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NSCAA
Coaching
Corner:
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Planning a Session at the Youth Level:
Beginning With the End in Mind
By Mick Smoothey, Regional Technical Director |
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We
design a coaching session in an effort to improve the way our team and the
individuals within it perform. This is the nature of our job. The way we
measure the improvement and the relative success of our session is through
the scrimmage at the end. If there is no improvement in the way the
players scrimmage then we have not been immediately successful in
achieving our aims and objectives.
The following guidelines propose a method of session planning where the
coach works backwards from the scrimmage to the warm up. The idea is that
we are always working towards a clearly defined goal.
Before planning a session the coach should have a very clear idea of what
aspect of the teams play he or she wishes to improve and should then
visualize them successfully performing that skill in the scrimmage at the
end of the next session. The coach can literally play a perfect videotape
in their ‘mind’s eye’! Improved performance in the scrimmage / game is the
main goal and should be the measuring tool for successful coaching. This
goal should be shared with the players at the beginning of the next
session thus involving them more actively in their own learning.
The penultimate activity will normally take the form of a conditioned
(restricted) game or functional activity which will maximize the
opportunity to reinforce the theme of the day in a game like setting e.g.
movement of the front two attackers. The nature of this activity will
depend on the age and ability level of the players but should lead
smoothly into the scrimmage as a bridging activity. Its relevance to the
game must be apparent to the players. It may involve organizing the field
area (in terms of size, placement of goals, number of goals, channels
etc.) to facilitate the repetition of a particular theme, or it may
involve placing the players in specific roles relating to team formation.
This is an important part of the session which is often overlooked because
other activities have over-run. It should be remembered that ‘everything
goes back to the game’.
The preceding technical/tactical activities should ensure maximum
activity, and quality feedback from the coach. This feedback should be
specific to individuals whenever possible but to the whole group if
relevant. As educators we must decide in each unique situation which
method we should use. As with the later stages of the session the players
need to be exposed to quality demonstrations so that they take away a very
clear, visual imprint of the correct techniques. This is far more
important than what you say to them! Remember, ‘a picture paints a
thousand words’.
In this model the final aspect of planning will be the warm up and this
should be designed to lead into the technical/tactical practice and should
introduce the first couple of coaching points. If a coach specifically
wants to conduct a ball- each warm-up then the first activity after the
warm-up needs to be very sharply focused on the theme of the day,
otherwise the players are going to be confused about the objectives.
By planning the session with a clear end in mind, (defined by performance
in the game situation) there will be pace and a clear purpose to each
activity. It will also be easier to evaluate the success of a session
clinically. Simply put, if there is no improvement in the scrimmage then
we have not been immediately effective in realizing our objectives and our
planning for the next session will need to reflect this.
Taken from the Coaching Corner at
http://www.nscaa.com
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Created:
12/20/99
Last Updated:
03/26/07
Since
February 24, 1999
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Web Administrator
Ken Gamble |
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