5 Things
5 Things
5 Things
To Become A Top
Youth Football Coach!
Kurtis Pottinger
How to Become a Top Youth Football
Coach: For Parents and Coaches
Introduction
Every weekend throughout the football calendar, thousands of junior level
teams play against one another. At most football clubs you will nd either a
well-intentioned parent, who has decided to take over their child’s local
team or an aspiring football coach who has always wanted to get into
coaching and decided to start with a junior side.
In this e-book, I will address how a novice football coach can help produce
better football players and also outline what they must do to take them
from beginner to an expert youth coach.
How to Become a Top Youth Football Coach: For Parents and Coaches
How to Become a Top Youth Football
Coach: For Parents and Coaches
Coaching philosophy
“Soccer is simple, but it is difficult to play it simple” Johan Cruyff.
Without the right coaching philosophy you will be limited to how far you can
go as a football coach. In the beginning of a child’s playing career their
football development should be more important than winning.
This should be the main aim of every coach that works with players at youth
level, instead of focusing on winning they should encourage them to take
more risks and accept the fact that their players are likely to make mistakes
and lose some games playing this way.
One of the greatest basketball player’s Michael Jordan said “I’ve failed over
and over and over again in my life and that is why I succeed” in order to
succeed in anything you have to accept failure and learn from it, that is how
we progress and become better players.
Without the right coaching philosophy you will be limited to how far you can
go as a football coach. In the beginning of a child’s playing career their
football development should be more important than winning. This should
be the main aim of every coach that works with players at youth level,
instead of focusing on winning they should encourage them to take more
risks and accept the fact that their players are likely to make mistakes and
lose some games playing this way.
How to Become a Top Youth Football Coach: For Parents and Coaches
How to Become a Top Youth Football
Coach: For Parents and Coaches
Allow me to make this clear I am not telling you to totally forget about
winning the game. I am stating that you should concentrate on providing the
tools they need, that will allow them to play the game more e ectively in the
future. A top football coach understands that every game they play is an
opportunity to showcase what has been taught in previous coaching
sessions.
How to Become a Top Youth Football Coach: For Parents and Coaches
How to Become a Top Youth Football
Coach: For Parents and Coaches
The problem with creating a win at all cost mentality is that you encourage
your players to only use certain skills and tactical moves which are
considered important to win the game, such as playing long balls regularly.
Encouraging your players to play this way may bring rewards in the short
term but you also hinder the development of your players in the long run.
How to Become a Top Youth Football Coach: For Parents and Coaches
How to Become a Top Youth Football
Coach: For Parents and Coaches
Get Qualified!
You also need to be quali ed to a certain standard if you have ambitions of
progressing up the coaching ladder and maybe become an academy coach.
Every country has their own quali cations structure, in the UK to be
considered for a paid coaching position in the community you should have
at least your FA level 2 certi cate. This can be completed in 6 months and
requires you being assessed on one coaching session plus completing a
portfolio.
How to Become a Top Youth Football Coach: For Parents and Coaches
How to Become a Top Youth Football
Coach: For Parents and Coaches
To nd more information on the Practice Play courses click here. I am
currently a Premier Skills licence holder for the West Midlands, UK area, if
you would like to hold or attend a Practice Play course then Click here.
I personally learnt more watching other good coaches then I ever did on
most of my coaching courses. Luckily for us, we now live in an age where we
can access information from the comfort of our homes. Websites such as
YouTube and many other social sharing sites allow coaches to watch and
communicate with others, creating many opportunities to be mentored by
some of the great instructors.
How to Become a Top Youth Football Coach: For Parents and Coaches
How To Become A Top Youth Football
Coach: For Parents And Coaches
Great Leaders Are Readers!
Another way to learn from others is to read great content. A lot of the top
coaches around the world now have books or write regular articles, so
nding great content isn’t hard to nd you just need to know where to look.
Below I will include some of the books that have helped me on my coaching
journey.
Teambuilding: The Road to Success by Rinus Michels
Football for the Brave by John Cartwright
The Modern Soccer Coach 2014: A Four Dimensional Approach by Gary
Curneen
Coaching Soccer: The O cial Coaching Book of the Dutch Soccer
Association by Bert van Lingen.
How to Become a Top Youth Football Coach: For Parents and Coaches
Planning Great Football Sessions.
Style Of Play
A coach cannot put together a meaningful and progressive coaching session
without having in mind how they want to play the game.
If you were to look at all the great teams in the world such as Barcelona,
Bayern Munich, Ajax etc. what you will notice is that they all have a clear
style of play which every coach and player at the club adheres too. You
cannot coach a young player unless you have a clear vision of how you want
them to play when they are an adult.
Having a clear style of play is not about having the right formation. If your
football players have a clear understanding of how you want them to play,
the formation of your side will be more of a guide for the players but not the
most important aspect they should think about.
Progressive Planning
A top football coach understands the importance of gradually progressing
sessions throughout the season. A coach should never produce random
coaching sessions, which are in uenced by previous and forthcoming
football matches.
The coach should always produce session plans that will help them achieve
their end goal, which is their style of play.
If you stay clear from those situations and consider the tips I have
mentioned earlier, then you are on your way to producing engaging and
realistic football sessions.
Your players and coaches should develop an understanding that at this club
winning isn’t the most important thing, winning with a certain style is more
important. The development of players is the most important thing, and
every player and coach needs to understand these club values.
The main aim is to produce skilful, creative and innovative players in order
for this to happen you will need coaches who are innovative enough to
produce those players.
Engaging youth football players can be a di cult task for many coaches. A
young players attention span can be very short, and if your sessions are not
providing enough stimulation you will find it very hard to keep them on task.
Top coaches know how to engage youth football players throughout their
sessions. This requires recognizing when they seem to be losing
concentration and using tactics to keep them on task. It also requires
preparation before your session begins, planning how you will keep your
players involved will bene t you and the players when you deliver the
session.
To engage youth football players, you have to think about more than just
encouraging your players. Good coaches think of what, when and how they
give encouragement, they also think of using di erent teaching styles for
each player on their team as each player learns in different ways.
" Only those who attempt what they cannot do, will grow "
— Ralph Waldo Emerson.
Coaching Style
The coach has many di erent ways he/she can get their point across. There
are 3 main styles that coaches tend to use which are the following;
1. Command style - This is where the coach makes all the decisions with
little suggestions from the players.
2. Casual Style - This is when the coach takes a very laid back approach to
coaching, saying and showing nothing to their players throughout the
session.
3. Cooperative style - The coach who implements this style, tend to share
the decision-making progress with their players using frequent question
& answer methods.
Using a cooperative style of coaching helps the players take some ownership
of the session, thus encouraging further engagement from the players. It
also allows you to get your point across without having to bark information
constantly from the sidelines, instead you help players find the solution.
Summary
I believe a young players mood can be determined from the start of the
session. When a player arrives and hears what they are going to do in the
session can motivate or demotivate them. This is why it is important you give
your planning some real thought, I choose to use game situation training
(Match related scenarios) over drills (Waiting in lines & constantly being what
to do). Young players get more excited when they are playing the game, so
we should be doing more to make sure that they learn whilst playing the
game.
Horst Wein.
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