Tuesday, February 28, 2012

U13 - More passing and receiving

Tonight we ran a field size passing drill again that involved a lot of passing, receiving and dribbling. the boys kept moving and worked well enough.

I was stressing the receiving tonight.  One of the most important coaching points when receiving the ball is to attack the ball, moving towards it so your feet are already moving.  You significantly increase your success rate when receiving a ball with active feet.   We worked on receiving the ball with the inside and outside of the foot as well as letting it go through your legs and playing it behind you.

Before getting into our game I set up a 1v1 exercise.  I wanted to get them in the mindset of soccer  at the older ages, with respect to 1v1. I didn't deal with the technical ends of attacking and defending 1v1, but the mental/attitude end of the deal:
  • When you get beat 1v1 work hard to win the ball back.
  • When defending 1v1 be ready to win the ball and counter-attack
  • When you win the 1v1 accelerate as he is most likely going to be coming to win the ball back.
  • Compete hard to win every 1v1
  • When the attacking player turns his back, force him backward with great intensity and create a sense of panic in him
A small roster size hurt training again as we had 4 of our regulars missing (broken toe, flu, indoor league and ski trip).  Three players from our other U13 team were there and were great to have out. 

We have to work on improving the speed at which our passes are played.  The boys are improving with their decisions and getting a little more creative in games, but there has to be more of a threat in their passing.

For our next session we are with all the players on both teams, then back to separate sessions again.

I made a bold move tonight.  We were short players near the end as some had to leave early for hockey, so the coach jumped into the game ... and got schooled by his own son. 



All coaches should coach U9 or below

A friend of mine, Stuart Neely,  has coached at the international level and been involved with the youth academies of three different professional clubs.  He said something to me once that never escaped me but I didn't realize how important it was until this past Monday night.

His words were "anybody serious about coaching should always stay involved with the youngest players in some capacity".  His meaning was that you can sometimes get led away from the very basics of coaching when you move up levels and these young players bring you right back to square one, probably the most important place to be as a coach.

Over the past 5 weeks I've been working with a clinic for players U8-10.  I have to admit I was struggling with the lesser experienced U8 players and some in that group are very very raw.  Two weeks ago I felt I made some progress and last night I walked off the field feeling good.  During our warm-up and functional portion I felt they were really starting to understand what we were doing (dribbling and turns).  We got into 1v1 games and that showed more progress and the 6v6 game at the end told me they were catching on (with more work to do).

It's a funny relationship with younger players.  Not only can you feel yourself getting frustrated with their progress, you can feel the players getting frustrated with you at times.

The gentleman helping me , Coach Nilan, is helping with the Welland U9 boys this summer and I was glad he made this journey with me, to appreciate the work and persistence involved in coaching younger players.


Sunday, February 26, 2012

U17 - The art of Defending

Today with the U17 boys we reviewed defending.  Because it was a review, we piled 1v1 , a functional exercise and a small game into the same 90 minute session.
We are not training that often yet and most of these boys play High School soccer, so we want to give them as much info as possible to take back to their school sessions.

For the 1v1 it was a simple serve and play exercise.  Coaching points for defending were:
  • Goal side of the ball
  • Speed and angle of approach
  • Don't lunge into 1v1 battle
  • Body balanced
  • Threaten ball
  • Think of what you will do if you win the ball
We reviewed some different scenarios during the drill but kept it basic and informative.   It's interesting to see how some players give up so easily when they are beat, yet others will run over their grandmother to get the ball back.  It was new for some of them to be told that they need to take off and attack once they win the ball.  We all see it, a team wins the ball and holds it instead of looking for a counter attack.

Then we set up a playing area with 4 lanes roughly 7x25yds each.  The diagram at the right shows 8v8 but we only had 12 players today and put 3 players in each lane.  I always adjust the lanes according to age and # players.

The goal of the game is to move the ball to your teammates of the same colour in the other lane.  So Blue 1 to Blue 2, Yellow 1 to Yellow 2.  The opposing players between the lanes are trying to prevent you from putting the ball through and if they intercept it, they try to connect with teammates in the other lane.

This game can be used to work on so many different things: possession, defending, counter attacking mentality, etc.  Today I used it for defending.

Before you progress, all players must stay in their own lane.

BUT, before you can do anything with this game, you have to let them play for a bit to figure it out and get into the spirit of the game.  It's a very competitive game once it gets going.  Once the flow was there we got into defensive shape (pressure, support, cover, balance, etc).  Coaching points were:
  • Immediate pressure on the ball
  • Teammates move into support position
  • Player pressuring does not follow a pass
  • Stay focused on team goals and do not chase balls 
  • Lots of movement and co-operation between players on the defending team.
You do not want players chasing the attacking teams'  passes.  Instead a defensive support player moves up to pressure and original defender drops and tucks behind the pressure guy to take away forward progress.  If you chase the ball sideways and a teammate steps up to pressure you temporarily create a situation where you are square and vulnerable to a pass splitting the two of you.

Once the game was moving and we were happy with the movement we progressed it to where a player on the defensive team can step into the other lane to apply more pressure on the ball.  Only one defensive player can enter the lane at a time.

When we got into our 6v6 game (5+GK) we reviewed the principles of play for team defending:
  • Pressure the ball
  • Support
  • Communication
  • Recovery runs (get back!)
  • Deny forward progress and goals
I was happy with their work rate and intensity today.  These boys are older and competitive so when a training session is going well it's a lot of fun.  The number of players made it difficult to keep the pace of the final game at a good level so we took a few breaks to review.   We also put off-sides into the game as well as saying it would be 2/3 height pressure on the ball (no pressuring ball in attacking third of the field).  I did not stop the game at all to coach as they were enjoying themselves and adhering to the theme of the day. 

Next time I would:
  • Ensure there were more players (call ups?)
  • Ask more questions during first warm-up to gauge their knowledge of defending
  • Keep a better eye on the clock and provide more breaks so they have more energy left to give at the end of training





Saturday, February 25, 2012

What is a "good" player?

I had a discussion with some students the other day talking about this guy who is "good ... but" or that guy who is "good ... but...".  Then I was thinking of some former players who went on to successful playing days in college, university, men's competitive, semi-pro and professional.

Here is my opinion: if there is a "but" after the "good" then you're not "good".  You might be decent, or very effective, but "good" might be a strong word.  "Good" meaning a player who would be scouted for a professional youth academy or NCAA D1 school. 

A good player has many dimensions to the package they deliver.
  • Playing for the right reasons and because they want to
  • Strong work ethic, in training and competition
  • Internally motivated
  • Proper training/coaching
  • Technical proficiency is a must.
  • Mental toughness is a must.
  • Athletic over and above their sport
  • Intelligent enough to process what's going on around them and make decisions (understand the game)
  • Physical dimensions that lend themselves to success (in some cases certain aspects are way above average to compensate for lacking in other aspects)
  • Lifestyle choices lend themselves to success.
  • Strong emotional support system and environment for success
  • Hidden X-Factor --- Can make things happen or "that little something extra"
Finding an athlete who is truly "good" is rare.  A lot of athletes have talent and potential but are not driven.  We find kids who are driven and tough, but not particularly gifted or technically strong.

I use the word "good" very rarely.  I find myself saying "decent" and "suitable" often.  Sometimes I would say "incomplete".  I will say if you find a co-ordinated athlete at the right age who wants to play and learn, you can eliminate items on their deficiency list with the proper exposure and training.

I think highly of players who play for life and give back to the game and register their children.  But the conversation was about being good.

Players who are on their way to becoming good need the right guidance and incentive to finish their journey.  This is where soccer falls apart in Canada.  Players at 13/14/15 who show real potential for getting to the next level have little incentive to continue.  Scholarships and professional opportunities are not readily available, but that is slowly changing. 

We do have young Canadians playing professionally in MLS and overseas.  But the stage is set for developing a greater number of quality players.

Community clubs are taking a different approach to player development at young ages.  The soccer powers are seriously rethinking and changing their approach at the younger age groups (See Ontario and Canada Soccer's LTPD).  In Canada we now have 3 MLS teams with youth academies and 10 provincial programs offering elite opportunities for young players.  Private academies are also connecting ambitious players with potential trials over seas. 

Hopefully we will see a stronger and bigger crop of U12-U14 players in the next 3-4 years.

There will also be long term benefits to a larger group of players who continue to play into U15 and into adulthood.  These people will become the coaches and decision makers of tomorrow.

We need better training in a more appropriate environment for younger players.  Then we need to  develop more destination programs for our young players who show promise and continue the process of turning them into good players at the right time in their life.


MLS - Congratulations Simon Gatti

Simon Gatti was a player on the first team I ever coached and we coached him during his U9-U10-U11 years.  He moved on to a career at the University of Rhode Island then the Montreal Impact.  He announced his retirement and has joined the Impact as the u14 Academy Coach.  He was a good boy who grew into a good man, and a very good player.  He will be a great coach.

http://www.impactmontreal.com/en/news/2012/02/simon-gatti-announces-retirement-and-joins-academy

Photo from www.montrealimpact.com