When Should We
Teach Positions
Jan
Simisek, US Soccer U-14 National Coaching Coordinator
with Dave Schumacher, WSYSA Coaching Director
At youth coaching
clinics and licensing courses across the country the question of when
to teach positions is usually raised. The fact that questions and concerns
continue to be asked, mainly by coaches of 9 to 11 year olds, suggest
that it is important to address this issue. Many coaches of this age group
seem to be focusing on organizing players to play in specific positions
once they begin playing 6 v 6, 7 v 7 or 9 v 9. It also appears that, at
this point these coaches are abandoning the use of small-sided games,
3 v 3, 4 v 4 or 5 v 5, as a teaching tool in their practices.
Because there are
more players on the field at this age, inexperienced coaches feel an overwhelming
need to manufacture structure at the expense of continuing to build a
solid base of individual techniques and a clear comprehension of individual
and small group tactics. Many Coaches fall back on their familiarity with
other American team sports, where positional play and structure are a
natural and fundamental part of playing the game. As a result, these coaches
create practices filled with an array of contrived, unrealistic drills
designed to get the players to spread out in an attempt to resemble the
adult game. Providing the structure of being a defender, midfielder or
forward starts to become the guiding force in their approach.
This is not to say
that as we begin to add more players on the field 4 v 4 to 9 v 9 – we
ignore that team roles start to occur and that players should be allowed
to experience these various roles. It should NOT, however, assume high
priority in coaching 9 – 11 year olds.
Soccer is DIFFERENT!
Its foundations are based upon basic techniques and elementary principles
required by ALL players. A young player’s ability to perform the basic
techniques of the game: passing, dribbling, receiving, shooting, heading,
and tackling, is directly related to the application of simple principles
of play and is critical to their development and future success. It is
therefore vital that coaches continue to play small-sided games such as
3 v 3 and 4 v 4 in practices. Small-sides games increase the number of
touches on the ball, do not allow players to hide or be excluded, and
provide simple but realistic soccer challenges and decisions. In addition
to small-sided games at practice, providing players a variety of playing
experiences in games produces the appropriate environment for learning
to take place.
Goalkeeping is a unique
role and needs training of special techniques. However, it must not be
forgotten that in today’s game goalkeepers are soccer players and need
exposure to the same techniques and principles as field players. Youth
coaches must safeguard against limiting players to just playing in goal
at these young ages, we must develop well-rounded soccer players with
some ending up as goalkeepers later in life.
A major element of
soccer is decision-making. Players must make decisions individually and
collectively regarding possession, penetration and defending. Playing
in a particular area of the field only provides one view of the options
or choices available to the player within the game. It is important for
young players, as they learn the game, that they be exposed to playing
in different areas (roles/positions) to gain perspective (vision) which
will help develop the decision making process.
Coaches must remember
that they are working with 9, 10, and 11 year olds. They display distinct
characteristics mentally, physically and socially. It is the ideal age
for challenging technical development and it is the point at which they
begin to understand the importance of cooperation in team play. They are
capable of grasping basic principles of play, such as support, and their
application in a small-sided environment. We need to take this into account
and keep our expectations and demands of players with this context. The
foundation of the game must be created in the small-sided environment.
We can’t expect players to see pictures and make good decisions in larger
sided games until they master them in small-sided games. Most of all be
patient. We don’t teach children to read by starting with “War & Peace”.
In this respect, soccer is not different.
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