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Soccer – How Often You Should Perform Soccer Conditioning

Friday, September 3rd, 2010

In Sweden there’s been kind of a trend to do a lot of long distance running during the first part of the pre-season, and then as you progress towards the regular season you start to decrease the distance the players are running.

When you first think about it, it looks like a pretty decent idea, right?

Well, it isn’t. I am so tired of hearing coaches talk about “creating a conditioning foundation for the players so they have base to stand on” when the season starts. But here’s where it gets weird in my opinion.

Every pre-season you do a lot of conditioning, and then when the season starts you stop doing all intense-related work because you are afraid the players might get sore or tired during the in-season period. So when the season is over the players have a few weeks (months?) off from training, and then when they start the pre-season again, you start doing all the conditioning all over again.

I have seen this happen for the last 10 years and experienced it myself as a player. At the end of the pre-season, you feel like you  are unbeatable, but somewhere during the season you lose that feeling, and when the next pre-season starts again, it feels like you’re starting again from square one. I like to sum this up and give you my idea and explanation on how YOU should set it up. To sum it up, I’d like to quote Will Smith:

“If you stay ready, you ain’t gotta get ready”

With that being said, if you work on maintaining a good level of conditioning all year round you don’t have to build it back up when the pre-season starts again, you can either take it to the next level or plain and simple just work on what soccer really is all about – playing soccer!

My players have a really great level of conditioning and therefore I am able to really work on developing their ability to play soccer, and develop their ability to play it at a high speed and a high level.

Stall. Again, this is precisely what it sound like: You’re “stalling” the footbag with various parts of your body, in order to exert more control over it. Think of it as catching the bag with the inside or outside of your foot, or your toe. There’s also a move called a “clipper stall,” which is an inside stall made while your foot is behind the opposite leg.

Arm Stall. You might think this move is a bit odd, since it involves arms instead of feet and legs. But many of the best footbag artists use whatever body parts make for the best maneuvers. To initiate this move, it’s important to kick the footbag high enough that you can reach it with your elbow. Then catch the bag in the crook of your elbow, and immediately straighten your arm to “bump” the footbag back into the game.

Knee Bump. Think of this as a kick/stall hybrid. It involves catching the footbag on your knee, then bouncing it back into play. Or it’s simply a “kick” using your knee. It’s one of the simplest moves to master, but it’s a crucial component to many other complicated tricks.

Sitting on the sidelines in discomfort and watching my team was hard, especially as I had been put there by an innocuous challenge, but it certainly sped up my progression into coaching. My posterior cruciate ligament was torn and I was sidelined for a season undergoing regular intensive physiotherapy sessions and a rehab programme. I was well on the road to recovery when I hit from behind when stationary in a road traffic accident and clattered my knee against the dash board due to the inertia caused by the other driver and extensively damaged it again, undoing the months of hard work I’d recently put in. that was it, my playing days were well and truly gone. As with everything I do, if I’m doing something then I aim to be the absolute best that I can be at it and hence I undertook as many coaching qualifications as I possible could fit in in a ridiculously short space of time. I aimed to provide each goalkeeper that I worked with as much insight into the game as physically and mentally possible as I embarked on my new fledgling career as a goalkeeper coach. Having received no specific coaching personally I wasn’t dogged by the “Do it this way” mentality that follows the majority of coaches and I was free to develop my own personal style, ideas and methodology. I am a huge student of how people work and watch many, many coaches in their mannerisms and style and took the bits that would suit me and adapted those that wouldn’t until I found a style that works. And it is with this style that I lead you into the magical world of Coaching the Goalkeeper by Bob Warby

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Get The Upper Hand On Your Competition – Soccer Prospects

Tuesday, August 31st, 2010

If you are trying to make from high school to college soccer, you’ll be matched up against soccer prospects from all around the country and even the world. Soccer is the number one sport in the world, and many foreign students are now using soccer as a way to get an education in the United States.

Soccer prospects should keep in mind that unless you are being recruited by a major Division I school, most college coaches just don’t have huge recruiting budgets. Coaches that find themselves in this situation rely heavily on word of mouth recommendations from other coaches, recommendations from high school and travel team coaches, and they also rely on hearing directly from high school student-athletes.

The mystery, if at all there was one about soccer goals, is revealed around this fact – With every goal scored in a match, the goal scoring team gets to rejoice in its achievement.

But, more importantly, the fact that the player who actually sends the ball into the net has already done something special – He has won over about 4-5 players including the goalkeeper who are assigned the responsibility to cut off any scoring efforts.

They need others to help them learn about quality players who may be available. That’s why coaches will want to hear from you if you have the talent, skills and athleticism to play at their level.

And in some occasions, when the ploy backfires, defensive teams adopt a more attacking formation only to score more goals, either to restore parity to the proceedings, or to finish victors

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