Young receivers need to understand that running a route isn’t just about speed: it’s about hitting a spot and cutting hard. This drill builds that habit before anything else matters.
Equipment needed: 8 cones, 1 ball.
Setup: Place three cones in a line 5 yards apart on the grass. Create a simple “L” pattern: cone at the start, one 5 yards straight, one 5 yards to the right. Receiver lines up at the first cone. Quarterback stands 2 yards behind.
How to run it:
- Call out the route: “Go straight, then right.” Receiver runs hard to the second cone, plants foot, cuts right at the third cone.
- QB throws the ball to hit the receiver at or just after the final cone.
- Receiver catches and walks back. Do 8 reps.
- Switch routes: straight then left, diagonal then right, whatever pattern keeps it simple.
- Add a second receiver and run both simultaneously (each on their own cone pattern).
What to look for:
Watch for hard plant steps at cone cuts. Many kids round their routes; the cone should make them stop and redirect. The QB’s job is to throw accurately so the receiver doesn’t have to adjust mid-cut. If throws are off, fix the QB’s footwork first, not the receiver’s route.
Variation: For older kids in the same age group (closer to 7), add a defender who starts 2 yards away and tries to tag the receiver before they plant at the next cone. This teaches receivers to accelerate into their cuts, not slow down.