dirkvanadidas wrote:Decentric wrote:It wasn't loading quickly enough on my system. One thing Mourinho said was that kids should understand the objective of every session. I think this may have been imparted in KNVB. I'm guilty of not always doing this because I sometimes spend so long working on explicit technique, through identifying so many faults, unlikely to be corrected by many other coaches, players become restless to play SSGs. Hence, I rush the instructions because it seems like their concentration has lapsed. you might of missed the bit about no isolated practice as well, use it as warm up with a ball. They are often working in pairs as simulated one v ones, with defenders providing passive defence. They keep alternating roles. If a player can't perform a technique correctly in isolation, because of faulty technique, it is unlikely to work in matches under pressure. All warm ups I do have a ball. It would be impossible to accrue the number of touches we do without doing everything with the ball. I've never seen another coaching session get anywhere near the number of touches our players get. The other coaches at CFP do similar on the training track with their club teams, so they must get an enormous number of touches too. One can even see improvement in players from week to week, even during a session. Even on match day players would touch the ball hundreds of times in the warm up. Arsene Wenger considers players at any level should get 1000 per session. The FFA Skills Acquisition Programme only get 400-600 over 75 minutes. Edited by Decentric: 1/5/2012 12:04:17 AM
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