Monday, 27 June 2016

A load of balls !


After watching an u/8 team running a couple of miles the other day, might be a good read








 6.Get on Twitter! Ask questions, expand your knowledge, read more articles and view session plans. Help your players become the best they can be by trying to become that best that you can be. Follow @CoachingFamily and then go from there.








https://coachchrismclaughlin.files.wordpress.com/2014/07/pre-season-article-ccm.pdf

Sunday, 19 June 2016

Master the ball - Foundation phase of development

I've put a few you tube clips together of some of the ball mastery skills we have been doing over the last few weeks on a Saturday morning and with the girls on a Friday night  If you can at any time get the kids to practice at home this would be a massive help,  also just kicking a ball against a wall will help with touch and control using both feet  .With  children in the foundation stage its important they spend more time on the ball ,  and you probably noticed a major part of the session is made up of ball mastery (especially Saturday mornings ) .The Football association also  wants 70% ball rolling time ,hope we are getting near this , and hope the kids are enjoying the sessions.


Inside /outside cut


https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=aQc2HVWoLn4




pull /push


https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=1S3fugQcCyw


Some of the games at the end of the above video I use with the u/10,s


Few more Coerver ball mastery exercises


https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=RwsUBXrq9UQ


Some small sided games , I think 3 vs 3 is better at the younger ages , more touches of the ball, more decisions to make etc etc


http://coachingdutchsoccer.com/dutch-style-4v4-small-sided-games/

Monday, 23 May 2016

Welcome to the world of the grassroots volunteer coach

Think all us coaches have been there , I have also had a parent who thought her son was a central midfielder at 7,another one who  turned up at half the sessions and wanted her son to be Messi. "Get it out ! clear ya lines !etc etc .This was in fact sent to me by a parent currently at our club, and definitely doesn't need to read it .
A good read for coaches and parents the world of the grassroots VOLUNTEER football coach !






The international break is over, the millionaires are back ensconced in their clubs – and around the country tens of thousands of children are ready to kick off the season at the other end of the footballing spectrum: the grassroots. One coach, who has asked to remain anonymous, offers up 10 pre-season home truths to parents.

1) Quiet, please
“Noooo! Not there. Gordon, bloody well get rid of it … you can't play about with your spreadsheet there. Just email it. NOW! Remember, nothing fancy. Just get rid.” Does your boss stand menacingly near your desk shouting at you when you're doing your job? If he does, do you enjoy it, feel inspired, creative and ready to perform at your best? No, thought not. With this in mind, I'd dearly love it if you could refrain from roaring from the sidelines at little Billy when he's trying to have fun with his friends. He's only eight. It really doesn't help. Ask him if you don't believe me.

2) I'm a volunteer
I know the annual club registration fee has gone up a tenner. And yes, I am wearing new boots. But I can assure you the two are not linked. When I'm not doing my job – yes, coaching is but a (mostly) joyful hobby for me – I am simply a willing, unpaid volunteer at an increasingly hard-pressed grassroots football club committed to giving children of all abilities the chance to play – not a one-man footballing equivalent of Serco out to inveigle a handsome profit from cruelly inflating the footballing dreams of your child and her friends.

3) I'm not a magician
How can I put this? Just because you stump up the registration fee all too readily (after all, as you say, it's only a fraction of the annual fees at the prep school) that doesn't mean you've bought the right to mess the coach and the other players about by turning up with little Gianfranco to training or matches whenever you feel like it. My training sessions are planned carefully; the arrival activities, challenges, targets and games are not merely a series of random events; they're actually planned. And, without going all educationalist on you, I'm a big believer in constructivist learning. Each session is linked thematically to build on the players' knowledge, understanding and skills in a thoughtful fashion, always with the goal of developing the players' skills across the FA's “four corner model”: technical, physical, psychological and social. All of this just might explain why, on several occasions, you've complained to me that Gianfranco isn't feeling “a vital part of the team” or perhaps improving his skills quite as much as you'd hoped. I'll repeat: I AM NOT A MAGICIAN! HE NEEDS TO PRACTICE. That means turning up every week, not just when you feel like it.

4) A chip off the old block
I'm really sorry to tell you this but your child's clearly got your gene for insufficiently honed coordination. With you it's getting your basic timing, application and demeanour in order (do you ever – I mean ever – even so much as glance at my numerous emails and texts?); with him it's ABCs, proprioception and ball mastery (which I'm working on with him all the time). So, as mentioned above, it's a teeny bit unrealistic to expect me to transform him osmotically into Lionel Messi after half a dozen sessions (only half of which he actually attended, all the time wearing hideously unsuitable running trainers and swigging from a can of Monster the size of his leg). So let's strike a deal: you agree to reply to my emails and make sure your son turns up to training suitably attired and not caffeined up and I'll continue coaching him (even though he turns like the QE2).

5) A winning mentality
I know little John's a born winner. He clearly takes after you doesn't he? And I know he was named after your role model. As was his little sister, Terri. You've told me that. A few times actually. I also appreciate their uncle played a few games for Wealdstone reserves in the season they cruised to the Gola league title back in the day. So you clearly know your football. It's just, well, this is coaching, not playing. Or watching. And when we're dealing with children – not adults – we have to think carefully about whether we demand that the players show you how much they really want to win the league - and, of course, the big shiny trophy that goes with it. Overemphasis on what us coaches call extrinsic motivation (pressure to win a match, the threat of punishment etc as opposed to intrinsic motivation) can actually have a negative impact on the child's motivation and self-esteem. Some studies link too much external pressure to stress, burnout and giving up the game, especially among players in the professional academies. The FA also surveyed thousands of kids playing grassroots football a couple of years ago and found the most common reasons for playing were, not winning the league or trophies, but trying their hardest, because it's fun, it's a great game and they love it.

So I'm not saying regaling children with that infamous winner's aphorism “show me a good loser and I'll show you a loser" is always wrong. Actually, yes I am. Again, just keep quiet. Please.

6) A valuable lesson
“Why on Earth did you play him there? He can't play there. He's not a defender. He's a forward; he only wants to play as a striker; he'll get you 30 goals a season from there.” But he's only seven years old. Your son's clearly good at maths too – I suppose it's all that counting practice keeping track of his goals tally – but would you instruct the teachers in his primary school to excuse him from literacy lessons so he can focus on becoming a mathematician instead? No, so give him a chance to breathe, let him develop new skills and you'll be surprised at how good he can become. In relation to point five, I really want him to be successful too. A winner, yes. But not just in an under 9s match where, frankly, he's simply much faster, stronger and older than most of the other players. (The wonders of a September birthday.) But this won't necessarily last. I'm trying to provide the players with the full range of skills necessary to win when they're 15, 18 and 21.

7) Fancy a promotion?
You know when I say I'm not interested in league tables … I actually really, truly mean it. It creates a race to the bottom with 10-year-olds, where long-term player development is relegated at the expense of hoofball, ranting parents and pressure to win at all costs. And no, I don't see it as an infringement of our human rights that the FA is finally scrapping them for all under-10s and younger from this season. But hey, I do find it intriguing the way you and Cristiano's dad, Eric, tried manfully last season to keep track of all the other teams' results to work out your own league tables. I sort of appreciate your initiative guys but did you really need to try to publish it on Facebook? Don't get me wrong though: I'm with them on the league tables but I'm no apologist for the FA. I see the new Wembley as a citadel of profligacy as much as the next person. And I'm the one practically remortgaging the house to complete my coaching licence CPD each year by shelling out for coaching courses. But you know, there's only so much we can do to change the FA. Back here at the grassroots, however, I'd love it if you could direct your efforts towards something a little more meaningful. Like, say, one of the many admin/committee roles at the club: there's communications, secretary, treasurer, welfare officer (actually, maybe leave this one for someone else), pitch coordinator - take your pick. Or you could just volunteer to fetch and carry equipment to and from training. Or what about linesman once we start playing offside? I'm not picky. Hell, we can't afford to be choosy in grassroots football.

8) Why the big rush?
And I know you're desperate to move your child up from the local pro club's community £5 a session gravy-train dream-building “development” sessions to the intermediate/advanced/demi-semi-elite “beyond-development” squad and eventually get the golden ticket – a slot in the full-blown junior millionaire elite “over-developed” squad because it's YOUR lifelong ambition – yeah, I get all that. And you want it all done before he's in secondary school. But can you please explain why? While you're thinking about it, please try not to relive your life through your child.

9) This is serious
Let me say this again: I'm not a childminder; I'm a qualified coach. Experienced too. Keen and passionately interested in helping the children fall in love with the game and reach their potential in a safe, fun-filled environment. Got that. Good. Now please let me let them play. They're children. That's what they love to do. They take play very, very seriously.

10) Bring on the dream team
Let's end on a positive note. You know that little schtick I do occasionally about the importance of fostering a growth mindset with the players (“mistakes are learning opportunities” etc)? Well, I genuinely believe we can be the living embodiment of all of this. Yes, you and me. Parents & Coach United. We'll both make mistakes. Even you, honest. But imagine the impact we could have together if all parents trusted the coach, backed him or her up and reassured your child by simply saying to them after a match: “I loved watching you play. It was great fun.” This would allow them to move on from mistakes and bask in the warm, character-enhancing glow brought about by riding on the physically, technically, socially and psychologically challenging rollercoaster that is playing a competitive team sport; if you could just remind yourself that we both want them to become the best player they can possibly be, we could create an environment for them to succeed unencumbered by a crippling fear of failure. Just try it. Go on, please. It might be tough at first but just, you know, do your best.
Sent from my iPhone

Friday, 29 April 2016

I,m a Striker !

A re post but think its relevant  after seeing some adds this week from teams advertising for position persific players at u/8  !






https://keeptheball.wordpress.com/2014/02/02/im-a-striker/

Thursday, 21 April 2016

A game of too many cliches !

Not read too many articles worthy of a re-post lately , but I think this is definitely worth a read .I remember  a coach from a former club at half time, telling a group of 7 year olds to "TURN THE SCREW " in the 2nd half. If im honest I have also reflected on sayings and terminology after a game or a coaching session and thought why did I say that !


https://jojodebrazza.com/2016/04/21/football-its-a-game-of-too-many-cliches/

Wednesday, 23 March 2016

4 vs 4 small sided game format

Futsal at Roding Valley school finishes tonight Wed 23/03/16  until the week commencing Monday the 11 th April, as always I like to finish the terms with the small sided conditioned game format, that forms the base of pretty much all our u/10,s training, with them I can add targets , floaters , 3rd man runs , wall passes , limit the number of touches etc etc etc, but these games on the PDF , form the basis of what we do , and are used by professional football club  academies across the world  . Some may not be interested , some might, but definitely  worth a look. Hope all the kids enjoyed the games and I tried to explain the reason behind them, see you in a couple of weeks


http://www.anbfutbol.com/4V4%20Football%20a%20must.pdf

Sunday, 31 January 2016

If you dont want to track back .............................

Firstly last weeks game wasn't our best performance ever, we didnt in my opinion deserve anything out of the game, ive seen teams earning  millions thou, having similar performances, we cant be superb every week think we just had an off day


This Sundays first 15 mins , seemed to be a hangover from it. I know it was cold and the pitch was heavy , but a few , looked like they weren't putting in any effort. When they come off i just explained to them i would never take players off because they are having a bad game, but would if I thought they wasn't trying . Having done 3 of the FA youth modules , i have to choose my words    carefully , the military phrase    "fear works best as a motivator" i mite have to change into u/10 context " if you don't want to track back, we've probably  got 5  on the bench that will "!!!
I try to be mostly positive but sometimes i think you have to tell  em how it is !
I hope i managed the situation well.
To  come back from being two down to win the game ,  they may have realised I was serious !!!, for me the winning was irrelevant , the fact that we never gave up ( after the first 15 mins) was what i took from the game. Ill take character over ability every day of the week, they were a very good side , probably one of the best we have come up against, hard work, chasing lost causes, shutting down quickly , got us the result today in my opinion, and that's not the  first time this  season that's been the case . I love how  comfortable we are playing the ball around at the back, we will concede goals doing it , but we are not part of the 30 million sky deal to stay in the premier league EmojiEmoji, so I don't really care .Having watched a few other  games  this season , I find it a shame that we congratulate kids ,  that's parents and coaches, for kicking the ball of the pitch when in a tight  defensive situations , its no wonder we struggle in the English game with players being comfortable on the ball, my opinion is they need to learn how to get out of that situation time and time again, surely if we allow them to make mistakes and concede the odd goal at  9 years old , we may have players who have learnt how to get out of those situations and   by the age of 14/15 , we have players who are more comfortable and don't panic on the ball, think they call it RISK AND REWARD , just my opinion, in any case they are in a no lose situation , ill  take it on the "gunger din" if we concede .....
First Futsal friendly for a while on  Monday night vs Finta Futsal, ill also be shadowing Diego,s first session from 6-7, lately I have been doing a lot of coaching, I need to be doing a lot more learning, it will be the 2nd futsal session this month I have shadowed, I took Nathan and Tobi to Carlos's session at CM FUTSAL 2 Fridays ago .   

Tuesday, 12 January 2016

Some more small sided games for the coaches

I am always looking out for more sessions and different , sessions keeps the kids focused . Another PDF I have just came across, ill get the wife !!! to print it off at work and have a more in-depth look . May be or may not be beneficial to your sessions , but worth a look






http://static1.1.sqspcdn.com/static/f/327948/3466832/1246308165223/Training+program+manual+for+U7+and+U8.pdf?token=Po3UPY2REVTQDrkMtt6VlBNgh80%3D

Chasing "a dream "

With the stats stacked against an 8 year ever reaching the    elite level of the game are we chasing  "a dream "
I was once asked by an "academy director! ! .If I would like to take my 2 boys to Brentford academy for a trial .Having spent the last 27 years as a driver, 23 years as a class 1 HGV driver, and the last 12 years as a London cab driver . Travelling around the north circular on a Friday night for a 5.30 pm start, 2 hours training then sitting in all that traffic  again to come  back my replie was " na im alright for that"!!.
He looked at me like I was mad .But harry ,Jack , bla bla bla is going .Hope the do alright then,  I replied .The fact of the matter IS  my two are not good enough , simple as that. Why would I want to travel a four hour round trip, for six weeks , for them to tell me what I already know .At the time , & things have changed drastically you could "nick a few quid in the cab" so adding to the traffic I would also lose money by not working . . Anyway just reminded of that little bit of history ! when I read this piece below .Its a good read






http://changingthegameproject.com/does-youth-sports-get-the-math-all-wrong/












It is frustrating for coaches, too, especially those who value trying to develop players for long-term success, instead of trading tomorrow’s development for today’s win.


 Yet, at the critical ages of development, where kids need as many touches and attempts as possible, we are choosing to play competitive games that give them very few, instead of practice that will help develop technical mastery.






. Let your kids play multiple sports, and help them find their passion instead of trying to determine it for them.




http://changingthegameproject.com/does-youth-sports-get-the-math-all-wrong/

Friday, 8 January 2016

Futsal club Roding " a potted history" -streetplayer sessions

Fed up with the lack of football due to the weather during the winter months  , the Buckhurst Hill  u13,s  (then u/8,s) were in early  2014. We started our Monday night sessions with 7 kids as a training session, they brought their  brothers who brought their  friends. Back then  I looked around and no one in this area was playing Futsal .Although when we started at Roding Valley school I met up again with Gavin Prince from  then (LOASS FC), a great coach who I  have a lot of time for, . Gavin coached my two 10 year olds at 4 years of age ( yeh he did the hard bit )!!!  good coaches are always on the cutting edge of  Football and you guessed it Gavin had thrown away his footballs and replaced them with futsal balls , so Gavin Prince was officially the first coach in the area to play futsal !!! (im choked) !With Mondays full up from 5-6 pm , I had  no hesitation passing kids on to Gavin who I couldn't fit in. Sessions have since come and gone mainly due to working in schools during the day, we currently Jan 2019 have 3 sessions Monday, Tuesday, Wednesday  .
 We  are looking  to add to our sessions , Monday girls session  7-8 pm and our Tuesday 6-7 pm session both at Roding Valley High School. Our sessions work on the WHOLE-PART-WHOLE principle, so we generally start with a game, move on to our "learning objective"  then back to a game      .Email me    Stuart.blake@bhfc.co.uk.   if you are interested in our #streetplayer #sessions, more games, more ball rolling time.  .Here is a piece I have shared before from Joey Barton
 
http://www.joeybarton.com/football-futsal-future/












And have a look  at the way these u/11, s stroke the ball around . Beautiful to watch


https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=ZDW2FASAo9s













Tuesday, 5 January 2016

Rough guide to Monday and Tuesdays Futsal session 5/6 th January 2016

We kicked off with some small sided games 3 vs 3,s 2 vs 2,s , get  all the kids on the ball, more passing more control more decisions to make I like to use the whole part whole system from the youth modules. Start with a game / some isolated practice , followed by 10 mins at least of ball manipulation .I see the basics as the inside cut and outside cut , if you watch any pro game you will see these 100,s of times I then asked the players to pick some turns / skills , which they had a go at . Here are some below






inside /outside cut




https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=AlMwNGOmkwA


The Maradona


https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=oYXcoG_mVUA




Cruyff turn




https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=DOqQbamkPvE




We then went into some isolated practices just passing using different parts of the foot, controlling the ball with one foot (futsal trap), then rolling it to the other foot, passing it on, lots  of different variations
Then we progressed to more small sided games , I use the dutch style games , and tonight we used , the line goal game which encourages the players to attack and be positive , to score a goal they have to breach the line and put there foot on the ball  . At the opposite end we used the 4 goal game , two goals each end , coaches use this a lot for switching play, and it breeds by its nature more decisions . . We split the group in two , Owain took the players from his Barkingside team and I took the BHFC kids , both teams varied in ages , both were 4 vs 4 . We switched teams and both played at both ends of the court
We then set up two zones and focused on our 1 vs 1,s , on any pitch anywhere regardless of the number of players on it , there will be  lots of one vs one situations, an all round player should be competent in attack and defence and the more 1 vs 1 ,s you can do in any session the better the player you will produce. Below is a slight variation of the one we used tonight, I tend to give the defending player 3 pug goals to score into , I explain this , as when a defender nicks the ball of an attacker he doesn't give it back to him .The pug goals separated one on the left , one in the centre and one on the right represent a left and right sided player and a player in the middle is the centre fwd . I also found in any session I have done over the years, the more goals you give a defender to score into the more players will volunteer to be defenders !!!, but they have to know the reason they play into them. Ie a centre back wins the ball and plays out to his left sided midfielder ( the pug goal to his left ).














https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=u4KXrv8M1wk




With all games and training likely to be called off this Saturday and Sunday, 45 local boys and girls have had training over 2 nights and 3 sessions , playing indoors this time of year is a must , that is why we started Futsal nearly two years ago.

Developing creativity by Saul Isaksson-Hurst

1v1 soccer skills create problems for defences and change games.


Supporting our players in learning and mastering these will open up a world of creativity and options, as they decide which ones they prefer and want to use.


http://mypersonalfootballcoach.com/1v1-soccer-skills-coaching-part-1-routes-to-the-end-goal/






http://mypersonalfootballcoach.com/1v1-soccer-skills-coaching-part-2-learning-mechanisms-soccer-education/




Ball manipulation as an unopposed session


https://youtu.be/TiABNepxTLw

Friday, 1 January 2016

Developing creativity from Matt Whitehouse




 



KEYPOINTS


Players will make mistakes and young players will make many of them, yet mistakes should be viewed as a key learning tool, because they are very important for a player’s development. For players to develop they require a challenging environment and, of course, they need to make mistakes.


Before receiving the ball a player should be fully aware of the situation and ‘pictures’ which are around him/Her


Painting pictures, for grass roots coaches  https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=MaoyrKAzZY0





There is a new craze which people believe will develop the skills for young players; futsal. Futsal helps to develop creativity in players perhaps more than any other version of small sided football. By its nature it promotes imagination, inventiveness and skill, and also improves decision making and spatial awareness. It promotes players to learn and cope in tight spaces under pressure…a significant issue which many English players struggle with.










The obsession with winning has stopped education, learning and creating skilful and creative players. The problem is many of our young footballers are being placed in the hands of coaches who are not skill ‘developers’ but skill ‘destroyers’. For all the well-meaning coaches who proclaim their wishes to play good football and promote the use of skill…as soon as these coaches get in the ‘heat of the battle’ they forget that they are developers of talent and instead focus solely on the result.








The reason this skill-set is restricted is as follows; firstly the issues above regarding coaching and limiting players. And secondly, the positon specific nature of young players development, being pigeon holed and asked to develop only the skills needed for that position. Players at nine or ten-years-old are being ‘labelled’ as defenders or forwards and being developed for those specific roles. Players should be developed to possess all the key characteristics of being a ‘footballer’. Why not develop an all-round skill-set which allows a player to fit in anywhere?














". Coaches may lose their bottle when results appear to go against them, falling for short termism over long term gains. It is perhaps why so few are genuinely creative in their ways; the fear of failure, a pathway marred by the wrong people.

Buckhurst Hill u/9 JPL just fall short in the Nationals

  BHFC u/9,s just fell short Saturday of making the National cup final    coming 2nd in their group with a convincing 6-0 win against the ev...