Iggy---
This won't be hard at all.....as far as SF or DF programming, don't sweat it.....just use a 'single factor' approach until your gains slow down, and if you're coming back to heavy training, you can milk these gains for a while.
Here is my take on partials, pin presses, board presses, etc etc.....They sound like a blast, the guys who train "WSB" do them, it's all over the net, 'high-level' strength coaches use them, but if you think about it, unless you're competing in a PL contest in a bench shirt, why do you need to take more weight than you bench down to a sticking point and back up?? You don't, you're not training for the biggest bench you can do, you're training to prepare your body for a football season. That doesn't mean don't life heavy, it means don't forget WHY you're lifting.
The bench press is a good tool, and you do need static strength, but college S and C coaches drool over kids who like to squat and clean. Their take is that explosion is more important because anybody who is an athlete can get in the weight room and improve their bench through training. The general public and NFL owners love the bench press because it is all they know, but college s and c coaches and scouts are more concerned with squats and cleans and explosion, they'll often ask if a kid can dunk a basketball before they ask what can you bench. NOT that you shouldn't be a strong bencher, just giving you backup that it isn't the be all and end all of football prowess. The consensus is that a kid who can power clean 300, dunk a basketball, and squat 1.5 times bodyweight can always gain weight and they can always develop static strength...if that kid also benches 400, all the better it will only help him.....BUT, if a kid benches 400, can't squat bodyweight, cleans 200, and has a vertical jump of 19 inches, there isn't much athletic potential there. You know what I'm saying??
I strongly disagree with the 'technique coaching'....once you know how to lift and you're not doing something stupid and dangerous, it is time to get good at the lifts. Technique is a MUST, but so is adding weight to the bar, weight cannot come at the expense of technique obviously, but weight cannot be held back to acheive "John Basedow form" as that will also result in John Basedow (ya know, the Fitness Made Simple guy) size and strength. Light/technique sessions and greasing the groove and all are needed, but you need to add weight to the bar, or you'll be a weak puss with textbook technique.
What lifts are you tested on? I suggest setting up a single factor plan where you train them progressively at least twice a week. I'd be more than happy to make some suggestions for you if you'd like, just let me know. You'll be back where you need to be in no time, and it'll be fun because your gains will come fast right now.