Discover the most popular and inspiring quotes and sayings on the topic of Rushes. Share them with your friends on social media platforms like Facebook, Twitter, or your personal blogs, and let the world be inspired by their powerful messages. Here are the Top 100 Rushes Quotes And Sayings by 93 Authors including Billy Tubbs,Dick Bennett,Kevin Abromitis,Demarcus Ware,Pete Carroll for you to enjoy and share.
This year we plan to run and shoot. Next season we hope to run and score.
What does this program/team need this week?
If you see adversity arriving at your game field, time to put on your pads and let see how well you can tackle adversity.
When you put the pads on ... it's time to make plays.
I just don't feel like you can have enough speed pass rushers on your club.
So when you put the kick in and the other runners go past you, it's game over!
You've got to be careful of guys trying to chop-block you. You know, running backs, the receivers. You've got to just hope that your knees are fine and you can avoid those chop blocks.
The players scrambled around like puppies,
Ian Baird is dashing around like a steam roller up front.
I don't want to rush you."
"Rush me through what?"
"Us."
He let out a low laugh. "Babe, I've been here waiting all along. Waiting for you to be ready." He tugged her into his arms. "Please rush me.
Quickness means you are hustling.
When In Doubt...Punt!
When I'm out there, you just have to react. That's why you work on those throws. When you're in the moment, you can't think to yourself, 'How do I get this to go 47 yards and be 2 yards inside the sideline?'
Football is the poetry of a motion.
Hurry wounds a questioning soul.
I'd like to improve on running plays. I want to see if I can hurt some more people. To me, I don't think I'm out there hurting enough people.
I run angry. Football allows me to take out some of my pain on the field.
Don't play for safety
There are few instincts more natural than the body in full motion as it races across a field or through the trees.
Run from being good. Chase being great.
Don't look for comfortable plays. Look for strong plays. Have balls.
For me, it's not about sacking the quarterback. It's about changing the course of the game. It's causing a crucial fumble at a crucial time. It's making a tackle for a loss when the opposing team needs to gain one or two yards for the first down. I look at myself as a sudden-impact player.
There's a handful of situations already in two games - some hits I don't need to take - and I'm taking them because I'm stringing out the play.
Too much hurry will bury your goals. Too much haste will make you waste. Too quick race will cripple your pace. Be patient.
You got one guy going boom, one guy going whack, and one guy not getting in the endzone.
You don't need to manage the clock when you score in one play.
Warren Moon and Doug Williams really didn't run that much. That's the negative stereotype when it comes to African-American quarterbacks, that most of us just run. Those guys threw it around. I like to think I can throw it around a little bit.
In the NFL, everyone's attacking, so you have to be quicker in your decisions.
Brooks Robinson is not a fast man, but his arms and legs move very quickly.
commotion and flurry.
Hurry n: The dispatch of bunglers.
When fools rush in, rush out.
I'm instinctive. I'm still learning how to run the ball. What I've done may look good to everyone else, but I know I'm capable of more than I've shown.
My first option is not to run. I am not a runner. I'm a quarterback.
When you have momentum going, play the momentum
Understanding the intentions of a play is so key because you can block a guy into the running back if you don't know how the play is supposed to work or where the back is going to come out.
As an athlete, when you least expect it, you may find yourself standing on the threshold of an accomplishment so monumental that it strikes fear into your soul. You must stand ready, at any moment, to face the unknown. You must be ready to walk boldly thru the wall of uncertainty.
Many shots are spoiled at the last instant by efforts to add a few more yards.
I think I am a good running back, but I'm really not that fast. There is only one thing I can do, that is throw a cross-body block. Picture perfect. I love it. Not that good at pass blocking.
The team has come along slow but fast.
Only run special plays for special players; find plays that fit your players.
In our rushing, bulls in china shops, we break our own lives.
You remember how much I come?
~Rush
The players need to remember to run with their bodies above their legs.
There's nothing to fear but a wide receiver who can run a 100-yard dash in under 10 seconds.
You put a real tough tight end with good hands in the hash area, and there won't be anyone who can cover him. Then you really control the passing game.
When everybodys clicking, we can put a lot of runs on the board.
I'm a four-down guy. I can rush the passer and stop the run. I know I can be a difference-maker.
rush in where angels fear to tread.
If you rush in and out of the clubhouse, you rush in and out of baseball.
At nose tackle, you don't have to run that much.
Rush to danger; wind up nowhere.
We was doing a lot of what our officers called "maneuvering" - which is officer talk for running
You don't hit anything on the backswing, so why rush it?
coveralls to the
More than just a big adrenalin rush, it's more like, 'let's explore what's possible in our sport'.
Hurrying, dragging, falling, crying, calling out names hopefully and hopelessly.
I make impact plays. I make game-changing plays.
Always acknowledge hustle plays in practice.
Things slow down, the ball seems a lot bigger and you feel like you have more time. Everything computes - you have options, but you always take the right one.
Wisely and slow; they stumble that run fast.
You can run a lot of plays when your X is twice as big as the other guys' O. It makes your X's and O's pretty good.
I think that's another misconception, [that] our quarterbacks run all the time. Quarterbacks can help you in the run game, they complement what you do, but it's a running back-driven run game.
Henry looks from my face back to the field, and his eyes pop open wide. I turn to see why he's gaping: JJ and Carter are messing around, trying
to shove a scrawny wide receiver into Jerry Rice's stroller.
"JJ!" Henry yells, "You can't fit a freshman in that stroller.
You pressure, you want possession, you want to attack. Some teams can't or don't pass the ball. What are you playing for? What's the point? That's not football. Combine, pass, play. That's football - for me, at least.
Alford was going to start this fast the same way he had started everything else, alone and uncertain
We'll run a lot of multiple sets - pro set, twin set, the box set, ... We'll run a lot of option plays and pass the ball more than in the past.
Not since Reggie White have the Packers had a pass rusher of this magnitude.
Adrian Peterson is redefining the way teams defend the running ability.
In practice, I run every play like I'm scoring a touchdown.
There's something about football that's exciting. The defense is trying to shut you down and you're trying to blow people up.
Any defensive coordinator is worried about two things: a running quarterback and a deep ball. You know, don't get beat deep and don't let the quarterback run, because a big part of your defense can't account for the quarterback as a runner, so he gets a free run.
A hook shot kisses the rim and hangs there, helplessly, but doesn't drop and for once our gangly starting center boxes out his man and times his jump perfectly, gathering the orange leather/from the air like a cherished possession.
Blocking out is everyday, every drill, all the time. We run sprints every time someone does not blockout.
You're an idiot. You've screwed up every play we ever ran. You're too stupid to even remember the plays. We ought to get rid of you.
I see young quarterbacks just coming into the league, and they're throwing screens and layoffs right away. As funny as this might sound, I really learned a lot by going downfield, even in tight coverage.
Stealers, keepers.
When your opponent is hurrying recklessly, you must act contrarily and keep calm. You must not be influenced by the opponent.
Play out the play ...
I like to run the slants. The slants are cool. I like routes that you can catch the ball running.
The adrenaline gets pumping and you just got to forget about [injuries] and play.
Time plays for the other team.
After the snap, Chad took off like a gazelle and the quarterback hurled a 30-yard bomb that rocketed straight to him. Fast as Chad was, Joshua ran him down like a Discovery Channel cheetah. It was no contest.
Some yards is better than none yards?Yards-- John Madden
You have to run the football and stop the run, no matter what level you play at, whether it's high school, college or professional ranks. I'm a firm believer in that.
It's brutal out on the football field.
Teddy has lost that yard of pace he never had.
Football is and always will be a game of blocking and hitting
We are making a little portion of their brains be sprinters; they are 100 percent football players, but for these purposes, they must learn the proper way to run.
The world is full of people running
To win a race, the swiftness of a dart Availeth not without a timely start
Play is experimenting with chance.
Under pressure, a team will consciously or unconsciously begin to be more conservative in what they take on. They will begin rating things as a bit larger or a bit harder than they used to. This will give the impression that they're going faster, but they are not.
You write a hit play the same way you write a flop
Anybody who has watched me play knows I'm not one of the fastest guys, but I understand what's going on around me and what to look for. I know what the defense is doing.
The key to the fast break is every one running hard for their teammates.
Sports teach you how to be quick. Injuries teach you how to slow down.
Got any excuses tonight Roy?
You always wonder if you can make plays at the end.
The march of good fortune has backward slips: to retreat one or two paces gives wings to the jumper.