two players lined up three yards opposite one another.[3] A corridor is set up typically using three blocking bags on each side of the players lined up top to bottom to create a wall, and the walls are spaced about one yard apart. This creates an area of about three feet by nine feet. The two players, at the sound of the whistle, then run at one another and the drill is over when one of the players is on the ground, or if a ball carrier is involved when he is tackled, or if the ball carrier runs out of bounds. If a player is able to drive the other player out of the corridor, that also ends the drill. In a variation, the ball carrier must keep running until they score a touchdown.

Prevalence

Many high school and college teams use the Oklahoma drill as a way to kick off the first day of full-contact practice.[1] While often criticized as excessive, some argue that it can be a critical tool used by coaches to evaluate players that might have looked good in non-contact drills, but have yet to face full contact. Other times the drill is used simply to get players in the proper mind-set for full contact practices, especially in high school and college, where many times players have gone up to eight months doing only non-contact drills.

The Oklahoma drill, along with other full-contact drills, was officially banned from NFL team practices in May 2019 following years of declining use and increasing concerns for player safety.[4] Veterans and high-profile NFL players rarely participate in pit drills owing to the higher risk of injury, with many coaches already refusing to permit the drill prior to its ban. A non-contact variant of the drill is sometimes run.[5][6]

Outside football

Oklahoma drills have been used for entertainment purposes, as a type of combat sport.[7]

References

  1. ^ a b "Today's players don't know the drill". The Boston Globe. July 29, 2006.
  2. ^ "OU football and Bud Wilkinson's gift to football: The Oklahoma Drill". newsok.com. August 21, 2010.
  3. ^ a b Kendall, Josh (29 May 2019). "NFL banned Oklahoma drill from practices. Here's why Muschamp still believes in it". The State.
  4. ^ Florio, Mike (May 22, 2019). "NFL bans certain old-school training-camp drills". Profootballtalk.com. Retrieved May 22, 2019.
  5. ^ Meinke, Kyle (29 July 2018). "Lions training camp observations, Day 3: Frank Ragnow shines in first padded practice". MLIVE. Advance Local Media LLC. Retrieved 29 July 2018.
  6. ^ Birkett, Dave. "Detroit Lions, Matt Patricia keep safety in mind with new Oklahoma drill". Detroit Free Press. Retrieved 2024-04-03.
  7. ^ Goodridge, Harold (2024-03-19). "Hundreds gathered on Jacksonville Beach before fatal shooting to do 'Oklahoma drills,' but what is that?". WTLV-TV First Coast News. Florida. Retrieved 2024-08-28.
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