Everyone agrees that perfect technique is essential for an attractive and
successful game, and age-appropriate basic training is essential for
learning technical skills. To learn basic techniques, players need to
practice them again and again over a long period of time, ultimately using
them in exercises with opposition pressure.
In winter, the gym can be an ideal place
to practice technique. The limited space, even floor surface and
opportunity to use the walls all speed up the game and make it more
technically demanding. I And you don't have to worry about inclement
weather conditions (wind, cold, soft and mushy ground), which makes
technique training even easier.
This is Part 1 in a 2 part series. Part
1 will summarize major concepts and attributes for each of the basic
soccer techniques. This information can help coaches make corrections. We
will also tell you the best way to use indoor training equipment for each
exercise, and we also give some basic advice on organizing an efficient
practice session. Part 2 will present sample exercises designed
especially for indoor training, for each basic technique. These sample
exercises are intended primarily as suggestions: As a coach, you have to
evaluate your players' abilities and decide which exercises are
appropriate for them. Of course, by making small changes to the rules,
adding extra rules or changing the setup, you can make any exercise harder
or easier. We've also included some tips to help you organize these
exercises and use them in your own training program.
Indoor training can be an excellent
opportunity for players, especially the very young, to work on
coordination and effectively improve their technical skills. Indoor
training equipment can open up a whole new world of possibilities for the
inventive youth coach!
Dribbling & Faking
- Take your eyes off the ball and
look at the ground about three yards ahead of it.
- Keep the ball close! Touch it with
the active foot often, preferably with every step you take.
- Keep your body between the ball
and your opponent, so you can protect it. Always dribble with the
foot farther away from your opponent.
- Use fakes intelligently.
Indoor Training
- Use lines on the gym floor as
dribbling paths, with different colors for different dribbling
styles (e.g. step-overs on the blue lines and shooting fakes on
red).
- Use boxes, medicine balls, etc. as
dribbling obstacles.
- Set up interesting dribbling par
courses using various items.
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