Playing Soccer vs. Learning Soccer
Does just "playing the game" create great
players?
By Coach V
The University of Soccer
Somewhere along the way someone
made two great comments about learning the game
of soccer. The problem is that some how, some
where, along the way they simply got
misunderstood by many in youth soccer.
1) "Youth players learn the game of soccer by
playing the game."
2) "The game is the best teacher."
These are very true statements
but you MUST understand what they really mean
and how to apply them. The GAME is the GAME and
technical skills are skills we take to the game
to play.
I have seen soccer players that
have "played the game" for years and years but
they have very poor technical skills. Parents
often don't understand this and call the teams
that their children are trying out for
"POLITICAL" in their selection process. Not
understanding that "little Jimmy" can run fast
and is big for his age, but can't receive a
simple long pass to save his life.
One of the most PAINFUL things
for me to watch is a young / maturing soccer
player, generally between 13 - 16 years in age,
tryout for a team thinking that all those years
of playing "on the field" will help them.
They hit the field and look
"clumsy" compared to others. They are still "toe
kicking", can't perform proper traps, have
trouble making quality passes and just don't
have a good first touch. I feel horrible for the
player knowing that many of their precious
development years have been wasted.
I think it was said best by
former U.S. Men’s National Team captain Claudio
Reyna…
“It’s possible at
any time during a player’s career to get into
top physical shape or to try to win every game,
but you can’t teach skills to an old player.
Youth coaches should keep in mind that
individual skills need to be nurtured at an
early age. Players who haven’t mastered the
fundamental skills become frustrated because the
game gets too difficult for them as they move
into higher levels.”
Soccer players gain vision,
understanding, creativity, and teamwork from
"playing the game". They become a more highly
skilled player by refining and improving their
technical skills AWAY from the game. This is why
the SOCCERU series
www.SoccerU.com was designed. Teach them
early and expose them to as much as they are
able and willing to learn.
Soccer players between the ages
of 8 and 14 are programmable machines. Learning
new things and concepts comes quickly and is
enjoyable. After that point it can be very
difficult to change habits and instinctive
movements. It can be done, but they really have
to understand the WHY and not just the how. (We
also address this in Soccer U.)
Just "doing" something over and
over does NOT necessarily make you better at it.
I will use the example of the 60
year old golf player. (Slicer)
I once knew a man that loved golf. He played the
game twice a week for over 40 years. He was a
self taught golfer that never took lessons and
really didn't go to the range often. His
philosophy was that "the game was the best
teacher".
The funny thing is that he never
really improved. After "playing the game" over
20 years (more than 80,000 holes of golf) he
still had the same swing, slice, and still shot
in the 90's.
Soccer or any sport is much the
same. If we simply "play the game" over and over
we only can improve "so much". We use the same
skills and HABITS throughout the years.
Until we OPEN OUR MINDS and allow our bodies to
feel things in a different way, we will do what
feels "natural". Often this is wrong or needing
improvement.
I do realize that kids want to
have fun, but you would be surprised how many
kids walk away from a soccer practice or a
soccer camp with the feeling that, “I really
didn’t learn anything.” They often simply go
through some DRILLS then end up with a
scrimmage. (A horrible plan to follow.)
Each player should be introduced
to at least two new technical skills at each
practice. Then they should revisit skills they
learned from weeks before. Even if they only
revisit the old skills for 60 seconds each, the
body FEELS them again and grows accustomed to
them.
The NEW SKILLS should be moved
into more of a game like environment with a
focus on the new skill. Making this transition
from just the “learning of the skill” to adding
some pressure to it makes all the difference in
the world. A young player will NEVER try new
skills in a competitive match. There is too much
risk and fear of failure will make them return
to what is easy and natural.
Play the “game of soccer” because
you love the game. Work on improving your skills
because you have a desire to be better and
improve your game. Take those new skills to the
field and use them often.
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