Welland's Sabrina D'Angelo continues her exciting journey in our national program by getting called to be a backup goalkeeper for our women's national team, this Wednesday vs China in Moncton, NB.
Link to pregame story
Link to Sabrina's profile
Monday, May 28, 2012
When do we start specializing positions?
Determining the age of when to start slotting players in fixed positions is a never ending debate for every sport.
Slowly, we are moving our team towards 1, 2
or 3 possible positions for each player.
We will always tinker and experiment, but there will be an underlying
consistency to our line-up.
So when is a good time to specialize young
players in certain positions? We
have players who have had tremendous success in certain positions but are
reluctant to try other spots.
How about when a parent is trying to
interfere with where you are paying their child? I say “try” because if a parent is influencing your line-up,
your team needs another coach.
I like to try players in different spots to
see if we can determine the best spot for them. But I try to ease those changes in while keeping the
rest of the line-up stable.
Here are my thoughts. If you have players who can succeed in
more than one position:
- They develop a more complete set of skills, mentally, tactically and technically.
- It gives you more flexibility in putting other players on the field.
- You have more options tactically, for different situations.
- You prepare them to win spots in other programs, away from your team (school, academy, college, etc).
There are things you need to consider.
- If a player is trying a new position with limited (but increasing) success, you can move them back and forth so they continue to experience success.
- If a player is failing at a position that you thought would work for them, you should consider the possibility that you were wrong. Let them go back for a while, then try somewhere else when you feel they are ready.
- Make sure you put each player’s needs before the entire teams. When all of your players are confident and succeeding, the team’s needs will be met.
- All players deserve the opportunity to periodically play a full match. Sometimes players don’t “let it all out “ if they know they are your first choice to be replaced during games.
One last consideration is that each position has desirable physical characteristics for the players who play there. As the players age and pass through puberty, their physical characteristics will also change. The more technical work and situations they are exposed to as younger players, the better prepared they will be for the challenges their future coaches hand to them.
We will see how things develop with each
boy as the season moves forward.
It’s a challenge for youth coaches to not get caught up in the score and
situation, forgetting to serve their players.
Friday, May 25, 2012
U17 - Transition - Intro to Counter Attack
After my U13 practice last night we had a U17 session. The start time was 7:15 because we had team photos immediately after.
Some of the boys had track and school soccer earlier that day, but everybody was in a good mood. I was feeling pretty groovy after a good session with our U13 boys.
We started out with a dribbling warm-up and introduced them to some 1v1 attacking ideas. I am not sure what the sequence is called, but it's a change of pace, double tap on an angle with the outside of your foot, and making a move. The three moves we did were 1) turn back 2) chop across to the other foot 3) push it forward and go.
We progressed from this to a 1v1 drill to the net. Players were encouraged to experiment with their new moves. Coaching points were:
On a side note, I always appreciate the GK on this team. He works hard all the time, even when he's not being directly coached.
We used a Game-Activity-Game (GAG) approach to the last part of practice. Our last session, we worked on maintaining focus during transition. The progression was to introduce/review the counter-attack. Counter-attacking is a mentality. To me, it's a celebration of winning the ball back and trying to make the opponent sorry for losing the ball.
To start, we let them play for 5 minutes and get in game mode. I then stopped and quickly went over ideas for what can happen when the team wins the ball back:
For the player with the ball:
We only had 11 players and one of the coaches played. It would have been more effective if the entire team was here, but they weren't. We played with offside to make it more realistic.
This was about counter-attacking, so it was transition from defending to attacking. Another time we will do transition again, from attacking to defending.
This group has their first game Monday night. I am not sure what to expect as we've had very little time together and very few sessions with a full squad. They come to work and I always feel good about our progress when the sessions are over.
Some of the boys had track and school soccer earlier that day, but everybody was in a good mood. I was feeling pretty groovy after a good session with our U13 boys.
We started out with a dribbling warm-up and introduced them to some 1v1 attacking ideas. I am not sure what the sequence is called, but it's a change of pace, double tap on an angle with the outside of your foot, and making a move. The three moves we did were 1) turn back 2) chop across to the other foot 3) push it forward and go.
We progressed from this to a 1v1 drill to the net. Players were encouraged to experiment with their new moves. Coaching points were:
- Keep ball close and under control
- Attack defender, then change of pace to double tap
- See man, ball and space and time move properly
- After the decided move is executed, explode and go
On a side note, I always appreciate the GK on this team. He works hard all the time, even when he's not being directly coached.
We used a Game-Activity-Game (GAG) approach to the last part of practice. Our last session, we worked on maintaining focus during transition. The progression was to introduce/review the counter-attack. Counter-attacking is a mentality. To me, it's a celebration of winning the ball back and trying to make the opponent sorry for losing the ball.
To start, we let them play for 5 minutes and get in game mode. I then stopped and quickly went over ideas for what can happen when the team wins the ball back:
For the player with the ball:
- Long first touch forward if possible
- Pass/run forward into space
- Move with urgency
- Catch other team before they re-organize
- Look to get ahead of the ball for a forward pass
- Look to create a target/space behind defenders
- Look to support man with ball in case counter-attack is not there and he needs support
We only had 11 players and one of the coaches played. It would have been more effective if the entire team was here, but they weren't. We played with offside to make it more realistic.
This was about counter-attacking, so it was transition from defending to attacking. Another time we will do transition again, from attacking to defending.
This group has their first game Monday night. I am not sure what to expect as we've had very little time together and very few sessions with a full squad. They come to work and I always feel good about our progress when the sessions are over.
U13 - Challenging for the ball
I feel closer to my team than ever after our session last night. Last night we had our training on a mini field at our club.
Environment:
I did not do any running. It was VERY hot, and I wanted them with full energy for the subsequent drills.
We started with a dribbling warm-up that included dribbling through 6 agility poles and then running with the ball for 20 yds. Going through the poles we circled each one with the inside and outside of the feet then right and left foot only. Running with the ball is always a challenge for some boys and it requires more practice than some people think.
We then set up a 1v1 sequence that we always use. Simple serve and play setup. I didn’t coach it because I was going to over-coach the next drill.
We then set up a 10x20 grid. 7 yellow, 7 greys. Each team lined up on their own end, holding hands across as if to form a wall across the end of the grid. Each player was assigned a number. I would serve a ball in the middle, call a number and each corresponding number from each end entered the “battle area” to win the ball. To score the ball had to be played on the ground past the wall of players holding hands. I was looking for hard challenges and we were starting to get them.
Our progression was that I would call 2 numbers. The first number had the challenge. If a player was beat, then his teammate (the second number) stepped in to cover.
Coaching points:
Getting your players to challenge is more mental than it is technical. It's not like teaching how to cross or defend as there is fear to overcome. When it's happening, one player at a time, the entire team senses a new level of intensity.
When we got into our game I was looking for challenges for each ball. I was also encouraging the keepers to put the ball in the air as I also wanted to get them in the mindset for playing balls out of the air (and challenging for balls in the air)
As a coach, I am happy with our progress heading the ball, playing the ball out of the air and the appreciation they are developing for strong challenges.
I wouldn’t say it was my best coached session ever, but I wasn’t in the mood to be frustrated and I didn’t want to ruin a 90-minute opportunity to work with my boys... so I will say I am proud of how I planned it. They gave me 100% and showed improvement, so I can't be unhappy. We even took a 10 minute break to cheer on our U9 boys in their first ever game on the next field.
Watching them leave, I felt good that they were feeling good and they know they did a good job. Reflecting afterwards, I can say we worked together to keep the practice on track and productive.
There is one thing we need to improve on ... chasing balls during the pre-practice goof-around. The boys were told last night that practice stops when I do not see 20 balls present.
Environment:
- 14 players
- 60x40 mini-field with 2 goals
- 20 balls, 12 agility poles, cones, blue and yellow pinnies
I did not do any running. It was VERY hot, and I wanted them with full energy for the subsequent drills.
We started with a dribbling warm-up that included dribbling through 6 agility poles and then running with the ball for 20 yds. Going through the poles we circled each one with the inside and outside of the feet then right and left foot only. Running with the ball is always a challenge for some boys and it requires more practice than some people think.
We then set up a 1v1 sequence that we always use. Simple serve and play setup. I didn’t coach it because I was going to over-coach the next drill.
We then set up a 10x20 grid. 7 yellow, 7 greys. Each team lined up on their own end, holding hands across as if to form a wall across the end of the grid. Each player was assigned a number. I would serve a ball in the middle, call a number and each corresponding number from each end entered the “battle area” to win the ball. To score the ball had to be played on the ground past the wall of players holding hands. I was looking for hard challenges and we were starting to get them.
Our progression was that I would call 2 numbers. The first number had the challenge. If a player was beat, then his teammate (the second number) stepped in to cover.
Coaching points:
- CHALLENGE!
- Don’t let us at the moment of impact, to avoid injury
- Full body into the challenge
- If you win the ball, lift your head and make the next play a smart one.
Getting your players to challenge is more mental than it is technical. It's not like teaching how to cross or defend as there is fear to overcome. When it's happening, one player at a time, the entire team senses a new level of intensity.
When we got into our game I was looking for challenges for each ball. I was also encouraging the keepers to put the ball in the air as I also wanted to get them in the mindset for playing balls out of the air (and challenging for balls in the air)
As a coach, I am happy with our progress heading the ball, playing the ball out of the air and the appreciation they are developing for strong challenges.
I wouldn’t say it was my best coached session ever, but I wasn’t in the mood to be frustrated and I didn’t want to ruin a 90-minute opportunity to work with my boys... so I will say I am proud of how I planned it. They gave me 100% and showed improvement, so I can't be unhappy. We even took a 10 minute break to cheer on our U9 boys in their first ever game on the next field.
Watching them leave, I felt good that they were feeling good and they know they did a good job. Reflecting afterwards, I can say we worked together to keep the practice on track and productive.
There is one thing we need to improve on ... chasing balls during the pre-practice goof-around. The boys were told last night that practice stops when I do not see 20 balls present.
Wednesday, May 23, 2012
U12 Boys - "Can I go forward?"
Last night, I was invited by Coach Jim to run a session for the U12 boys. I know many of these players from past clinics and our fitness sessions, but I’ve never worked with them as a team on the field.
I knew I would be back with them a few times, so I used last night as a sort of diagnostic session for me to see what to do next. My theme was decisions after asking the question “Can I go forward?”
I started with a dribbling warm up using agility poles. Players were going around the poles with the inside and outside of their feet, both feet.
We then got into turning and passing. My focus wasn’t so much on different styles of turns, but deciding which foot to use on the turn and subsequent pass. We were also stressing the quality of the pass to the next player.
Coaching points were:
Coaching points were:
When we got into our 7v7 small game, the lesson was to look/touch forward first and look to attack.
Coaching points:
My next time with them I will practice moving the ball, back and forth, across 4 players then try the 6v6 exercise again and see if there's improvement.
One of the keys to possession is to be able to decide if you can go forward or not, and play the ball accordingly, with technical proficiency.
I knew I would be back with them a few times, so I used last night as a sort of diagnostic session for me to see what to do next. My theme was decisions after asking the question “Can I go forward?”
I started with a dribbling warm up using agility poles. Players were going around the poles with the inside and outside of their feet, both feet.
We then got into turning and passing. My focus wasn’t so much on different styles of turns, but deciding which foot to use on the turn and subsequent pass. We were also stressing the quality of the pass to the next player.
Coaching points were:
- Proper foot on turn and pass
- Head up after the turn
- Speed of the turn
- Ball passed in front of next player so they can easily move forward, dribble and turn
- 50x40 area, divided in half lengthwise
- 2 teams , 6v6
- Each half had 4 of one colour and 2 of the other. So, the 4 players in one half had their 2 teammates in the other half
Coaching points were:
- Shape of the 4 players in their half, in possession (width, depth)
- Support position of target players in opposite half
- Quick-early-accurate passing
- First look/touch forward
- Pressure on the ball by defending team
When we got into our 7v7 small game, the lesson was to look/touch forward first and look to attack.
Coaching points:
- First look/touch forward
- Ask the question "Can I go forward?"
- Make decision quickly? Pass/dribble forward? Pass back to support?
- Attack open space in front of you
- Patience! If forward play is not there, that's OK. But you had to look forward to determine that.
My next time with them I will practice moving the ball, back and forth, across 4 players then try the 6v6 exercise again and see if there's improvement.
One of the keys to possession is to be able to decide if you can go forward or not, and play the ball accordingly, with technical proficiency.
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