tag:blogger.com,1999:blog-57555659193793527732024-02-20T09:29:42.910-08:00Coach Drew's Coaching BlogCoach Drewhttp://www.blogger.com/profile/10117986274827413479noreply@blogger.comBlogger10125tag:blogger.com,1999:blog-5755565919379352773.post-82986589455611178171981-05-13T07:00:00.000-07:002007-10-04T05:42:49.663-07:00"Kill or be Killed" Running a Good Offense<strong><u>Basics<br /></u></strong><br />1. Sets Pushed Out to the Antennas (4’s and 5’s)<br />a. Deep Shots<br />b. Line Shots<br />c. Cross Court<br />d. Hard Cross Court<br />2. Setter/Middle Connection<br />a. Quick Sets (Timing)<br />* Push 1’s<br />* Back 1’s<br />b. 2’s<br />3. Pass Low/Quick to the Setter (Especially Free Balls)<br />a. Quicker Pass = Quicker Offense<br />b. Free Ball = Quicker Pass, Set and Kill<br /><br /><strong><u>After Basics<br /></u></strong><br />1. “Tweeners”<br />a. Used AFTER Posts are Set (4’s and 5’s)<br />b. Usually Quick (31’s and B31’s)<br />2. Back Row Sets<br />a. Especially Right Side<br />* Then You Always Have a 3rd Option<br />* Right Side should be your Best Back Row Hitter<br />b. Outside Hitter Usually Runs ‘Pipe’<br />3. Shoots<br />a. Outside – ALMOST ALWAYS Cross Court<br />b. Back – ONLY IF your Setter is Good Enough<br /><br /><strong><u>Advanced</u></strong><br /><br />1. Trick Plays<br />2 Tandems and Stacks<br />3. Swing Plays<br />4. Etc. (Coaches Prerogative)Coach Drewhttp://www.blogger.com/profile/10117986274827413479noreply@blogger.com0tag:blogger.com,1999:blog-5755565919379352773.post-89303570844028506581981-05-13T06:21:00.000-07:002007-10-04T05:47:17.038-07:00Defense, Offense and Scoring Points<strong><u>D e f e n s e<br /></u></strong>"Pull Them Out Of Their Offense"<br /><br /><strong><u>Best Methods of Defense</u></strong><br />1. A Tough Serve<br />2. A Good Closed Block<br />3. Good Coverage of Open Shots (Line, Angle, Etc.)<br />4. Tip Coverage<br /><br /><strong><u>O f f e n s e<br /></u></strong>“Better the Ball!”<br /><br /><strong><u>Best Way to Run a Good Offense</u></strong><br />1. Good Pass<br />2. Eye on the Court (Hitters in Position)<br />3. Smart Set (With an Eye on the Defense)<br />4. Good Hit (Pushed to the Hitter)<br />5. Smart Hit<br />6. Power Hit<br /><br /><strong><u>S c o r i n g P o i n t s<br /></u></strong><br /><strong><u>Best Ways</u></strong>:<br />1. Ace Serves<br />2. Stuff Blocks<br />3. Better TransitioningCoach Drewhttp://www.blogger.com/profile/10117986274827413479noreply@blogger.com0tag:blogger.com,1999:blog-5755565919379352773.post-70434191705737000591981-05-13T06:18:00.000-07:002007-10-04T05:46:50.934-07:00Passing: Starting Your Offense<strong><u>Basics</u></strong><br /><br />Stay Low<br />Arms’ Straight, Knees Bent<br />Weight Forward, Stand on the Balls of your Feet<br />Be Loose and Ready to Move<br />Make a Flat Passing Area<br />Stay Behind the Ball, Pass INTO it<br />Face Towards the Setter<br /><br /><strong><u>Digging<br /></u></strong><br />Hands in the “Ready” Position (Not Down in case the Ball Comes High)<br />Watch Your Blockers<br />Watch the Hitter<br />Get into Position<br />Know your Position on the Court<br />a. Know where the Lines are<br />b. Know where your Teammates are<br />Stay Low, Even More than Usual<br />Face INTO the Court<br /><br /><strong><u>Serve / Receive and Free Ball Passing<br /></u></strong><br />Hands on your Knees to Start<br />Watch and Know the Server<br />React Early<br />a. Don’t wait until it gets close to react<br />b. Move to the Ball<br />c. React BEFORE the Ball gets to the Net“Push” the Ball to the Setter- Quicker Pass=Quicker PlayCoach Drewhttp://www.blogger.com/profile/10117986274827413479noreply@blogger.com0tag:blogger.com,1999:blog-5755565919379352773.post-45665879862371067111981-05-13T06:14:00.000-07:002007-10-04T05:46:27.593-07:00Setting<strong><u>13 Setting Laws to Live By:<br /></u></strong><br />1. Set the “HOT HAND”<br />If Someone has been hitting well, Keep Setting Them<br /><br />2. Pick on the Weak Blockers<br />Once you find them, move your plays to overload that side of the court<br />This Works Especially well with SHORT Setters<br /><br />3. Run the Middles, But Don’t FORCE the Middles<br />Running the Middle Well Opens up your outside Hitters<br />If the passes aren’t there and you FORCE the middles, it can pull them out of their game, and your defense will crumble<br /><br />4. Set Your Hitters, not just TO your Hitters<br />Part of Being a Setter is Knowing your Hitters<br />a. Know WHO your hitters are (Front and Back Row)<br />b. Know where/How High/How Fast/Etc. Each Player Likes their Sets (Front and Back Row<br />c. Even on a Bad Pass, Set the Best Option<br />d. Don’t Forget your Back Row Hitters<br /><br />5. Remember: Bad Hits Happen to Good Hitters<br />If One of Your Good Hitters makes a hitting Error, don’t be Afraid to Go Right Back to Him<br />a. A Good Hitter Will Learn From their Mistakes<br />i. If They Block Him Line, Next Time He’ll go Angle, etc.<br />ii. If they triple block, he’ll tip or go High Hands<br />b. If You Don’t Set Him Soon, you lose your Opportunity to Regain your confidence in him, and for him to regain his confidence in himself<br /><br />6. Consistent is Better than Flashy<br />It Doesn’t matter how good ONE PLAY is, if you can’t back it up with a consistantly good offense<br />No one Wins Games with ONLY FLASHY PLAYS, but some try<br /><br />7. Open your Middles by Running your Posts and Vice Versa<br />Outside Sets (Right or Left) need to be Pushed Out to the Antennas<br />Middle Sets need to be Quick<br /><br />8. Dump with Purpose, NOT as a LAST RESORT<br />A Dump is an Offensive Tool, not an Act o Desperation<br />Remember: Dumps are Blind, Hitters can see their Blockers<br /><br />9. Wait for the OPPORTUNE MOMENT<br />Big Plays AT THE RIGHT TIME change the Momentum of a Game<br />Wait for the BEST TIME to Strike<br />a. After the Other Team Misses a Serve<br />b. After they Make a Hitting Error (Especially into a Block)<br />c. After a Questionable Call (Either Side)<br />d. After a Time-Out<br />e. After a Big Play<br /><br />10. It’s Never Anyone’s TURN to be Set<br />Don’t Set Someone Just Because they haven’t been set for a While, ALWAYS SET WITH A PURPOSE<br /><br />11. If Something’s Working, Do it until it Doesn’t<br />If the Other Team Can’t Stop It, Keep it up until they Can<br />You Haven’t Run it ENOUGH until they’ve shut it down TWICE<br /><br />12. Don’t Forget the Back Row<br />Back Row can be used as much as a weapon as the Front Row if done correctly<br />Right Side Back Row Means you ALWAYS have a 3rd Hitting Option<br />‘Pipe’ Sets are a Great Way to Throw off the Blockers Timing<br /><br />13. Always Know “WHY?”<br />The Best Setters can go through an entire game, Play-by-Play, and tell you why they set EVERY SINGLE SET<br />They Could tell you Which were mistakesAnd What they would change if they were to do it againCoach Drewhttp://www.blogger.com/profile/10117986274827413479noreply@blogger.com0tag:blogger.com,1999:blog-5755565919379352773.post-23424099574891017021981-05-13T06:09:00.000-07:002007-10-04T05:45:58.636-07:00Hitting<u><strong>Hitting Laws to Live By:<br /></strong></u><br />1. Never Talk Negatively to your Setter<br />If they are having an Off Night, HIT BETTER<br />Remember: They Choose How Many Sets You Get<br />Remember: Their Setting Percentage is Probably Better than Your Hitting Percentage<br /><br />2. There are No Bad Sets<br />A Good Hitter can do SOMETHING EFFECTIVE with EVERY Set<br /><br />3. See Your Blockers, Hit the Ball<br />ALWAYS Keep the Ball IN FRONT OF YOU, this allows you to See the Block, and the Ball<br />If you don’t know where the Block is, How can you Hit Around it?<br />A Hard Shot INTO the Block is Worth Much Less than a Soft Shot Hit AROUND the Block<br />This also Gives you the Chance to TOOL the Block<br /><br />4. A Tip that Drops is Worth as Much as a Hard Hit –Sometimes More<br />Smart Tips are as Much a Weapon as Hard Hits<br />They’re Worth the Same Amount of Points<br />They Are Much More Aggravating than Big Hits to Your Opponents<br /><br />5. Hits Open Tips, and Vice Versa<br />After a Couple of Great Hits the Passers will Dig in, and the Blockers will Press more, That’s a Great time to Tip<br />After a Tip, the Blockers won’t Press as Much, and You Can Hit Right Down the Front of them<br /><br />6. Pick on the Weak Blockers<br />If Their Hands are Flat, Tool Them<br />If they aren’t Pressing, Hit Down the Front of them<br />If the Middle’s Late, Hit Their Lead Arm (the one closest to the other Blocker) as they come Over<br />If they reach Behind, Tip Just Over their Head, and Out of Reach of their Arm<br />If They’re Short, Speed Up your Arm Swing and Hit Down onto their Block and Out<br />If they Don’t Jump very High, Hit Down onto their Block and Out<br /><br />7. Pick Your Spot, Don’t Just Hit Hard<br />If You See a Spot open, Hit towards that Spot, not just Cross or Line, but at that Spot<br />Hit Towards the Weak Passer –OR- the Setter<br /><br />8. Tip in Smart Spots<br />Tip Where it will Throw-Off the Offense the Most:<br />a. Towards the Setter<br />b. Over the Block and Short<br />c. Just Off the Block, to the Right or the Left (Make the Block Reach)<br />d. Where it will take the Most Powerful Hitter out of their Approach<br /><br />9. Hit the High Percentage Shots:<br />Line<br />Hard Cross<br />Deep Cross<br /><br />10. Pick on the All-Star<br />If you can pull Him out of his Game, He will usually pull the rest of the Team Down With Him<br />Most of the time, even if he just dove on the ground, the Setter will Set Him<br />Put Him on the Ground, and that will Throw off the Other Team’s Offense<br /><br />1. It also Makes Him Easier to Dig/BlockCoach Drewhttp://www.blogger.com/profile/10117986274827413479noreply@blogger.com0tag:blogger.com,1999:blog-5755565919379352773.post-55800964756973385771981-05-13T06:07:00.000-07:002007-10-04T05:45:37.569-07:00Serving (The Ten Commandments of Serving)<strong><u>Never Miss A Serve When:<br /></u></strong><br />1. Your Teammate Just Missed a Serve<br />2. You Just Came Out of a Time-Out<br />3. Your Opponent Just Missed a Serve<br />4. You Missed Your Last Serve<br />5. The Last Play Ended with a Questionable call<br /><br /><br /><u><strong>Serving Laws to Live By:<br /></strong></u><br />1. Serve the Weak Passer<br /><br />If Someone Misses a Pass, Serve to them Again (and again, and again…)<br /><br />2. Mistakes Breed More Mistakes<br /><br />It Doesn’t matter what Mistake is Made, (Passing, Serving, Hitting, Blocking) it will Throw off their Game- Take Advantage of That<br /><br />3. Serve the “Head-Case Power-Hitter”<br /><br />It Doesn’t Matter if He Passes Most of them Perfectly, one missed pass can and will throw off the rest of his game.<br />It Becomes a very effective way to take him out of the game<br /><br /><br />4. Make Them Move<br /><br />A lot of Passers are lazy, instead of moving they’ll reach instead of move<br />Making them move will really hurt a lazy teams’ Passing (and most teams are Lazy)<br />Moving a Front row passer around can really throw off their offense<br />NEVER SERVE STRAIGH TO A PERSON- make them move<br /><br />5. Serve the Setter<br /><br />Especially unexperienced setters, many times won’t know what to do<br />Many times the setter will take the pass, and this will throw off the teams play, and limit their options for a set<br />Even better than serving to where the setter is, is serving into the path that they’re running to<br />Even if the setter doesn’t pass the ball, some of the hardest passes are those close to the setterCoach Drewhttp://www.blogger.com/profile/10117986274827413479noreply@blogger.com0tag:blogger.com,1999:blog-5755565919379352773.post-42900889758405456001981-05-13T06:03:00.000-07:002007-10-04T05:45:08.949-07:00Blocking: Controlling their Offense<strong><u>Basics<br /></u></strong><br />Line up With the Hitter’s Arm, not His Body<br />Watch the Angle of the Hitter’s Approach to Judge where to Set the Block<br />Watch the Hitter, then the Set, then the Hitter to get your timing<br />Jump Straight up, THEN Press<br />Press With your HANDS, Don’t Swing Your Arms<br />Keep Your Hands Turned into the Court<br />Block Over the Ball<br />*A well Contacted Block will Hit the Palms of your Hands<br />Watch Your Hitter, so that you can call out if they tip, or roll shot<br />Never Reach Back, If they Tip over your Head, let your Back Row People Pick it up<br />Remember: A Block is designed to Control their Offense, It doesn’t always need to end the play<br />*Limiting their Options, many times, is just as effective<br />*Many Hitters Will Miss their Hit if you Take away their Favorite Shot<br /><br /><strong><u>On the Net<br /></u></strong><br />Jump when the Hitters Arm Pulls Back to Swing, Not When the Hitter Jumps<br />Reach for the Ball, “Cup it”<br />Push Farther over the Net to Limit the Hitters Options and increase your chance of getting a “Stuff Block”<br /><strong><u></u></strong><br /><strong><u>Back Row</u></strong> (Behind the 10 Foot Line)<br /><br />Jump when the Hitter Contacts the Ball<br />Don’t Push as far Over the Net, Instead Reach Higher<br />Press with Your Hands when the ball contacts them<br />Watch For the Miss-Hit, be careful not to Accidentally Get tooled off the top of your hands<br />Don’t Jump if you’re late, instead call “Down Ball”Coach Drewhttp://www.blogger.com/profile/10117986274827413479noreply@blogger.com0tag:blogger.com,1999:blog-5755565919379352773.post-59590677802018046511981-05-13T06:01:00.001-07:002007-10-04T05:44:42.189-07:00Transitioning From Defense to Offense<strong><u>Middles<br /></u></strong><br />Watch the Setter, then the Pass, then the Setter<br />Stay out of the Setter’s Way, Don’t make the setter go around you<br />Stay on the Left (“On-Hand”) of the Setter, if at all Possible, until you come in to Hit (then move to where your set is going)<br />Always Go up for a Hit, try to draw the Middle Blocker (no matter how Bad the pass)<br />If at all Possible Middles on the Front row should NEVER Pass<br /><br /><strong><u>Outsides<br /></u></strong><br />Should Be out and ready to hit First (As soon as you see that the Ball is not going to you)<br />If the Pass is Bad Be ready for a Troubled Set<br />If you Pass the Ball, Pass it High, so that you have time to get out and take an approach<br /><br /><strong><u>Opposites<br /></u></strong><br />Wait and Back up for your Approach AFTER you see the pass<br />Be Ready to set the ball, just in case<br />When you see that the Setter can get to the Ball, THEN Get out for an ApproachOpposites need to always be ready to hit in the Back RowCoach Drewhttp://www.blogger.com/profile/10117986274827413479noreply@blogger.com0tag:blogger.com,1999:blog-5755565919379352773.post-15889125186211492111981-05-13T06:01:00.000-07:002007-10-04T05:44:13.343-07:00Transitioning From Defense to Offense<strong><u>Middles<br /></u></strong><br />Watch the Setter, then the Pass, then the Setter<br />Stay out of the Setter’s Way, Don’t make the setter go around you<br />Stay on the Left (“On-Hand”) of the Setter, if at all Possible, until you come in to Hit (then move to where your set is going)<br />Always Go up for a Hit, try to draw the Middle Blocker (no matter how Bad the pass)<br />If at all Possible Middles on the Front row should NEVER Pass<br /><br /><strong><u>Outsides<br /></u></strong><br />Should Be out and ready to hit First (As soon as you see that the Ball is not going to you)<br />If the Pass is Bad Be ready for a Troubled Set<br />If you Pass the Ball, Pass it High, so that you have time to get out and take an approach<br /><br /><strong><u>Opposites<br /></u></strong><br />Wait and Back up for your Approach AFTER you see the pass<br />Be Ready to set the ball, just in case<br />When you see that the Setter can get to the Ball, THEN Get out for an ApproachOpposites need to always be ready to hit in the Back RowCoach Drewhttp://www.blogger.com/profile/10117986274827413479noreply@blogger.com0tag:blogger.com,1999:blog-5755565919379352773.post-54560118143514394611981-05-13T05:59:00.000-07:002007-10-04T06:40:23.846-07:00Great Volleyball Quotes1. “I Teach them Correct Principles and they Govern Themselves.” -Joseph Smith<br />2. “What I Do Depends on How I Feel About What I Know” -Hyrum Smith<br />3. “Better the Ball” -Coach Joann Reeve, Ricks College/BYU-Idaho<br />4. “In the Final Analysis, the Ball Only Knows One Thing: The Angle of the Forearm it Contacts.” -Carl McGowan, BYU<br />5. “In Volleyball Offense, it’s KILL or BE KILLED.” -Coach Joann Reeve, Ricks College/BYU-Idaho<br />6. “When the Time for Action is Come, the Time to Prepare is Over.” -Thomas Monson<br />7. “Out of Small and Simple Things Proceedeth That which is Great.” -Alma<br />8. “It’s Not Important who Starts the Game, but Who Finishes it.” -John Wooden, UCLA<br />9. “If Winning Isn’t Everything, Why Do They Keep Score?” -Vince Lombardi<br />10. “Success is Where Preparation and Opportunity Meet.” -Bobby Unser<br />11. “As Your Beliefs About Limits Change, the Limits themselves Change.” -Terry Orlick<br />12. “You Can Motivate by Fear, and You Can Motivate by Reward. But Both are only Temporary. The Only Lasting thing is Self Motivation.” –Homer Rice<br />13. “It’s a Very Bad Thing to Become Accustomed to Good Luck.” –Publilius Syrus<br />14. “The 6 W’s: Work Will Win When Wishing Doesn’t.” –Todd Blackledge<br />15. “Good Guys are a Dime a Dozen, but an Aggressive leader is Priceless.” –Red Blaik<br />16. “Success is about Having, Excellence is about Being. Success is about Having Money and Fame, but Excellence is Being the Best you can Be.” –Mike Ditka<br />17. “It ‘Aint what you Eat but how you Chew it.” –Delbert McClinton<br />18. “The Difference between Failure and Success is doing a thing Nearly Right and doing it Exactly Right.” –Edward C. Simmons<br />19. “The Harder you Work, the Harder it is to Surrender.”<br />20. “You Can’t Make a Great Play unless you do it First in Practice.” –Chuck Noll<br />21. “Things that Hurt, Instruct.” –Benjamin Franklin<br />22. “It isn’t Hard to be Good from Time to Time in Sports. What is Tough, is Being Good Every Day.” –Willie Mays<br />23. “He Who Falls in Love with Himself will have No Rivals.” –Anonymous<br />24. “When You Get to the End of Your Rope, Tie A Knot and Hold On.” –Franklin D. Roosevelt<br />25. “Difficulties in Life are Intended to make us Better, Not Bitter.” –Dan Reeves<br />26. “I Could Have been a Rhodes Scholar, Except for My Grades.” –Duffy Daugherty<br />27. “Sometimes it is More Important to Discover what one Cannot Do than what one Can.” –Lin Yutang<br />28. “Courage is Resistance to Fear, Mastery of Fear, Not Absence of Fear.” –Anonymous<br />29. “I’d Run Over My Mother to Win the Super Bowl.” –Russ Grimm<br />30. “I Don’t Have Any Tricky Plays, I’d Rather Have Tricky Players.” –Abe Lemons<br />31. “You are Never Really Playing an Opponent. You are Playing Yourself, Your Own Highest Standards, and When You Reach Your Limits, That is Real Joy.” –Arthur Ashe<br />32. “Victory Belongs to the Most Persevering.” –Napolean<br />33. “Every Game is an Opportunity to Measure Yourself against your Own Potential.” –Bud Wilkinson<br />34. “Everyone I Meet is in Some Way My Superior.” –William Shakespeare<br />35. “I have seen that in Any Great Undertaking, it is Not Enough for a Man to Depend Simply Upon Himself.” –Lone Man<br />36. “One Finger Cannot Lift a Pebble.” –Hopi Saying<br />37. “Team Guts Always Beat Individual Greatness.” –Bob Zuppke<br />38. “One Man Can be a Crucial Ingredient on a Team, but One Man Cannot Make a Team.” –Kareem Abdul-Jabbar<br />39. “This is the Second Most Exciting Indoor Sport in the World, and the Other One Shouldn’t Have Spectators.” –Dick Vertleib<br />40. “Be Strong in Body, Clean in Mind, and Lofty in Ideals.” –James Naismith<br />41. “Sometimes a Players Greatest Challenge is coming to Grips with His Role on the Team.” –Scottie Pippen<br />42. “The Pitcher has got only a Ball. I’ve got a Bat. So the Percentage of Weapons is in My Favor and I let the Fellow with the Ball do the Fretting.” –Hank Aaron<br />43. “Never Quit. It is the Easiest Cop-out in the World. Set a Goal and don’t Quit until you Attain it. When you do Attain it, Set Another Goal, and don’t Quit until you Reach it. Never Quit.” –Bear Bryant<br />44. “There’s No Substitute for Guts.” –Bear Bryant<br />45. “Show Class, Have Pride and Display Character. If you do, Winning takes care of Itself.” –Bear Bryant<br />46. “He Can’t Run, He Can’t Pass, and He Can’t Kick- All He Can Do is Beat You.” –Bear Bryant (Speaking of QB Pat Trammel)<br />47. “When You make a Mistake, Admit it: Learn from it and Don’t Repeat it.” –Bear Bryant<br />48. “You Have to be Willing to Out-Condition Your Opponents.” –Bear Bryant<br />49. “In Life You’ll have our Back Up Against the Wall Many Times. You Might As Well Get Used to It.” –Bear Bryant<br />50. “You Never Know How a Horse Will Pull Until You Hook Him to a Heavy Load.” –Bear Bryant<br />51. “The First ime you Quit it’s Hard. The Second Time, it Gets Easier. The Third Time You Don’t Even Have to Think About it.” –Bear Bryant<br />52. “I don’t care how much Talent a Team has- If the Boys don’t Think Tough, Practice Tough, and Live Tough, How Can They Play Together [In a Game]?” –Bear Bryant<br />53. “A School Without [Volleyball] is in Danger of Deteriorating into a Medieval Study Hall.” –Bear Bryant<br />54. “Confidence is Contagious, So is Lack of Confidence.” –Bear Bryant<br />55. “Individual Commitment to a Group Effort- That is What Makes a Team Work, a Company Work, a Society Work, a Civilization Work.” –Bear Bryant<br />56. “But I Firmly Believe that Any Man’s Finest Hour, His Greatest Fulfillment of All He Holds Dear, is the Moment when He Has Worked His Heart Out in a Good Cause and Lies Exhausted on Field of Battle- Victorious.” –Bear Bryant<br />57. “It’s Not Whether You Get Knocked Down, It’s Whether You Get Up.” –Bear Bryant<br />58. “Life’s Battles Don’t Always Go to the Stronger or Faster Man. But Sooner or Later the Man Who Wins is the Man who Thinks He Can.” –Bear Bryant<br />59. “Things Turn Out Best for those who Make the Best of the way Things Turn Out.” –John Wooden<br />60. Don’t Measure Yourself by what you Have Accomplished, but by what you Should Have Accomplished with Your Ability.” –John Wooden<br />61. “Condition Comes from Hard Work During Practice and Proper Mental and Moral Conduct Between Practices.” –John Wooden<br />62. “Be more Concerned with your Character than your Reputation, because Your Character is what You Really are, while Your Reputation is merely what Others Think You Are.” –John Wooden<br />63. “Consider the Rights of Others Before your Own Feelings, and the Feelings of Others Before Your Own Rights.” –John Wooden<br />64. “It’s what you Learn After You Know it All that Counts.” –John WoodenCoach Drewhttp://www.blogger.com/profile/10117986274827413479noreply@blogger.com0