FWIW I see a lot of teams trying to play "possession," but the players lack the technical ability to execute it. Traps are loose; passes aren't to feet; girls lack confidence on the ball when they're under pressure. So they don't move the ball quickly, can't play out of tight spaces, and they end up having to hoof it. Most teams, despite what their coaches say, end up playing direct when they're not playing a wildly overmatched opponent. Hurtarte's CDA Slammers team makes a real effort to possess; the Galaxy teams do, as well. And I'm obviously biased, but ball mastery, technical ability, and possession are the foundation of Jacob Tudela's teams. (I'm not selling -- we're in LA.)
Carlos Guerrero is the 06 coach and not 05. He is indeed a great coach though! You should look at IE Surf RBThey exist. Carlos Guerrero FC Golden State & Randy Bowling IE Surf Premier. I could be wrong but I thought FC Golden State was practicing in Azusa (which is technically in the SGV but really not that far from the IE and it is going against traffic. Not sure if IE Surf RB is practicing in San Bernardino or La Verne, but again not a bad drive against traffic. Bowling is more of a yeller when things aren't connecting but you can tell the corrections made on game day are referencing something from training. Guerrero is not a yeller and his teams play possession. Good luck!
In my humble opinion “pure” approaches are not the most effective. There is a place for an athletic direct style play and a place for possession. I think a good strategic coach knows when to direct players to use one of the other given the circumstances of the game. A hybrid.Your that parent that gets upset when a coach ask his/her team to drop the ball and reset if they want to switch the point of attack huh.
Or gets upset when the coach wants his players to play short on a corner kick or goal kick.
We all seen that parent throw their hands up in the air at their coach and scream "WHY!"
Absolutely. It requires a commitment from the coach (who may not collect as many trophies from his or her 8 to 12-year-olds) and from the parents (who, as you say, may have to sit through some losses.) So great coaching is important, but so is great communication. For example, a team might make a lot of progress in Tier 2 and get to the point where they can dictate play pretty consistently against other teams; then they get promoted to Tier 1, where everyone is a little bigger and a little faster, and suddenly there's a fraction of a second less time to make decisions, and then the whole possession thing falls apart. Girls can lose confidence ("Why doesn't it work anymore?"), parents can lose patience ("WHY DOESN'T IT WORK ANYMORE?!"), and the coach has to send the message that what's needed is just good training and time. And if the coach backs that up with some good training over time, the team will eventually hit the next level.The problem is that you can't teach a true possession style of play in one year. It takes multiple years of dedication in which there will be bad, bad losses. And parents nowadays hate bad losses and see it as a result of poor coaching. You'll only see true possession teams at a club that mandates it at the youngest age groups. And most clubs fall on the spectrum between SD Surf/West Coast/Beach --------------------- LAGSD/Legends/Arsenal
The problem is that you can't teach a true possession style of play in one year. It takes multiple years of dedication in which there will be bad, bad losses. And parents nowadays hate bad losses and see it as a result of poor coaching. You'll only see true possession teams at a club that mandates it at the youngest age groups. And most clubs fall on the spectrum between SD Surf/West Coast/Beach --------------------- LAGSD/Legends/Arsenal
Oh, E! Kicks are for kids, so you can punt and chase all you want."...true possession..."
What a joke.
Kick or chase?Draluck Blues
Draluck is kick. Kale is chase.Kick or chase?![]()
Well put Sir.Draluck is kick. Kale is chase.
It's like watching the Raiders for the last 20 years until Carr got there...Kale is the prefect defention of kick ball, kick and chase, go deep.
We played Apple Valley about 4 weeks ago and they were doing this the first 10 minutes of the game and they were undefeated until this past weekend, so I imagine it is a common trait for their team. My daughter was playing outside the 18 most of the time to clear every ball. Hats off to Apple Valley coach who switched mid game and stopped playing that route, instead running possession through the midfield. I think my daughter had about 45 touches that game, crazy high number for a keeper when she usually gets 15-20.Kale is the prefect defention of kick ball, kick and chase, go deep.
Part of that is because they usually wind up with the fastest and some of the biggest kids around. Play to your strength.
What happens to the girls when they are no longer the fastest and biggest? Does anyone have any experience on how their players develop as they move onto the older ages? Are they missing skill or lack the mental ability? I am genuinely curious...
I don't see a lot of skill development happening at practices. From my very brief experience with club soccer it seems that most of the individual skill development (needed for possession soccer) comes from private trainings.