Draupnir wrote:Thanks for the feedback TFL and D. You'll both be happy to know that I have all of the academy sessions! I am not sure about their, uh, nature in regards to copyright, but I can point to publicly available drives in any case.
My idea for the YouTube channel in regards to training exercises was to have an overhead view of a pitch, with animated circles/symbols representing players, a la 2D mode in Football Manager. Doing it this way gives me endless opportunities in creating any number of exercise videos, in contrast to have a set of players run through 1000 drills while being filmed. Thoughts? The FFA content on YouTube is pretty lacklustre to say the least.
Brilliant!
I don.t need them now, like I did, because I've used so many of them at training - shooting, passing and moving, passing, dribbling. However, to point other coaches in the right direction, and revisit them for different exercises, is difficult if one cannot find them.
This was an area that was lacking in my coaching, and I think probably most coaches in Australia some years ago. We told the Dutch coach educators we needed this and they looked at us blankly. Whenever they did sample training exercises they were brilliant.
FFA coaches keep telling me I should know all this. This doesn't help me in preparing them.](*,)
It also demonstrates inadequacies on their part as coach educators that they cannot respond to what coaches are asking for.
I'd argue the exercises in the Arsenal, Chelsea, Ajax and PSV sessions are brilliant for phases 1 and 2 of the FFA and KNVB four phase coaching sessions.
At a FFA Regional Conferences FFA started to produce some wonderful training ground exercises, to the extent they are the only place where one can find realistic explanations of 13v1, 4v2 and 5v3 rondos on the interweb.
All the Arsenal, Ajax, Chelsea and PSV sessions usually involve both footedness, defensive pressure and realistic game scenarios. Plus most players love the exercises which get them very fit, and busy, with a lot of touches.
This means no distractions and better player behaviour/attitude at training, of any age, by flogging them in the first 40 minutes or so.
To take this further, many coaches who've been through FFA Advanced Coaching courses focusing on seniors, have poor training ground exercises for developing technique. Some coaches I know , even at NPL senior level, say they make up all their own training exercise, as is supposed to happen according to FFA.
When one looks at what they do, compared to these, Arsenal, Chelsea, Ajax and PSV stuff, they are absolute rubbish. They need a baseline body of good drills to develop further. These academy session provide it.
One FFA SAP National Curriculum writer wrote back to me and said these were outstanding, once they were put into a when and why context for game sense . I'm not as prescriptive in my approach as that. Players will develop a lot of useful technique from them.
Tactically and structurally, the coaches who have gone through senior FFA Advanced Courses have progressed tremendously, but in terms of technical development at senior level, without the type of exercises that good old Draups has saved, they are often having little effect on continuing to develop players' technique.
The Academy sessions I've used successfully with soccer schools for migrants, underage FFA rep teams, suburban youth teams, suburban seniors and senior NPL level. I'v also passed them onto senior NPL coaches.
One of the changes I've made are virtually no opportunities for queues. Queues waste valuable training time, lowering intensity, unless one has players doing something useful with a ball whilst in a queue. These sessions are brilliant as a foundation. Then when I've learnt more from NTC and FFA staff coaches, they are the icing on the cake.
Edited by Decentric: 15/9/2015 11:58:42 AM