SoccerCoachWeeklyIssue 287 Wednesday, October 24, 2012
Defending deep to counter
1SoccerCoachWeekly Essential tools for your team
This game develops the counter-attacking skills of players whilst helping them get organised for defending a lead.
How to play it• In this 5v5 (plus keepers) game you’ll need balls, bibs, cones and goals.• Mark out a 40x30-yard area as shown - one half being divided into nine equal squares. • Only one defender can be in each box at any one time. They can move squares, but a player must vacate his square if a team mate enters it.• Attackers, going from left to right, must make three passes before they can shoot, and any shot must be from inside the opposition’s half. • Can the attacking team make use of the squares’ limitations and get defenders out of position?• If the defending team, going from right to left, wins the ball it must counter-attack quickly. If it fails to score within three passes of regaining possession, the ball is given back to the attacking team.
Technique and tactics• A useful scenario to present is that the defending team is winning 1-0 late on in a crucial cup match. They must try to protect their lead, but if they can score another goal the contest is effectively over.• Defenders should use the halfway line as the first point of pressure. But the key areas defenders must protect are those spaces immediately in front of and behind their team mates. They have to make the decision of when (and where) to try to win the ball, and when to fall back into full defensive mode.
With the ball turned over, defenders counter-attack, but must ensure they despatch a shot within three passes
Defending reds can only have one player in each box, so must plan their defence to attacking angles carefully
Reds pressure the attacking whites to force a mistake
TOOLS, TIPS AND TECHNIQUES
David Clarke Head Coach, Soccer Coach Weekly
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player movement ball movementshot
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SoccerCoachWeekly WARM UPWednesday, October 24, 2012
Play out and go out
SoccerCoachWeekly Essential tools for your team
Soccer Coach Weekly is published by Green Star Media Ltd, Meadow View, Tannery Lane, Bramley, Guildford, GU5 0AB, UK. Email: [email protected] Tel: +44 (0)1483 892894 Head Coach: David Clarke Editor: James Evans Publisher: Kevin Barrow Managing Director: Andrew Griffiths
Customer Service: Duncan Heard Designer: Steve Southern Contributors: Michael Beale, David Lewis, Scott Mendy, Michael Peacock, Daniel Toner, Steve Watson © Green Star Media Ltd. All rights reserved.
How to play it• Arrange your players into teams of six on a 15x15-yard area.• Each team has four players on the outside and two players on the inside.• Pass a ball into the players in the middle. They must battle for possession and then pass out to a team mate. • The player who completes the outward pass must leave the area, and the team mate he passed to dribbles in to take his place.• The warm-up works continuously for 10 minutes.
Technique and tactics• Players on the outside must be ready to receive a pass at all times.• Players on the inside must anticipate the next pass they’ll make.• Passing with positivity and confidence is crucial.• We also want to see players using disguise in movements to enable their team to maintain possession
The ball is played into the area
The player takes possession and decides to pass it out straight away to a team mate
He now swaps places with the player he passed to
NO HIDINGWITH THIS
CONTINUOUS
WARM-UP
Michael Beale Premier League Academy soccer coach
player movement ball movementrun with ball
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SoccerCoachWeekly FOOTY4KIDS
In the zoneThis is a great game for improving
passing and receiving skills, finding space to receive a pass, and supporting off the ball. It’s best for kids aged eight and upwards.
How to play it• To set it up, create a playing area measuring 30x20 yards with a five-yard wide channel at each end, marked out with flat cones. These are the end zones.• Divide your players into teams of five or six.• Each team scores a point by dribbling or passing the ball into one end zone and back to the opposite end zone without losing possession.• You’ll need to tell your players which end to attack first and explain that tackling is not allowed in the end zones.• If a team intercepts, they can attack the other end immediately, but must get the ball back to the opposite end zone in order to score a point.• The first team to score five points wins the game.
Advancing the game• For a new challenge, place a neutral player (or players) in the end zones. Now the ball cannot be dribbled into an end zone, but instead must be passed to a neutral player who has to control the pass.• The neutral player returns the ball to the team that passed to him, so that they can attack the other end zone.
Techniques and tactics• Encourage the attacking team to use the full width of the pitch, but to show patience whilst doing so – they have plenty of time and do not need to hurry things.• When a pass is fed into an end zone, look for forward players to make themselves available for the return pass so that they can then turn and attack the other end.• It’s essential for players to get their heads up when playing this game.
Each team lines up 5v5 looking to protect its end zone
Having found a player in one end zone, whites move to the opposite end, find the other zone and score a point
SoccerCoachWeekly Essential tools for your team
Here a forward pass by the reds is intercepted. Whites instantly attack the opposite end zone
Steve Watson Editor, Footy4kids.co.uk
Wednesday, October 24, 2012
A TOPGAME FOR IMPROVING
VISION!
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20yds5yds 5ydsEN
D ZON
E END ZONE
END Z
ONE END ZONE
END Z
ONE END ZONE
player movement ball movementrun with ball
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SoccerCoachWeekly TOUCHLINE TALES
The right drills get the right result
SoccerCoachWeekly Essential tools for your team
It’s been a busy start to the season - we’ve been working on possession play and making the most of attacking situations during my training sessions... and it is beginning to pay off!
The team has been scoring freely, and a lot of that has been thanks to a decent supply line coming from within the penalty area. This is due to the advancement of passing skills of my players.
Sure, the possession element is important, but the confidence it has given them has also led to them taking a chance and passing the ball into space behind the opposition defence. The whole thing has really increased team spirit, and confidence is high.
At the weekend we played a team we thought would be much better than us - they play in a higher division for starters. But my players had so much confidence
they were able to take the game to the opposition and ended up comfortable winners. As nice as it is to beat a tough opponent, it was the style of play which pleased me the most.
But before I get carried away, I have to mention how hard the players have worked since we came back from the summer break. They have also been training more regularly during the week, and winning has certainly helped keep the parents onside!
I think, however, it is a reliance on possession-weighted sessions that has really made a difference. The good thing about using possession sessions is that you can work on attack and defence throughout – after all, playing out from the back and pressing high up the pitch are part and parcel of possession games.
And I should add that every session I write up for Soccer Coach Weekly is first used by my own team - not only to make sure that it works, but so that I know it is developing my players the right way.
The good news is that, from feedback you’ve given me over the last few weeks and months, the sessions appear to be working very well for you too, not just me! That feedback will help me and inspire me to create more sessions with this type of end result, so please keep the comments coming.
8 ways to ensure player safety
OneUse the right equipment (for example,
soft, flat cones, not hard plastic traffic cones) and check regularly for damage. Discard any kit that is not in perfect condition.
TwoMake sure
children use the equipment properly. Don’t allow them to use poles as javelins, or swing on crossbars!
ThreeCheck the playing
area for hazards before you do anything. Look out for potholes that could snap a young ankle, dog excrement that could transmit a nasty disease and broken glass that could cause cuts.
FourNever leave children unsupervised. You
or an assistant must be with them all the time. They are in your charge.
FiveKeep age groups separate and be
careful to match players of a similar size when playing 1v1s.
SixMake sure children wear clothing
appropriate to the weather, as well as boots and shin pads.
SevenProvide sufficient drinks breaks.
Children’s cooling systems are not as developed as those of adults, so youngsters need to consume plenty of fluids in all weather conditions.
EightDon’t train in very hot or very cold
weather. Hot weather that you or I consider bearable may be anything but for a nine-year-old. And coaching children in cold weather is pointless - they don’t want to be there and won’t give anything like their best. And what’s more, I bet you’d rather be at home too!
David Clarke Head Coach, Soccer Coach Weekly
Steve Watson Editor, Footy4kids.co.uk
Wednesday, October 24, 2012
“The good thing about using possession sessions is that you can work on attack and
defence throughout.”
Left: Keep kids safe by matching ages and sizes during 1v1s
Right: Allow for plenty of drink breaks so that your young players stay cool
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SoccerCoachWeekly SMALL-SIDED GAME
5v2 three-goal defendThe defenders must work to their
maximum in order to pressure their opponents and block shooting opportunities.
How to play it• Create a playing area measuring 30x30 yards, configured as shown with three poles creating a triangle of goals.• Split players into two teams – an attacking team of five, and a defending team of three (comprised of two defenders and a keeper).• The attacking team attempts to pass the ball quickly in order to create a goalscoring opportunity.• The defending team must work as a unit, pressing the ball and constantly repositioning in order to stop the attackers scoring.
Technique and tactics• Teams must work together well. They’ll need to be organised and versatile given that a goal can be scored from any side of the pitch.• Defenders need to cut out all attacking options, being led by their keeper in terms of communicating the danger that arises from various areas.• Attackers should switch play in order to test defenders’ ability to shut out the danger.
20yds
20yds
player movement ball movementrun with ball shot
The interesting layout of goals will test your defenders’ decision making
The defenders will have to move quickly and hedge their bets as to where the ball will be played
SoccerCoachWeekly Essential tools for your team
The defenders will do well to get in blocks like this one
Michael Beale Premier League Academy soccer coach
Wednesday, October 24, 2012
30yds
30yds
player movement ball movementshot/clearance
A GREATGAME FOR IMPROVING PLAYERS’STAMINA
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SoccerCoachWeekly YOUR SAY
SoccerCoachWeekly Essential tools for your team
Wednesday, October 24, 2012
This week Daniel TonerDunstable
Q My nine-year-old has had almost nine months out with
a broken leg. He sustained it in a non-soccer accident, but it has affected his confidence on the pitch. What can I do to help? Tom Walsh, Liverpool
A It’s shocking when young players suffer the sorts of
injuries that would floor even an adult for a concerted length of time.
Naturally, he’ll be nervous coming back into the game because he now has an inherent fear that something like this might happen again – if not to his leg, then maybe even another part of his body.
What you can’t do is humour those fears for too long. Sure, maybe at first, keep him away from the tackle, and bring this element back in gradually. If you don’t, he may injure himself through actually pulling out of a tackle.
But the overall message must be to encourage the lad to get back on the horse, as it were - to take a deep breath, and to ‘play on’.
You should find that, given time, he’ll naturally get his confidence back. You can of course manufacture some situations in training where he’ll get a chance to score lots of goals (if he’s a striker) or clear his box repeatedly (if he’s a defender). But overall the biggest healer in this instance will be time, so be patient and offer him your full support.
TACKLED: Results
Here’s the result of the poll we ran in Soccer Coach Weekly 285 asking if you felt youth soccer was right to follow the pro game in becoming less physical.
SCW Surgery TACKLED: Undercover coaching
PUT IT TO THE VOTE: Which of our guest coaches do you agree with? Visit our Facebook page or email your thoughts to David Clarke at [email protected]
Should we be moving our training indoors as soon as the cold and rainy weather arrives?
Scott MendyLeicester Colts Under-12s
It’s a great idea to get kids inside. They can try out new skills that being outside won’t offer them – futsal, for starters. This is a game that’s transforming soccer in some countries, and the effects are already seeping through into national teams. Persisting with the standard form of the game when outside in freezing conditions does neither the players nor you any favours.
Carrying out skills on a hard surface, or in muddy conditions, can be difficult for a player of any age. What skills will a young lad really take from having to contend with a bobbly surface? By taking the session inside, you’ll help players retain confidence, because they won’t be disadvantaged by the inclement weather conditions.
It’s a well known fact that most kids simply don’t like cold and wet weather. You’re doing them no favours by keeping them out there, and you may find attendance numbers dropping if they know they’re going to be faced with another hour of being cold, wet and unimpressed.
Sometimes a change for change’s sake is a great idea when it comes to sport. Switching to an inside environment will most likely help them regain their interest after the early season honeymoon period comes to an end. If you reenergise your players you’ll see the reward in their performances.
“Sometimes a change for change’s sake is a great idea
when it comes to sport.”
Michael PeacockStaines Under-14s
Personally, the best solution for my team is to continue to train outside with one or two indoor sessions every few weeks. Just because pitches become a bit muddier, we shouldn’t all run for the warmth of indoors – that’s just not what soccer is all about. A combination of outdoors and indoors practice is a great idea, but this is something I’d recommend for all year round, not just when there’s rain in the air!
Moving to an indoor environment can soon become quite costly. Indoor practice areas are in frighteningly short supply in some towns and cities, and the cost may be prohibitive for you, or for your players. And it’s not just the hire of the facility that has a price – many players will use going indoors as an excuse for new trainers and other bits of gear!
Where are matches played? Outside! By training inside you’re creating a completely different environment and that can spoil some of the synergy that you want to build up between training and match day. At the end of the day, if a match can be played outside, then so too can training be held outside.
Sometimes playing indoors limits the style of coaching you can perform – there’s limited aerial practice, for a start, and games can only be small-sided because of the demands on space. No such limitations exist when playing outdoors, where you and your players really have the ability to express yourselves.
“Where are matches played? Outside! By training inside you’re creating a completely different environment.”
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