Anonymous wrote:Best bang for the buck is: having the kid do some running, not every day. Find a wall and have the kid work on their touch. Take a couple of cones and do some of the technical training they have done the past 3 years in travel. Take a ball and do some juggling. Take the kid and a couple of balls and have them do some shooting on their own. If there is an opportunity for pick up here and there, do it for fun. Play some basketball, tennis, swim and enjoy the summer while still being ready for the upcoming year. All of those FREE. Best bang for your buck.
Anonymous wrote:Best bang for buck will be private training IF you can find a good trainer. Especially if the focus is technical training.
Coachup.com is a good place to start looking for a trainer. Reviews and bios will tell you a lot.
You can also reach out to your club to see if any of the coaches do it on the side. I do not recommend training with your team coach for obvious reasons.
There was a recent thread where a private trainer provided some good info. I think they were going to do a dedicated thread on private training but I haven't seen it yet.
Camps are one size fits all and typically more recreation focused than anything. Skill levels vary since a lot of people see it as daycare in the summer.
Evening skills classes are a step better but still fairly structured with a "keep kids moving through the drills" mentality over technical training.
Private training is a mixed bag. Some trainers are good, others are just okay. A post in the thread I previously mentioned talked about seeing the difference between "practicing" and "training".
Camps and clinics will be more practice.
Private training can be practice or training depending who you get.