Tom House
👤 PersonAppearances Over Time
Podcast Appearances
I felt this, what should I have felt?
I felt this, what should I have felt?
I felt this, what should I have felt?
Oh yeah. And then if he didn't think I was paying attention, he'd screw something up.
Oh yeah. And then if he didn't think I was paying attention, he'd screw something up.
Oh yeah. And then if he didn't think I was paying attention, he'd screw something up.
And what he didn't realize is that I knew that he knew. The thing that was hardest for him to understand was his front side, I just say, closed until the last possible second. He was taught, like all quarterbacks in his generation, to pull that front side through to get more on the ball. And it's just the opposite.
And what he didn't realize is that I knew that he knew. The thing that was hardest for him to understand was his front side, I just say, closed until the last possible second. He was taught, like all quarterbacks in his generation, to pull that front side through to get more on the ball. And it's just the opposite.
And what he didn't realize is that I knew that he knew. The thing that was hardest for him to understand was his front side, I just say, closed until the last possible second. He was taught, like all quarterbacks in his generation, to pull that front side through to get more on the ball. And it's just the opposite.
If you've got a vector going this way, you can't put force on it that way or as much spin. Drew was extremely accurate with a base that was too broad. He could not throw long effectively. Tom Brady, on the other hand, could throw in the next week, but he had a base that was too narrow.
If you've got a vector going this way, you can't put force on it that way or as much spin. Drew was extremely accurate with a base that was too broad. He could not throw long effectively. Tom Brady, on the other hand, could throw in the next week, but he had a base that was too narrow.
If you've got a vector going this way, you can't put force on it that way or as much spin. Drew was extremely accurate with a base that was too broad. He could not throw long effectively. Tom Brady, on the other hand, could throw in the next week, but he had a base that was too narrow.
So we spent a good part of the first three years we worked together narrowing Drew Brees' stance and spreading Tom Brady out and firming Tom Brady's front side up. They both took volumes of notes. I think Tom told me he had 17 spiral notebooks. Drew had 12 or 13. And both of them, they shared in common film study.
So we spent a good part of the first three years we worked together narrowing Drew Brees' stance and spreading Tom Brady out and firming Tom Brady's front side up. They both took volumes of notes. I think Tom told me he had 17 spiral notebooks. Drew had 12 or 13. And both of them, they shared in common film study.
So we spent a good part of the first three years we worked together narrowing Drew Brees' stance and spreading Tom Brady out and firming Tom Brady's front side up. They both took volumes of notes. I think Tom told me he had 17 spiral notebooks. Drew had 12 or 13. And both of them, they shared in common film study.
They would look at film and look at film and look at film and look at film to where they had already played the upcoming game in their head before the game even started. And that's an anxiety reducer and a stress reducer
They would look at film and look at film and look at film and look at film to where they had already played the upcoming game in their head before the game even started. And that's an anxiety reducer and a stress reducer
They would look at film and look at film and look at film and look at film to where they had already played the upcoming game in their head before the game even started. And that's an anxiety reducer and a stress reducer
To be honest, quarterbacks are the easiest athlete to work with. They're used to huge amounts of data to be processed quickly and turned into action. Pitchers, on the other hand, don't have a time clock. Well, they do now. But pitchers are a tough sell because they don't have to be on the spot. They're expected to figure out how, at their pace—
To be honest, quarterbacks are the easiest athlete to work with. They're used to huge amounts of data to be processed quickly and turned into action. Pitchers, on the other hand, don't have a time clock. Well, they do now. But pitchers are a tough sell because they don't have to be on the spot. They're expected to figure out how, at their pace—