4v4 can
be misused as a tool. It is not just a matter of putting eight children on a small
field and making some random comments. Even with a properly constructed game learning
can be left to chance. The following are some ideas, which help to insure that
proper learning takes place. In the end though it is the coaches knowledge of
the game, the children, the learning process and his role in it that will make
the most out of any practice.
Have
a clear topic. A correct analysis of
the soccer problem must be in mind. This brings into
focus certain players at a specific moment in a clear-cut situation.
The starting point leads into the learning point.
In small sided games there are numerous restarts. Most of them should lead back
into the learning moment. For example, the soccer problem is the sweepers poor
distribution out of the back. The rules of the game are that all throwins, kickoffs
and corners for his team will restart with a goal kick. The sweeper may dribble
or pass out the goal kick. This way the coaching moment will be repeated often
giving him many chances to succeed or fail and to learn.
Stay on the topic. When things go wrong outside of
the topic ignore it if possible. Fix what you came to fix, don't get distracted.
Freeze the moment. When the
problem occurs have the players freeze. Address it with questions about the children's
TIC. Was that a good pass? Why did you run there? What could you do better? Ask
for solutions. Demonstrate. Begin again. You capture the moment and present them
a snapshot. After all a picture is worth a thousand words.
Don't over coach.
Experience teaches the coach when to step in. Over coaching kills the game and
ruins the fun. Avoid language that the children don't understand or don't need.
Slogans and mottos work well. Over coaching hinders the development of
concentration. Constant stoppages relieves the pressure that is necessary for
developing the proper mentality.
Coach those that need coaching. Mass explanations
generally waste time and fall on deaf ears. Addressing comments to the parties
involved is much more effective and efficient. After all it's their problem.
Don't argue against success.
If a team has just scored a goal don't try to tell them how to do it better. In
objective based training it's the result that counts. Wait for the opportunity
when the problem presents itself, then it is real.
Ask questions avoid statements. If I say it they
tend to doubt it, if they say it, it's true. Get them to tell you what is wrong
and how to fix it. They can't argue against themselves. Also, by asking them questions
they have to think for the answer as opposed to waiting for it to be given to
them. They are an active part of the problem solving.
Coach what is real. If the topic doesn't present
itself adjust the game. If it still doesn't then drop the topic. Don't coach a
coach's problem, it must be the players problem. Coach the children that are playing
the game, not what is convenient at the moment. Coaching must be relevant to the
picture and the problems.
Stand
where you can see. If you're interested
in the sweeper, stand behind the goal. Try to see the picture from their perspective.
Bring the game to life. The
color of the coach. Enthusiasm, humor, emotion and timing all play a part in making
the practice enjoyable.
Think
of three stages. First, get the game going. Give just enough direction
and instruction to start play. Boundaries, goals, any rules specific to the game.
They can learn the game by playing the game. This introduction might take a whole
practice. Next, what are the big mistakes? Do they understand the soccer problem?
Can their present TIC solve it? If it can't, introduce new answers. Finally, by
fine tuning you can introduce new demands that require new solutions.
Click on the image for a Real Time video showing some scenes on coaching SSG's
from "Street Soccer"
DVD.
Purchase an online copy from TotalVid.com
here.