US2316994A - Football kicking trainer - Google Patents

Football kicking trainer Download PDF

Info

Publication number
US2316994A
US2316994A US398220A US39822041A US2316994A US 2316994 A US2316994 A US 2316994A US 398220 A US398220 A US 398220A US 39822041 A US39822041 A US 39822041A US 2316994 A US2316994 A US 2316994A
Authority
US
United States
Prior art keywords
foot
trainer
player
ball
kicking
Prior art date
Legal status (The legal status is an assumption and is not a legal conclusion. Google has not performed a legal analysis and makes no representation as to the accuracy of the status listed.)
Expired - Lifetime
Application number
US398220A
Inventor
Fred P Silva
Current Assignee (The listed assignees may be inaccurate. Google has not performed a legal analysis and makes no representation or warranty as to the accuracy of the list.)
Individual
Original Assignee
Individual
Priority date (The priority date is an assumption and is not a legal conclusion. Google has not performed a legal analysis and makes no representation as to the accuracy of the date listed.)
Filing date
Publication date
Application filed by Individual filed Critical Individual
Priority to US398220A priority Critical patent/US2316994A/en
Application granted granted Critical
Publication of US2316994A publication Critical patent/US2316994A/en
Anticipated expiration legal-status Critical
Expired - Lifetime legal-status Critical Current

Links

Images

Classifications

    • AHUMAN NECESSITIES
    • A63SPORTS; GAMES; AMUSEMENTS
    • A63BAPPARATUS FOR PHYSICAL TRAINING, GYMNASTICS, SWIMMING, CLIMBING, OR FENCING; BALL GAMES; TRAINING EQUIPMENT
    • A63B69/00Training appliances or apparatus for special sports
    • A63B69/002Training appliances or apparatus for special sports for football

Definitions

  • the player takes his stance with two feet squarely on the ground and the matter of balance is easy compared to the skill which a football player must exercise in any of several plays in which the football must be powerfully motivated and at the same time well directed by stroke of one foot whilst the player has a moving or still stance on the other foot.
  • the golfer uses two feet to keep his balance but the football player, with his whole body tensed, can use but one foot to stay himself against loss of balance.
  • the player hereinafter used as meaning a football player, is under three very decided mental hazards when he is kicking: he must move up and plant his foot (generally the left foot) solidly with perfect freedom from mental strain of keeping his balance; he must plant his left foot at some particular spot which is, to himself, the best; for then swinging his right foot to contact the ball; and he must complete a correct leg and foot swing to motivate the ball. All of this necessitates perfect coordination of many muscles to get his (left) footing at the right spot, to keep his balance for a second on the planted foot and then to maintain balance while on one foot and combine with these strains'the application of effort of ball kicking with one swinging leg.
  • the present invention is, therefore, an apparatus for the practice training of football players to perfect the performance of kicking plays and to so thoroughly develop his subconscious control and coordination that kicking plays may be made as reliably as hand-function plays.
  • a cardinal purpose of the invention is to provide a mechanical trainer which is totally free of restrictive ccntraptions as far as reasonably possible. Any form of restrictive devices at once create a heavy burden on the players mind because a restriction of barrier form at once engenders a hazard in front of the player. And
  • any player who practices with a restrictive device must at once go wild in a real game play for the reason that he is liberated from hamper of his practice barrier and he feels all the more mental duress when trying to make his field play without his crutches, that is, the impediments used in practice.
  • An object of this invention is to provide but two spots for the attention of the player and to eliminate all unnecessary equipment as the same may put but an additional burden on the player's attention and some undesired restriction on his limb motion. It is a particular object to provide a reliable means to safely support a placed ball, on the ground, at the conventional axis angle so that regardless of the reasonable range between the stance foot and the ball place or rack, as it will here be called, the ball will always be reliably in ready position for a kick. Obviously any deviation in the repose angle of a placed ball could but confuse the practicing player.
  • an object is to provide a simple, low-cost, practical, compact, light weight, unharnessing, right and left reversible, substantial, and capacitatively adjustable, and easily set up and knock-- down trainer for players.
  • An object is to provide a trainer of really portable nature and which can be safely packed up and placed in a players room locker.
  • the invention consists in certain advancements in this art as set forth in the ensuing disclosure and having, with the above, additional objects and advantages as hereinafter developed, and whose constructions, combinations and sub-combinations, and the details of means, and the'methcd, and the manner of its operation will be made manifest in the description of the herewith illustrative embodiment; it being understood that modifications, variations and adaptations may be resorted to within the spirit, scope and principle of the invention as it is more particularly claimed presently.
  • the drawing is a perspective of the trainer as set up for use.
  • the trainer involves two principal parts. One is a flat, horse-shoe shaped target or spotter 2, of any suitable firm material, and the other is a ball rack l6 which is isolate or wholly separate from the structure elements of the spotter 2, but is adjustably attached thereto.
  • the spotter When the spotter is pinned by its spikes 3 to the turf the player, or his coach, or instructor, will, after the players test foot-swings, set up the rack Hi and impale its spikes II in the turf according to the position shown best by test for that individual player. It is desirable that each player have his own trainer, they are inexpensive, so that frequent adjustment of a single apparatus to accommodate tall or short, or thin or big men may be avoided.
  • the rack includes a ground bar with fixed, upstanding prongs l2 preferably of flexible but unbreakable nature (rubber or helical springs being sufiicient) so that the kickers mind is Wholly at ease when kicking at a ball leaned against the far side of the parallel prongs l2 which need be but half or so the length of the conventional foot-ball.
  • prongs l2 preferably of flexible but unbreakable nature (rubber or helical springs being sufiicient) so that the kickers mind is Wholly at ease when kicking at a ball leaned against the far side of the parallel prongs l2 which need be but half or so the length of the conventional foot-ball.
  • Means are provided to adjustably connect the rack IE to the spotter 2 and a form of connection includes a rod l3, of the rack bar ill, pivotally and slidably (on its own axis) connected to one end of a substantial radius link l4 mounted on one end of a gage bar I5 which is pivoted and slidable on a block [6 having a set-screw l! to fix the bar at the desired position to hold the rack It of the spiked spotter 2.
  • the block it has a king-pin l8 turning on a vertical axis in the outer end of a reach arm H) which is slidable in a box 28 of which two are fixed on the side shanks of the U-shaped spotter structure.
  • the arm l 9 is insertable endwise into either box 23 for used the trainer by either a right-footer or a left-footer (player) and the structure making up the rack assembly is set up on either the right or the left side of the spotter 2, accordingly.
  • set-screw 2! in the box will hold the reach arm It will be apparent that a player can run or walk up and plant his stance foot in the turf space between the shanks of the spotter 2 with all freedom from either counter-emotions on his mind either because of obstacle elimination at or near the foot space (the spotter frame being quite thin but wide enough in shank face to be a fair target in his eyes at practice), and with all freedom for any natural motion of his stance foot until it is properly laid on the turf spot exposed in the spotter 2.
  • a football kicking trainer including a holder whereby to retain a placed ball in the usual kick receiving position, a stance foot guide consisting of a fiat toe line bar having rearwardly extending side shanks spaced to form a foot sole spot rear of the said bar, and a forwardly extending rod mounted for axial adjustment on and as to the desired shank, and a means for laterally adjusting the holder as to the said rod.
  • a football kicking holder and trainer eluding a holder whereby to retain a pl ced ball in the usual kick receiving position, a foot guide having a stance-foot placing spot, and a rhea for adjustably fixing the holder in an isolai position laterally and wholly forward of parts and including a reach rod mounted b... one of the guide portions on one side or" the said 4.
  • a football holder a foot spot for .ing having spaced shanks connected by a line bar at the front ends, and means fixably adios able on either shank and reaching forwa of the guide parts and connected to the hol fix it in isolated position laterally and forwar of the guide.

Description

Filed June 16, 1941 f Md Patented Apr. 20, 1943 UNITED STATES PATENT OFFICE FOOTBALL KICKING TRAINER Fred P. Silva, Los Angeles, Calif.
Application June 16, 1941, Serial No. 398,220
Claims.
In the game of golf the player takes his stance with two feet squarely on the ground and the matter of balance is easy compared to the skill which a football player must exercise in any of several plays in which the football must be powerfully motivated and at the same time well directed by stroke of one foot whilst the player has a moving or still stance on the other foot. The golfer uses two feet to keep his balance but the football player, with his whole body tensed, can use but one foot to stay himself against loss of balance.
The player, hereinafter used as meaning a football player, is under three very decided mental hazards when he is kicking: he must move up and plant his foot (generally the left foot) solidly with perfect freedom from mental strain of keeping his balance; he must plant his left foot at some particular spot which is, to himself, the best; for then swinging his right foot to contact the ball; and he must complete a correct leg and foot swing to motivate the ball. All of this necessitates perfect coordination of many muscles to get his (left) footing at the right spot, to keep his balance for a second on the planted foot and then to maintain balance while on one foot and combine with these strains'the application of effort of ball kicking with one swinging leg.
To attain fair perfection of kicking plays the player must have learned to (1) plant his left foot, (2) to get his stance balance on theplanted not have his election as to the period of time to complete his negotiations for in a fraction of a second his whole preparations may be exploded by a tackle or a block. Therefore it behooves every player to practice up on his kicking plays.
Every season a great many games of football are lost or tied because a goal kick went astray.
The present invention is, therefore, an apparatus for the practice training of football players to perfect the performance of kicking plays and to so thoroughly develop his subconscious control and coordination that kicking plays may be made as reliably as hand-function plays.
A cardinal purpose of the invention is to provide a mechanical trainer which is totally free of restrictive ccntraptions as far as reasonably possible. Any form of restrictive devices at once create a heavy burden on the players mind because a restriction of barrier form at once engenders a hazard in front of the player. And
even more importantly, any player who practices with a restrictive device must at once go wild in a real game play for the reason that he is liberated from hamper of his practice barrier and he feels all the more mental duress when trying to make his field play without his crutches, that is, the impediments used in practice.
It is a purpose of this invention to provide a trainer which enables practice kicking under field conditions just as simulative of game conditions as practical so that when the practiced player at last comes into a game he has exactly the same reactions in making a kick that he has sensed in his practice plays. The consequence is that he, having no new emotions to counteract, proceeds to stance, balance and kick cocrdination just as though he was at practice.
It is of the most importance that the kicking leg and foot be entirely unhampered-kept out of a groove, as it Were-while practicing, and indeed the same freedom is desirable of the stance leg, be it right or left.
An object of this invention is to provide but two spots for the attention of the player and to eliminate all unnecessary equipment as the same may put but an additional burden on the player's attention and some undesired restriction on his limb motion. It is a particular object to provide a reliable means to safely support a placed ball, on the ground, at the conventional axis angle so that regardless of the reasonable range between the stance foot and the ball place or rack, as it will here be called, the ball will always be reliably in ready position for a kick. Obviously any deviation in the repose angle of a placed ball could but confuse the practicing player.
It is an object of the invention to provide a trainer which imposes the minimum vertical wall face or barrier so as to eliminate to the greatest degree a fearsome barrier which would detrimentally distract the players one aim of impinging a good, direct kick on the ball, or, briefly, an object is to provide a trackless, wall-less, nonconfining trainer for the game player here concerned.
Also, an object is to provide a simple, low-cost, practical, compact, light weight, unharnessing, right and left reversible, substantial, and capacitatively adjustable, and easily set up and knock-- down trainer for players. An object is to provide a trainer of really portable nature and which can be safely packed up and placed in a players room locker.
The invention consists in certain advancements in this art as set forth in the ensuing disclosure and having, with the above, additional objects and advantages as hereinafter developed, and whose constructions, combinations and sub-combinations, and the details of means, and the'methcd, and the manner of its operation will be made manifest in the description of the herewith illustrative embodiment; it being understood that modifications, variations and adaptations may be resorted to within the spirit, scope and principle of the invention as it is more particularly claimed presently.
The drawing is a perspective of the trainer as set up for use.
The trainer involves two principal parts. One is a flat, horse-shoe shaped target or spotter 2, of any suitable firm material, and the other is a ball rack l6 which is isolate or wholly separate from the structure elements of the spotter 2, but is adjustably attached thereto.
When the spotter is pinned by its spikes 3 to the turf the player, or his coach, or instructor, will, after the players test foot-swings, set up the rack Hi and impale its spikes II in the turf according to the position shown best by test for that individual player. It is desirable that each player have his own trainer, they are inexpensive, so that frequent adjustment of a single apparatus to accommodate tall or short, or thin or big men may be avoided.
The rack includes a ground bar with fixed, upstanding prongs l2 preferably of flexible but unbreakable nature (rubber or helical springs being sufiicient) so that the kickers mind is Wholly at ease when kicking at a ball leaned against the far side of the parallel prongs l2 which need be but half or so the length of the conventional foot-ball.
Means are provided to adjustably connect the rack IE to the spotter 2 and a form of connection includes a rod l3, of the rack bar ill, pivotally and slidably (on its own axis) connected to one end of a substantial radius link l4 mounted on one end of a gage bar I5 which is pivoted and slidable on a block [6 having a set-screw l! to fix the bar at the desired position to hold the rack It of the spiked spotter 2. The block it has a king-pin l8 turning on a vertical axis in the outer end of a reach arm H) which is slidable in a box 28 of which two are fixed on the side shanks of the U-shaped spotter structure. The arm l 9 is insertable endwise into either box 23 for used the trainer by either a right-footer or a left-footer (player) and the structure making up the rack assembly is set up on either the right or the left side of the spotter 2, accordingly. A
set-screw 2! in the box will hold the reach arm It will be apparent that a player can run or walk up and plant his stance foot in the turf space between the shanks of the spotter 2 with all freedom from either counter-emotions on his mind either because of obstacle elimination at or near the foot space (the spotter frame being quite thin but wide enough in shank face to be a fair target in his eyes at practice), and with all freedom for any natural motion of his stance foot until it is properly laid on the turf spot exposed in the spotter 2. Under such utter freedom the player will practice up to his best ability in planting his stance foot and getting his poise or balance on the planted foot and can carry this perfection with him into game plays because the only thing he will miss, consciously, will be the small, visual target made by the set spotter in practice work. Having learned his coordination of foot planting and poise of body on the planted foot, if the ball is in his most favorable aspect on the rack of the trainer then his next function is to change his balance and swing his kicking leg and foot with all his might. All his sub-conscious faculty comes into work to keep his poise and make the kick because he has, by this instrument, been tuned up to synchronize every muscle in his body without the least use of his mind to that endhis ultimate object is now, on a fraction of a second, to engage the ball at the right place with full dynamic concentration.
Thus a player brought up under the influence of this trainer has but two thoughts to worry with; to put his stance foot down on the right spot as it has to do with the placed ball, and then to correctly contact the ball. He negotiates all his approach to the ball wholly oblivious to any other element or factor of obstruction or re striction. Put him into play in a game on a field and he is at once at home (to make a kick) as if be had his trainer: it has never been a harness on him, nor kept him in harness as to any natural play of his legs in coming up to the small foot space in the spotter and finishing off the kick. He has learned that if the ball has been set he has but to plant his stance foot in his learned position and then to swing the kicking foot against the ball. In a game the absence of the trainer does not disconcert the learned player because in its use he enjoyed full free leg motion that he must take on a field of This trainer teaches the player great immanent coordination for physical balance during the whole play kick and at the same time inculcates reliant efficiency in the transitive function of motivating the ball. In the trainer the approach of the stance foot and of the kicking foot to the stance spot and to the presented ball are both as entirely free as in an actual game play and it is the eradication of hazard f' l ill practice that generates a wholesome confidence under stress of game tension.
What is claimed is:
l. A football kicking trainer including a holder whereby to retain a placed ball in the usual kick receiving position, a stance foot guide consisting of a fiat toe line bar having rearwardly extending side shanks spaced to form a foot sole spot rear of the said bar, and a forwardly extending rod mounted for axial adjustment on and as to the desired shank, and a means for laterally adjusting the holder as to the said rod.
2. The trainer of claim 1; the holder being wholly forward of the guide parts.
3. A football kicking holder and trainer eluding a holder whereby to retain a pl ced ball in the usual kick receiving position, a foot guide having a stance-foot placing spot, and a rhea for adjustably fixing the holder in an isolai position laterally and wholly forward of parts and including a reach rod mounted b... one of the guide portions on one side or" the said 4. The trainer of claim 3; and means on i c said rod for positioning the holder in dlfl'e. -t lateral relations as to the guide.
5. A football holder, a foot spot for .ing having spaced shanks connected by a line bar at the front ends, and means fixably adios able on either shank and reaching forwa of the guide parts and connected to the hol fix it in isolated position laterally and forwar of the guide.
FRED P. SILVA.
US398220A 1941-06-16 1941-06-16 Football kicking trainer Expired - Lifetime US2316994A (en)

Priority Applications (1)

Application Number Priority Date Filing Date Title
US398220A US2316994A (en) 1941-06-16 1941-06-16 Football kicking trainer

Applications Claiming Priority (1)

Application Number Priority Date Filing Date Title
US398220A US2316994A (en) 1941-06-16 1941-06-16 Football kicking trainer

Publications (1)

Publication Number Publication Date
US2316994A true US2316994A (en) 1943-04-20

Family

ID=23574492

Family Applications (1)

Application Number Title Priority Date Filing Date
US398220A Expired - Lifetime US2316994A (en) 1941-06-16 1941-06-16 Football kicking trainer

Country Status (1)

Country Link
US (1) US2316994A (en)

Cited By (7)

* Cited by examiner, † Cited by third party
Publication number Priority date Publication date Assignee Title
US3087726A (en) * 1960-10-25 1963-04-30 Pogue Albert Football kicking tee
US3105686A (en) * 1961-05-12 1963-10-01 Elsea Asa James Football kicking tee
US20050221918A1 (en) * 2004-04-02 2005-10-06 Sharrocks Mark P Soccer ball kicking training device
US20100298074A1 (en) * 2009-05-19 2010-11-25 James Eric Esposito Footwork grid to train football players to step correctly
AT505485B1 (en) * 2007-07-04 2011-09-15 Gangl Eunike FOOTBALL TRAINING DEVICE
WO2013049865A2 (en) * 2011-10-01 2013-04-04 Smith Martin Leon Sports practice aid
US20170173429A1 (en) * 2015-12-17 2017-06-22 Chad Jasmine Contoured terrain-conforming stance guide with foot opening

Cited By (11)

* Cited by examiner, † Cited by third party
Publication number Priority date Publication date Assignee Title
US3087726A (en) * 1960-10-25 1963-04-30 Pogue Albert Football kicking tee
US3105686A (en) * 1961-05-12 1963-10-01 Elsea Asa James Football kicking tee
US20050221918A1 (en) * 2004-04-02 2005-10-06 Sharrocks Mark P Soccer ball kicking training device
WO2005099831A1 (en) * 2004-04-02 2005-10-27 Skorrpi Corp. Soccer ball kicking training device
US7033289B2 (en) * 2004-04-02 2006-04-25 Sharrocks Mark P Soccer ball kicking training device
AT505485B1 (en) * 2007-07-04 2011-09-15 Gangl Eunike FOOTBALL TRAINING DEVICE
US20100298074A1 (en) * 2009-05-19 2010-11-25 James Eric Esposito Footwork grid to train football players to step correctly
WO2013049865A2 (en) * 2011-10-01 2013-04-04 Smith Martin Leon Sports practice aid
WO2013049865A3 (en) * 2011-10-01 2013-06-13 Smith Martin Leon Sports practice aid
US20170173429A1 (en) * 2015-12-17 2017-06-22 Chad Jasmine Contoured terrain-conforming stance guide with foot opening
US9919194B2 (en) * 2015-12-17 2018-03-20 Chad Jasmine Contoured terrain-conforming stance guide with foot opening

Similar Documents

Publication Publication Date Title
US4322084A (en) Golfer's stance training device
US2527906A (en) Baseball practice apparatus
US5037094A (en) Baseball hitting instructional device
US8784230B1 (en) Swing training device
US5873798A (en) Soccer speed agility and conditioning training apparatus
US7074131B1 (en) Golf grip kit and swing exercise device
US8167743B1 (en) Football training system
US7465242B2 (en) Swing plane training method
US3806121A (en) Sportsman{3 s muscle developer game apparatus
US7775914B1 (en) Baseball swing training device
US2316994A (en) Football kicking trainer
WO2016209994A1 (en) Rotating training device for kicking a soccer ball or football
US4895372A (en) Golf training device
US8100778B2 (en) Golf training device
US5398937A (en) Golf swing training device
US3384377A (en) Golf stance guide
US2606026A (en) Golf instruction device
US3343268A (en) Foot placement guide for golfers
US5328186A (en) Golfer's stance guide
US2239200A (en) Device for training football kickers
US3472511A (en) Apparatus for practice kicking of football goals
US7204767B2 (en) Swing programmer apparatus
US20190232139A1 (en) Golf-Training Apparatus
US10688369B2 (en) Lacrosse face-off/draw control training device
KR20240035124A (en) Swing training apparatus for various golf clubs