Monday, January 28, 2013

Week Two.

I'm glad I finished with the U4 team picture in time to get back on the field for the Lion's last quarter.  I was really amazed at the huge steps all the players are taking.  Ava B. was totally in the game.  William managed a goal.  Jackson was controlling the ball.  And Jagger and Diego!  They were talking to each other and executing passes.  I was blown away by how casually they were cooperating, as though they'd done that for years. 

The Bats played well too with strong efforts from everyone.  I saw so much good ball control, so much heads-up play and so much cool-headed play from everyone.  The highlight of course was the sudden arrival of Ashley as a goal scoring threat.  She beat defenders straight-up over and over through the game and I think she's clearly had a kind of realization that with her skills she can get around anyone.  I'm surprised she only scored one goal.  Ashley is always very disciplined in practice, working hard to learn new skills.  But in games she's not always willing to test those skills.  In this game that hesitation fell away and she just used everything she had: pull-backs, step overs, change of direction and speed.  Just fantastic!
Maddox and Ava each had goals too.  Maddox's was a beauty from the corner as he bowled past defenders and Ava's was a beautiful shot from dead center of the goal box.  She got there by using that soft touch to control the ball and get into position.  Just a great game against a tough opponent.  Good work in there at keeper too Luke Z.

The Sharks played beautifully and their game featured a sort of debut too.  Like Ashley, Wyatt is a diligent practice player.  He likes to get it right.  But then in games he has tended to fall back on his old reliable blast kick rather than put those ball control skills to work.  Not this week.  This week he played with speed and grace and creativity, using the moves he's been working on in his practices to amazing affect.  He had one goal and was joined in the scoring by Ryder (he's so fast it's crazy), Zach and Jackson.  Jackson was looking good again with those skills but he needed a beautiful assist from Elizabeth to get his goal.  Sam should have had a goal with all the great dribbling he did.  He plays with a real gift for slipping past defenders without making contact.  He knows how to get skinny.
We saw great ball control and patience from everyone and I was really happy to see the effort the Sharks made to stick to our game plan for this game:  Keep your head up, find the open space before you give the ball up.  Braden bought in completely and had some great runs, keeping the ball right at his feet.  They were very strong this week and I hope we can keep steadily improving.






Tuesday, January 22, 2013

Winter Session: Week One for the Sharks.

     With at least one other "Sharks" team in the division Coach Sharon dubbed our kids the Great White Sharks.  And why not.  They certainly look like the alpha predators.  They play with calm situational awareness most of the time but they can play in an energetic frenzy when necessary.  With the new combination of players we have and the fact that everyone had to share minutes there was some over-anxious play on the field.  A little too much ball chasing.  But overall it was a great game with plenty of the controlled and confident type of play we strive for.
     We are joined by some returning players this session.  Ryder, who usually plays up a group is playing with us and he's a great addition.  I look forward to seeing what he and Elizabeth can do together on the attack.  I don't normally work on any sort of passing strategy with the players (or any strategy at all, for that matter!) but Elizabeth is so good at communicating with her teammates and Ryder has such good peripheral vision and such a sound kick that I expect these two to team up frequently in a combination attack.  Perhaps we will work on a little bit of give-and-go and overlapping if we get the chance.
     Brandon and Braden are also back with us.  They both played on those very early Sharks teams when we had to separate the Goofball team from the real Sharks team.  It was great to have them back and they both played very well with tremendous energy.
     We had a goal from Elizabeth and two from Ryder.  We also got to see some amazing work from Jackson on two runs where he dribbled through some very tight traffic then got off a good quick shot.  No goals but the foot work was really amazing.  He's not the fastest kid on the field but when you get in close to the goal where defenders are forced to play with their back up against it you can make the congestion of the penalty area an advantage if you know how to keep the ball stuck to your feet and Jackson was doing that Sunday. 

Winter Session: Week One for U6

     For the U6 teams the schedule worked out perfectly with a session start playing each other.  Both teams remained committed throughout the game to the sort of quality play we want to see.  I saw a lot of ball control on first touches and in dribbling, a lot of clever ball movement, and a lot of thoughtful play off the ball as well.  With that observation I should take a moment to clarify again what I'll be looking for the players to be working on this session as in every session.

     When I mention "first touch" you should think of situations where a loose ball comes bouncing to one of our players and they have to get control of it somehow.  At first for most players their instinct is to just kick at the ball.  Where we try to go from there is to first teach them some basic techniques for trapping the ball, catching it with their feet or bodies and getting it settled at their feet.  Then we are working on getting them to be thoughtful about their next step, to anticipate what to do with the ball once it's trapped.  I think most of the kids on both rosters are at a point where they can be trusted to trap the ball, make a good first touch, rather than kick it away.  And now I'm seeing the development of that next level of play moving like a wave through the roster too.  This past Saturday we saw some great examples of players making smooth traps to control the ball while already anticipating their next step, their get-away step.  Maddox had a couple of brilliant moments like that where he made a quick trap of the ball and then looked up to find the right direction to go, eluding the first opponent who got to him.  With Diego and to some extent Ava, Abby and Ashley, you can even see players who are learning to make a little hesitation move part of that get-away step.  More than once in this game I saw Diego trap the ball then hold it under one toe waiting for the nearest opponent to make a decisive move to the ball.  Watching them out of the corner of his eye he'd hold the ball till they took that step then make a quick pull-back move to leave them behind.  Beautiful, clever and startlingly competent for one so young! 
     Another thing we work on in practice is trying to develop good habits of posture both away from and over the ball.  Too many kids play with a very upright and stiff posture so we work on getting them to be in a flexible "ready" position when away from the ball, like a baseball infielder, and to be in a low position when they have the ball.  Knees bent, butt down, shoulders over the ball.  The great practitioner of that skill so far is Jagger who demonstrated repeatedly this past week his ability to trap and possess the ball in a way that resembles a basketball player's "box-out" technique.  I saw Jagger several times get to a loose ball then step over it, taking possession and immediately getting his body between his opponent and the ball.  It's simple, it's tenacious and it is the perfect technical demonstration of that attitude we want all the kids to have..."it's my ball."  Hailey's got a good version of this same box-out move as does Micah and all three are rapidly developing their peripheral vision, allowing them to establish possession then find the right get-away direction.
     It was great to have Luke E. joining us, a very energetic player with a lot of confidence in his skills.  And I was very happy with everyone else too.  Ava B. was fully engaged in the game as was William.  We are fortunate to have a core group of players who already have that killer instinct to get the ball and find the goal.  They set a great example for our other players who have a great work ethic in practice but still need to get that in-game feeling of playing with a purpose and with real intensity.  Overall the progress is wonderful to see and I'm thrilled to continue working with these great kids.

Thursday, January 3, 2013

Last Week of Fall Indoor.

Sorry to just be getting around to this now but with the session ending right before Christmas I didn't have any spare time for blogging.  The session went really well for all of the teams and I saw lots of steady improvement from everyone and even some remarkably fast improvement from some.  Here's a little video of the Midnight Bats in action that gives you a good sense of what I'm working on with all of my teams all the time: solid fundamental skills and field awareness.  You'll hear me asking them on the field "where should you be?" or "what is happening next?"  I'm trying to get them to always be thinking ahead a bit, to anticipate rather than always just reacting.  In the video you can see most of the kids doing that.  There's one great moment near the end (at about 4:30)  where you see Micah trap the ball with one foot then look up to find his teammates.  Good stuff.  And at about 1:10 you see Ashley making a perfect pull-back move without hesitation and doing it in just the right context where it is really effective.



I didn't get to see the Lions play but Coach Chris told me they had a great game too.  The Sharks had a rough time of it on Sunday, at least score wise, though they did play really well and I was very pleased with some of what I saw going on.  In particular I'd note the game Tyler had.  There was one moment where he got possession of the ball and basically boxed the opponent off of it for a good five seconds, just keeping his body between the ball and the other player.  In the end he lost the ball but the fact that he was confident enough to try that was huge and I see that sort of confidence from all of the Sharks now.  They'll get their wins.