I know many people think that working with adults is much more difficult than working with children, because adults have a personality formed, they have their own experience with the game of football and each must be treated as an individual at any time. For me, the years of youth football players are much more difficult to implement because you do not have many options to take in your relationship with them.
With adults, you can base your coaching on a close relationship with them, seriousness, professionalism, honor and several other concepts that are not or would not work with a group (again, all these options). With children on the other hand, you're really stuck with them to provide a fun environment to play in. You can not "hard" on a bunch of children. Yell at them and they will cry and not go back to training again. It is as simple as that secretly, they are:)
So if you're stuck with exercises such as football, let's make sure you really like them, so that your youth team can both enjoy and learn from them at the same time. Before a soccer some fun exercises you can try to work with, I would just say that you really can not train "passing" or "pull" or a concept with children. This is not fun to shoot for 30 consecutive minutes, or practice throw-ins or anything.
You need to find exercises for your young soccer players who combine these raw concepts, so they exercise them, even unconsciously.
Soccer Drills for Young Players - One against an Dribbling
Children will love it, it's really a year of football fun! Even as little children when it comes to sports, we are very competitive and with a one on one dribbling drills, you put them head to head competition.
What they compete for yours. You can count a score like this: each time the attacking player manages to dribble past the defender, he gets a point, but it does the defender if he manages to stop the dribble. Or, you can easily form two goals cones, one for each player and the score will be based on exceeding the opponent's goal line with the ball at his feet.
Soccer Drills for Young Players - Unbalanced Drills
Unbalanced drills usually refer to 2 against 1, 3 cons 2, 4 or 5 cons 2 compared to group 3 above. Say you play youth 4 cons 2, which is the most popular version of the unbalanced group passing drill. Four players form a square about 20-25 yards and two players form a smaller team in the middle of this square. The four players from outside have to take the ball to another without being too far from their corner, while both the middle needed to keep the ball away from them (touch).
You can ask players to spend only 2 or 3 wears out before the pass, but it is not recommended if you are very young children. The player who loses the ball will go inside the square, and was a runner of the team and two players who hit the ball rather more likely, thus maintaining the ratio of 4-2. This fun soccer drill teaches kids several things:
\\ \\ X3e \\ \\ x3e It is important to work in groups, you're in the team pass the ball or the team to recover
\\ \\ X3e \\ \\ x3e It is important to give precise passes, if the player you want the ball to go the distance
\\ \\ X3e \\ \\ x3e Sometimes, it is important to reach first pass use
\\ \\ X3e \\ \\ x3e This emphasis on working in a confined space, which will prove invaluable later
Provided that you provide drills fun soccer makes it a value, it is a win win situation: the children love coming to training, knowing that fun, they are very good with their friends and you also get to teach them the basics of passing, receiving and dribbling. Once they get the hang of these basic principles of football, you can skip to the head, shooting and more complex concepts.
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