Youth
Soccer Drills - Keys to a Productive Practice
By Jeff Cozzier
The main
difference between youth soccer drills
and adult soccer drills is that you need
to allow kids to be kids. What I mean
by that is that kids love playing games
so to keep them involved we need to properly
structure our practices. As a rule, in
practices you should focus on playing
games. You can either run the games by
keeping time or keeping score.
Remember that you need
to always praise the attitude, effort;
the hustle and of course the improvement.
The key is to measure each player against
his or her own past performance and personal
improvement. There are always going to
be kids that are more or less athletically
inclined in any group. The best kids should
not be held back by the others, but at
the same time the kids that are struggling
still need to be motivated and praised
for their efforts. Now in case anyone
thinks that that means that I tolerate
slackers, I don't, they need to be putting
forth the effort.
I'm a big fan of teaching
proper technique by setting up playing
situations and games that simulate play.
By setting up a number of these and keeping
your players active you can make sure
that everyone gets a maximum number of
"touches" in the ball. If you're
looking for a "magic number "
of touches for every practice, common
practice is to for 100 "touches"
per player per practice.
Good games must be easy
& quick to set up and should be simple
to explain and manage. If you have to
explain it more than a couple of times
break it down into multiple games / drills.
The goal is to keep everyone active and
participating. You must make sure that
everyone is having fun.
Avoid general scrimmaging
for more than 10 minutes per hour. In
general scrimmages players don't get enough
touches on the ball, the weaker players
tend to get the fewest touches and bad
habits can be reinforced because players
tend to do the same things they have always
done. If you scrimmage, do so without
a goalkeeper
Adopt
this philosophy: "Keep it simple,
keep them active, keep it fun & at
least 100 touches per player per practice".
Editors note: I
would recomend more than 100 touches per
practice, which is different then what
this soccer author has to say. I would
shoot more in the neighborhood of 400
touches per practice, which will give
your players an adequate enough number
of repititions to work on their ball control.
Otherwise, the advice in this article
is good.