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About this Course
Coaching Offensive Backs presents a detailed overview of
the fundamental skills involved in sound offensive back play. Coach
Steve Axman examines the techniques that have given him success in
coaching quarterbacks and running backs. In a step-by-step,
easy-to-understand manner, this instructional video explains and
demonstrates the key aspects of each basic technique.
Among the topics covered:
Ballhandling skills
Quarterback-to-ballcarrier exchange techniques
Quarterback-passing techniques
Ball security
Offensive back-receiving techniques
Faking techniques
Offensive back-blocking techniques
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Steve Axman
Former Assistant Head Coach and Offensive Coordinator at University of Idaho
Steve Axman was most recently the quarterback coach at
Simon Fraser University in Vancouver, Canada. Previous to that, he was
the assistant head coach and offensive coordinator at the University of
Idaho. Prior to that, he was the wide receivers coach at the University
of Washington, a position he assumed before the 2004 season. It was
Axman’s second stint on the Huskies staff. Previously, he served as the
assistant head coach and quarterbacks coach. Axman oversaw the work of
UW record-setting quarterbacks Marques Tuiasosopo and Cody Pickett.
During the 2003 season, he was the offensive coordinator and
quarterbacks coach at UCLA.
Axman is no stranger to wide-open,
multiple offense football or producing top- flight collegiate
quarterbacks. During his career, he has worked at four Pac-10 schools
(UCLA, Arizona, Stanford, and Washington). Among his former collegiate
pupils are Troy Aikman and Drew Olsen (UCLA), Neil O’Donnell (Maryland),
Jeff Lewis and Travis Brown (Northern Arizona), and Nate Enderle
(Idaho). In 1998 (prior to joining the UW staff the first time), Axman
served as the quarterbacks coach at Minnesota under Glen Mason. Before
that, Axman was the head coach at Northern Arizona from 1990-97. He
inherited a NAU program that had experienced just three winning seasons
during the 1980s and had never qualified for the Division I-AA
post-season playoffs. During his eight years with the Lumberjacks, Axman
guided the team to a 48-41 record, making him the second-winningest
coach in Northern Arizona’s history.
Axman’s NAU teams were
known for their offensive fireworks. During his eight-year career,
Axman’s teams averaged 30 points per game. His 1996 Lumberjack squad set
or tied 14 national records and averaged 43.2 points per game en route
to a 9-3 overall record and a 6-1 record in the Big Sky Conference. That
season produced a secondplace finish in the Big Sky, the school’s first
post-season appearance, and a school-best No. 6 national ranking. In
1989, Axman served as quarterbacks coach for Maryland, where he worked
with O’Donnell. In 1987-88, he was the offensive coordinator at UCLA,
where he coached Aikman. Prior to UCLA, Axman coached at Stanford
(1986), with the Denver Gold of the United States Football League
(1985), and at the University of Arizona (1980-1984), as the offensive
coordinator and quarterbacks coach. Axman previously spent a year at
Illinois, three seasons at Army, and one season at Albany State. Prior
to that, Axman’s first collegiate coaching assignment was at East
Stroudsburg State in 1974. A 1969 graduate of C.W. Post College in
Greenvale, NY, Axman went on to earn his first master’s degree from Long
Island University in 1972 and his second in 1975 while coaching at East
Stroudsburg State College.
Axman has authored 12 instructional
books on football. He has also been featured on seven well-received
instructional videos on football. He is nationally renowned for his
knowledge of offensive fundamentals, schemes, and techniques,
particularly quarterback play.