Granite Country Youth Soccer Association
Transcription
Granite Country Youth Soccer Association
Granite Country Youth Soccer Association DIV Curriculum 2 TABLE OF CONTENTS Coaching Technical Skills P.3 Passing Technique P.4 Dribbling Technique P.5 1 v 1 Moves Technique P.6 Player Development Guidelines P.7 U6 Curriculum P.8 U8 Curriculum P.9 U10 Curriculum P.10 Practice Structure P.11 Testing P.12 Tips For Coaches P.15 Resources P.16 Appendix A – U6 Player Evaluation P.17 Appendix B – U8 Player Evaluation P.18 Appendix C – U10 Player Evaluation P.19 Appendix D – Practice Structure (Coerver) P.21 Appendix E – Test Recording Sheet P.21 3 COACHING TECHNICAL SKILLS In order to ensure the long-term development of participants in GCYSA soccer, it is imperative that players receive instruction that is consistent. To achieve this, the following pages contain coaching points related to the teaching of various aspects of soccer technical play. It will facilitate the development of players if athletes receive instruction that is consistent and in consistent language. Technical ability is the foundation upon which all subsequent soccer success is built. It is important that the players get proper foundation in the technical aspect of the game early and often in their soccer career. The first section of the coaching curriculum will cover the coaching points for the following areas of the technical game: 1. Passing a. inside of foot b. outside of foot c. instep 2. Receiving the ball – positive first touch* a. On the ground b. From the air i. with feet ii. with thigh iii. with chest 3. Dribbling 4. 1v1 Moves 5. Running with the ball 6. Shooting 7. Heading 8. Tackling 9. Shielding *Receiving the ball should be taught in conjunction with passing technique. Positive first touch refers to receiving the ball in such a way with the first touch that it sets up an easy, accurate, effective second touch (pass or dribble). Generally a positive first touch places the ball out from under the feet, a foot to a yard in front of the receiver in a place that is convenient to strike quickly for an effective pass or dribble. 4 PASSING TECHNIQUE The coaching points for passing are fairly consistent regardless of the type of pass you are looking to make. There are slight variations depending on the surface of the foot that you are using or if you are trying to pass on the ground, drive a pass through the air, or chip the ball. With our younger players we should focus on learning to properly pass a ball on the ground with all three surfaces of the foot. In executing a pass, we are concerned about four things: direction, power (or pace), control, and accuracy. Direction is determined by the direction the hips face when striking the ball. The easiest way to determine the direction of the hips is by the direction the plant foot points. Power comes from the backswing, both the distance and speed of the foot’s approach to the ball. Control is achieved by locking the ankle with the ball is struck. Accuracy is a product of the follow through. Players should be trained to follow through to their target. Coaching Points 1. Plant foot should be even with the ball and far enough away for the kicking leg to swing freely. 2. Plant foot should be pointed at the target. 3. The ankle should be locked before striking the ball. The method of locking the ankle depends on the surface of the foot being used to strike the ball. a. Inside of foot: Toe up and out. b. Outside of foot: Toe down and in. c. Instep: Toe down 4. Head and knee slightly over the ball. 5. Strike the center of the ball firmly and kick through the ball. 6. Follow through to the target. We should teach our younger players to master inside of the foot passing. It is the most accurate and reliable passing technique. Chipping 1-3. The steps for chipping are the same as steps 1-3 above, except that in step 3, the toe should be pointed down so the top of the toes will strike the underside of the ball. 4. Strike the bottom half of the ball, but do not follow through, but rather sort of “stub” your foot into the ball. Many players will mistakenly try to lift the ball into the air. A correct chip will cause the ball to rise quickly into the air with a significant backspin. 5 Dribbling Technique As you will read later, dribbling with the ball should be the first technical skill young player’s master. Many times dribbling is confused with running with the ball. Dribbling is close control of the ball in movement, with the feet and on the ground, continuously changing its trajectory. Running with the ball is control of the ball with the feet and on the ground at high speed without changing it trajectory. Mistakenly, many coaches will overlook dribbling because they want to teach their players to pass. Young players need to learn to become comfortable with the ball first and to master touching it, particularly in small spaces. Early in a player’s career they need to spend a significant amount of time working on dribbling. The coaching points for dribbling include posture, vision, touch, direction, and pace. Coaching Points Posture 1. Players should be relaxed, bent at the knees. 2. Players should be on their toes for quick change of direction. 3. Players should play with their chest over the ball. 4. Players should “sit down” a little to maintain a lower center of gravity. Vision – good vision is essential to composure on the ball 1. Players should have their head up and scan the field. 2. Players should be trained to look for both players and space on the field. Touch 1. Dribbling should be done by simply pushing the ball with all three surfaces of the foot (inside, outside, instep) Direction and Pace 1. Players should be trained to dribble at a comfortable pace. Normal dribbling is not at full speed 2. Players should be trained to use a 1v1 move as part of their dribbling technique. 6 1v1 Moves Technique Some players will confuse 1v1 moves with “tricks”. Tricks are done for fun or to impress your friends. While 1v1 moves might be fun and might impress your friends, they must accomplish one of three objectives, to maintain possession to: continue with a dribble or running with the ball, gain time and space for a pass, gain time and space for a shot. There are hundreds of 1v1 moves with all sorts of different names. Allow players to create their own, copy one from the favorite player, or from a friend, as long as their creation meets the objectives stated above. There are three types of 1v1 moves, change of direction, stop start, and feints. Change of direction 1. Dribble or run with the ball at the fastest pace possible, then quickly change directions and accelerate as quickly as possible in the new direction. Stop start 1. Dribble or run with the ball at the fastest pace possible, then quickly stop the ball, wait a split second to allow the defender to stop, then just as he is stopping, move forward again as quickly as possible. Feint 1. A soccer feint is a move by a player with the purpose of deceiving an opponent, with the intention of tricking the opponent and creating space. Many great soccer players only have one or two 1v1 moves in their repertoire, so a coach should present a variety of moves to his or her players and encourage them to choose one or two to focus on and to master. Make certain they understand the objective of the move. 7 Player Development Guidelines Granite Country Youth Soccer Association U6 – U10 The following player development guidelines have been established from a variety of sources including USSF, the Canadian Soccer Association, North Hunterdon Soccer Club, Liberty Hill Youth Soccer Association, and the Shakopee Soccer Association, as well as original ideas. The intention of this document is to provide some degree of vertical alignment and consistency in what is taught to GCYSA participants. It is important to note that each player and team is different. Players develop at different rates and times. Before the guidelines below are adopted, each player should be evaluated to determine where to begin. In organizing all training sessions, the principles from USSF below should be applied: • • • • • • Activities are developmentally appropriate Coaches provide clear, concise, and correct information Instruction is organized to move from simple to complex A safe and appropriate training space is utilized Decision making by players is required with activities Activities have implications towards the game After looking over the curriculum, coaches should proceed to the next section of this publication dealing with practice structure and organization. 8 U6 Player Curriculum Goal: Develop a love and a passion for the game. Reinforce the reason the child participates in the first place: FUN. Develop a technical foundation to sustain the child throughout their soccer career. Technical: • Dribbling with all surfaces of the foot. • Attacking moves, turns, stop-starts, change of direction • Receiving ground balls move to meet the ball, control with all surfaces of the foot. • Proper passing technique with inside, laces, outside, from the dribble, and weight of pass. • Focus should be on ball mastery. Physical: • Body awareness • Master running, balance, jumping, and turning, and speed. • Eye foot, eye hand coordination • Agility – changing direction while in motion. Tactical: • Develop an awareness of which goal to attack and which goal to defend. • Develop an understanding of basic rules of play. (can’t use your hands, out of bounds, etc.) Psychosocial: • Fun and passion for play. • Develop positive attitude and positive self-esteem. • Learn to play with others. General Practice Guidelines Have one ball per player at every practice session and do activities for over half the practice session with one ball per player. Never train with less than one ball per four players. All practices should be based on fun games. Use some small-sided games but keep them simple. Recommended training time 30 – 45 minutes. 9 U8 Player Curriculum Goal: This is a period of youth development that is sometimes called a golden age of learning. This age is the beginning of an optimal time to train speed, agility, flexibility, and technical skill. This age provides the greatest opportunity to build the foundation of technical skills necessary for the successful long-term development of the player. Fun is still very important. Technical: • Focus should continue to be on ball mastery. • Introduce and develop individual 1v1 skills of change of direction moves, stop-starts, and feints. (Coerver) • Continue to develop dribbling, running with the ball, and positive first touch. • Focus very intensely on positive first touch. Physical: • Continue with physical objectives from previous stage. • Continue to develop speed, agility, and quickness. Tactical: • Develop basic principles of attack and defense. • Develop awareness of 1v1 and 2v1 attack to goal. • Introduce positional awareness in a number of positions. • Understand restarts. Psychosocial: • Introduce sportsmanship, working with others. • Promote group interaction skills • Introduce discipline and acceptance of training structure. • Create a task oriented environment in training. • Begin to develop a sense of team. General Practice Guidelines Continue to begin practice sessions with one ball per player to reinforce ball manipulation techniques. Teach the principles of 1v1 moves including change of direction, stop-start, and feints. Allow time in practices for players to practice these moves and encourage them to work on them on their own time. Teach a number of moves and allow players to choose one change of direction, one stop-start, and one feint to focus on. Encourage risk taking, reward effort, and ignore mistakes to encourage these players to take their 1v1 skills to the game. Begin to introduce team building activities at this point. Recommended training time of 50 – 60 minutes. 10 U10 Player Curriculum Goal: This period is a continuation of the golden age of learning. Continue to focus on the technical skills of 1v1 moves, dribbling, running with the ball, passing and receiving. Vertical alignment between the U8 coach and the U10 coach is very important. The U10 coach should encourage the players to continue to work on the 1v1 moves that they began mastering in U8. Technical: • Focus should still be on ball mastery. • Continue to develop individual 1v1 skills of change of direction moves, stop-starts, and feints. (Coerver) • Continue to develop dribbling, running with the ball, and positive first touch. • Focus very intensely on positive first touch. Physical: • Continue with physical objectives from previous stage. • Continue to develop speed, agility, quickness, and speed. Tactical: • Continue to develop basic principles of attack and defense. • Develop an ability to effectively accomplish 2-3 player combinations. • Introduce positional awareness in a number of positions. • Teach basic set pieces. (corner kick, throw in, kick off) • Introduce concept of 1st and 2nd attacker and 1st and 2nd defender. Psychosocial: • Reinforce sportsmanship, working with others. • Promote group interaction skills. • Introduce discipline and acceptance of training structure. • Create a task oriented environment in training. • Work to develop task oriented thoughts within each player. • Begin to develop a sense of team. General Practice Guidelines Continue to begin practice sessions with one ball per player to reinforce ball manipulation techniques. Reinforce the principles of 1v1 moves including change of direction, stop-start, and feints. Allow time in practices for players to practice these moves and encourage them to work on them on their own time. Encourage players to create their own moves as long as they meet the objectives of a 1v1 move. 11 Practice Structure The Coerver curriculum is a good source of information for youth soccer coaching, particularly their practice structure. While the Coerver system is touted as a complete system, coaches can certainly supplement the Coerver activities with others. Below is some information related to the Coerver method. This information came from the Session Planner Deluxe program offered by Coerver. Coerver Practice Structure for all ages U12 The sections of the practice session are listed as percentages of total time. Determine the length you want your practice session to be, then assign the percentage minutes to each section. Warm Up 10% Speed 15% Moves (1v1,2v2) 15% Small Group Play 20% Small Sided Games 30% Homework Assignment 10% For example, for a 60 minute practice session, the times would be those listed below. Water breaks and transition time is in addition to the percentages allotted. Warm Up Speed Moves (1v1, 2v2) Small Group Play Small Sided Games Homework Assignment 6 minutes 9 minutes 9 minutes 12 minutes 18 minutes 6 minutes Coerver provides an assortment of activities for each section of practice. To prepare a training session, simply choose one activity for each section. A small selection of activities appears in the Session Planner Deluxe e-book, with a much larger selection of activities in the accompanying 5 DVD set. Many Coerver activities are multi-dimensional and in addition to working on the main objective, also improve awareness, agility, and decision making skills. The Coerver Session Planer Deluxe e-book will be made available to GCYSA coaches. 12 Testing Proper evaluation is necessary to measure the growth of the players under our direction. Minimally, tests should be administered at the beginning of a season (U8 and up) and again at the end of the season. Additionally, the coach could also administer some tests periodically throughout the season. The results should be archived to measure the players’ progress over the course of their youth soccer career. Encourage the athletes to set goals to improve their scores through work done in training and in practice at home. Test 1 – Ball Mastery U8, U10 1. Pair players with one ball. One athlete participates in the test while the other counts his touches aloud. Player drops ball and kicks and catches. Player gets 3 attempts and counts the best. Players then switch roles. Test 2 – Speed U8, U10 Set up: 3 cones set out at 5 yds, 5 yds, and 10 yds. Two players can run the course simultaneously but each runner must be timed. Runners sprint forward around first cone, sprint backward around first cone, sprint forward around second cone, sprint backward around first cone, sprint forward around third cone, round third cone and sprint forward to the first cone. 13 Testing Continued Test 3 – Dribbling Set up: A dribbling course of 3 cones 1 yard apart, 3 yards from the start line, with another 3 cones 1 yard apart, 7 yards from the first 3 cones. Time starts when the player touches the ball. If the player misses or touches a cone with the ball, add 2 seconds on to the time. Stop time when players dribble across the finish line. 14 Testing Continued Test 4 - Passing Set Up: 20X20 grid set up as shown above. U8 can pass from the U10 passing line. If passing from the U10 passing line, balls should be lined up on the U14 passing line. Player must take a minimum of 1 touch prior to passing. Player should alternate between each gate, passing with the right foot through the right gate, and the left foot through the left gate. Have other players or coaches place balls on the shooting line so the player does not run out of balls. Player gets 3 points for each pass that passes between the gates and 1 point for each pass that strikes a cone but still passes through the gate. Perform the tes testt for 45 seconds. 15 16 Resources • USSF Soccer Curriculum, retrieved from http://www.ussoccer.com/coaches/coachingeducation/coaching-home.aspx • USSF Soccer Best Practices, retrieved from http://www.ussoccer.com/coaches/resources.aspx • USSF Coaches Manual • Shakopee Soccer Association, Player Development Guideline, retrieved from http://www.shakopeesoccer.com/page/show/270446-player-development-plan • North Hunterdon Soccer Club Development Curriculum, retrieved from http://www.northhunterdonsoccerclub.org/Curriculum/index_E.html • Canadian Soccer Association, Wellness to World Cup, retrieved from http://www.canadasoccer.com/wellness-to-world-cup-s14682 • Liberty Hill Youth Soccer Association, Player Development Program and Coaches Manual, retrieved from http://www.lhsoccercoach.info/dl/pdp.pdf 17 APPENDIX A – U6 PLAYER EVALUATION FORM Player Name:_________________________ Coach’s Name:_______________________ Parents’ Names:__________________________________________________________ Date:________________________________ The player receives a rating 1-10 with 10 being best in each area listed below. _______ Ability to dribble with all surfaces of the foot. _______ Quality of attacking moves, turns, stop-starts, change of direction. _______ Receiving ground balls, moving to meet the ball. _______ Receiving ground balls, control with all surfaces of the foot. _______ Proper passing technique with inside of foot. _______ Proper passing technique with outside of foot. _______ Proper passing technique, weight of pass. _______ Awareness of which goal to attack and which goal to defend. _______ Understanding of the basic rules of play. _______ Ability to run, balance, jump, and turn. _______ Agility – changing direction while in motion. _______ Fun and passion for play. _______ Positive attitude and positive self-esteem. _______ Ability to play well with others. 18 APPENDIX B – U8 PLAYER EVALUATION FORM Player Name:_________________________ Coach’s Name:_______________________ Parents’ Names:__________________________________________________________ Date:________________________________ The player receives a rating 1-10 with 10 being best in each area listed below. _______ Ability to dribble with all surfaces of the foot. _______ Receiving ground balls – positive first touch. _______ Mastery of 1v1 skills of change of direction, stop-starts, and feints. _______ Proper passing technique with inside of foot. _______ Proper passing technique with outside of foot. _______ Proper passing technique, weight of pass. _______ Positional awareness. _______ Understanding of restarts. _______ Speed & Quickness. _______ Sportsmanship and working with others. _______ Fun and passion for play. _______ Positive attitude and positive self-esteem. _______ Coachability. 19 APPENDIX C – U10 PLAYER EVALUATION FORM Player Name:_________________________ Coach’s Name:_______________________ Parents’ Names:__________________________________________________________ Date:________________________________ The player receives a rating 1-10 with 10 being best in each area listed below. _______ Ability to dribble with all surfaces of the foot. _______ Quality of attacking moves, turns, stop-starts, change of direction. _______ Receiving ground balls -positive first touch _______ Receiving ground balls, control with all surfaces of the foot. _______ Proper passing technique with inside of foot. _______ Proper passing technique with outside of foot. _______ Proper passing technique, weight of pass. _______ Speed, agility, and quickness. _______ Ability to effectively accomplish 2-3 player combinations. _______ Understanding of positional awareness in number of positions. _______ Ability to follow instructions. _______ Fun and passion for play. _______ Positive attitude and positive self-esteem. _______ Coachability. 20 APPENDIX D Practice Structure For Coerver Training Session Time Activity Type Warm-Up Speed Moves Small Group Play Small Sided Games Homework Activity Description Notes 21 APPENDIX E Test Recording Sheet Date:_________________ Name Ball Mastery Speed Dribbling Passing