Sunday, May 6, 2012

U17 boys - friendly with Welland u16

Our U17 boys were on the turf this morning, sharing it with the u16 boys from our club.  It was supposed to be an 11v11 friendly, helping both teams get organized.

While we were waiting for their team to assemble we played some keep away, including the boys from u16 who were early.  It was very basic: 1 touch, in a circle, 2 guys in the middle type of keep-away.  NO COACHING.  Just having fun.  They don't realize they're learning and practicing, so they just play and have fun.  The only coach and motivator you need is their desire to not want to be in the middle.  :-)

Still waiting for their team to assemble, we moved the one net to half and lined a small field the width of the penalty area.  So the field is now 50x44. We were playing 10v10 so the space was tight.  There was very little coaching here.  I wanted them to figure out if they want to be successful the ball has to keep moving, quickly, early and accurately.  They seemed to enjoy this game as well, and some were figuring out the recipe for success.  Other than guiding a few guys into position, I left them alone.  I played with them and was having fun trying to keep up.  "Trying" is the big word here.

When we broke into our 11v11 setup, we had the boys in 4-4-2.  Most are familiar with the various roles.  I just walked the field with my whistle to blow down crazy fouls, but spent most of my time massaging the shape into place.

Some quick points to note for future sessions:
  • recovery runs when team loses the ball
  • releasing the ball earlier
  • organization of 2 strikers up front
  • organization of back 4 when working the ball around
  • width in possession
  • moving out past half when team is in possession
The kick-around never got out of hand and nobody suffered any needless injuries.  It's good to work with this team because these boys are the ones called when the u17 are short players.

Again, our original plan was displaced.  This time because we wanted to include the U16s and keep them busy.  We had planned to organize our boys into their positions via a short phase-of-play setup.  They all play 4-4-2 in high school, but it's still necessary to set up with your players.  That's something we can address the next session.

The high school soccer is a blessing in that the boys are able to enhance their school experience and stay active.  It's also a curse in terms of getting your own team organized.  If Coach Benny's work in the past prepared the boys to be successful at the high school level, then that part of his duty to the players was well done.

A nice observation for me is this team's trust in their goalkeeper.  He's a hard working young man with good hands and smart distribution.


Saturday, May 5, 2012

Fox Sports World Canada Out of Business

I found out today that Fox Sports World Canada ceased operations April 30.  It was a great channel and I appreciated how much soccer they brought to the viewing audience.  Sky Sports News from the UK was my favourite show.

So the question is ... did it close up because there was too much competition to show soccer on TV (at least 5 other networks show games regularly) or was there no interest in a mainly all soccer network?  The network said it also showed Rugby and Cricket, but soccer took up most of the broadcast day.

It may sound like a dumb question,  but the high number of children playing soccer in Canada does not mean it's mainstream.  It still makes me scratch my head thinking of the number of players who have never seen a full game, live or televised.

We'll see if the other networks add more soccer or remain status quo.

Thursday, May 3, 2012

U13 Fitness Session


Our 6th group fitness session took place tonight.  We had 60 players total, including a U14 girls team that joined us.  The U14 girls at our club are a great bunch of young ladies.  I've coached them in clinics and they've always been a focused bunch.  They are coached by Eric Opala, a man with good experience.

The group for this session was U10, U11, U13 boys and U14 girls.
 
The session.  The players ran for 30 minutes with 4 stations set up around the track.  The stops were 5 pushups, 10 skips, 10 jumping jacks and 8 hurdles.

After a short break we followed it up with 30 minutes of dribbling and turns.

I have some ideas for the next session that I need to run by the other coaches.  We admire the players' work ethic, but they are young and we have to work to keep it interesting.

A great development for next week is that the grass fields are available to us!  We will definitely have to integrate that into our program.

Wednesday, May 2, 2012

St Mike's - phase of play 4-4-2 - basic

I ended up attending St Mike's Jr Boy's training a bit late as I was at another school.

Coach Lucchetta ran them through a few exercises to keep a ball on their foot and moving.  His plan for the day was a phase-of-play to work on the front 6 in their 4-4-2.  He actually started them off with the front 6 playing again 2 opposing defenders, so it was borderline shadow-play for the first bit.

The main goal was just to get the boys more familiar with their shape and basic movements in 4-4-2.

Introduced to the players was:
  • Striker combining with wide midfielders
  • Different runs for strikers
  • Central midfielders supporting strikers and wide midfielders
Once some movement was established, the defending team had 4 defenders and a midfielder while the attacking team had the front 6 and Coach Lucchetta supporting from behind.  4 players were absent.

As the play kept moving more and more towards the goal on each restart, I started to coach the back 4 a bit to push up and make the space available more realistic.

If all players were there I would have suggested  6 players on the defending team and add 3 supporting defenders to the attacking team.  That's something we can progress to.

The boys worked hard for 35 minutes at this and I would have to say they showed improvement.

Playing and coaching a 4-4-2 properly is not as easy as people think.  I watch teams at tournaments throw their players on as 4-4-2 and I scratch my head.  4 players line up straight across the midfield, each striker assumes their side of the field and off they go!  it's like playing with 3 forwards and the centre striker got a red card.

Because a lot of the boys are not overly experienced players, the coach's delivery was clear and not overwhelming.  Once they feel more comfortable he can introduce some more ideas for them to consider during a game situation.

Monday, April 30, 2012

U13 - First friendly game

Tonight we played our first friendly.  Our friends from Niagara Falls u13 were our guest and a very nice team to share a field with.  They came to the game with the right attitude, and that was to work on things.

We played on the turf field in St Catharines and the rain was coming down.  The weather radar let us down as it said the clouds should have passed by 4:50.

Back to the game.  The bottom line is we lost 5-0 but I don't care.  The kids had some good ideas and were working hard to establish their shape.  That made me happy.  Niagara Falls already had 5 full field games and they were sharper than us.  Three of there goals were off giveaways from poor restarts and that's something we can fix.  Restarts are a definite topic of the next 2 sessions.

We haven't really organize ourselves past our overall shape and moving the ball around the back and into the midfield.  This is our next practice's topic.

A few individual things we need to fix are:
  • 1v1 defending and intensity doing so
  • Getting to the ball first
  • Not letting the ball bounce, playing it out of the air
I was very happy with our wide defenders and wingers tonight.  One bone of contention for me in the past was keeping our width and today we did that.  Our holding midfielders also kept their shape and that was a problem last year.  They would always creep up between the attacking mids, killing that triangle.

Coach Paul and I agreed that the boys looked more organized than when we started last year.  Our next friendly is coming up followed by a tournament and I hope to have more of the movement organized by then. We have 2 sessions to before the tournament.

Next session we will work on getting to the ball first, then organizing the movement within the midfield and forward from there via phase-of-play.  That will be one session.

The following session will be 1v1 defending at first, restarts, then phase-of-play moving the ball into space behind the defenders (penetrating passes) from the midfield.

After that we would do a session on penetrating the defensive line via the flank players.  That's a science in itself.

One step at a time the team's delivery will be put together.  Coach Paul and I look forward to helping that happen.