Anonymous wrote:You have 2:26 to spare? Listen to some wisdom from one of the legendary coaches of the 90s-00s
“You build a player like you build a house. You start by technical foundation. If you don’t have the touch by age 14, forget it, you’ll never be a football player”
https://youtu.be/8vA0uBgzLYU?si=Mcu2gT3jAx0bT49N
Anonymous wrote:Imagine people saying focus on developing technical skills for a youth player is a bad thing 😳
Anonymous wrote:
The world's top academies will prefer and take a kid who dribbles through everyone the wrong way and scores and own goal, than the passer who can't and treats the ball like a hot potato
Anonymous wrote:People who say you have a bad trainer could you please explain what a good trainer does differently, what drills, how avoid those 3 issues, etc. Thanks
Anonymous wrote:The responses in this post is why you have to simply keep your head down in America.
Technical training is almost exclusively what a kid should be focused on until U14/U15. It is akin to learning a 2nd language as a toddler. You can layer on physicality and tactics later. You train technically and then games are tests of the training to see how good you are under pressure. You will have to put your head down and endure possibly losing, possibly not being on a first team or dealing with parents and coaches who want the ball to leave your feet every single solitary moment because they just don’t know enough about football development. The most technical players I have seen state-side know when the pass and dribble but that is a result of coaching and allowing a kid to fail at dribbling through a team. Development involves failure. The US culture of winning hurts development.
Ideally, most technical training should be at home or small informal groups. If you don’t know what you are doing, it is okay to attend those training sessions and learn but over the long term, you are losing hours to the quiet silent types who can get in 2k touches just during a typical I-495 commute. Typically, all of the U10-U13 IG All-Stars are going to quietly fade away as the kids who spend an hour a day on a wall, juggling and ball mastery without posting to IG will surpass them at U15-U18.
It’s been documented. Not sure why we keep doing the same things wrong.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Are they bad? No. But they suffer heavily from diminishing returns.
The problem is that "Technical Training" usually just means "Ball Mastery." While cone drills look great on Instagram and build initial confidence, they rarely translate to the game.
If you stay in these programs too long, they teach bad habits:
• Heads-down dribbling (no scanning).
• Holding the ball too long.
• Zero explosiveness over distance.
Think of it this way, freestyle jugglers aren’t footballers, and cup stackers aren’t boxers.
Top academies like Ajax or Barca don't train in a vacuum. They teach technique within the context of the pitch (e.g., practicing a specific pass from the actual touchline).
Use these trainers to build base comfort, but realize that eventually, your player will graduate. At a certain point, isolated cone drills stop making you a better soccer player.
Sounds like you are with the wrong trainer
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Are they bad? No. But they suffer heavily from diminishing returns.
The problem is that "Technical Training" usually just means "Ball Mastery." While cone drills look great on Instagram and build initial confidence, they rarely translate to the game.
If you stay in these programs too long, they teach bad habits:
• Heads-down dribbling (no scanning).
• Holding the ball too long.
• Zero explosiveness over distance.
Think of it this way, freestyle jugglers aren’t footballers, and cup stackers aren’t boxers.
Top academies like Ajax or Barca don't train in a vacuum. They teach technique within the context of the pitch (e.g., practicing a specific pass from the actual touchline).
Use these trainers to build base comfort, but realize that eventually, your player will graduate. At a certain point, isolated cone drills stop making you a better soccer player.
Your exposure to Technical 1v1 coaching is limited and low-level
Since you think it's all head down dribbling around cones
Anonymous wrote:Is the whole technical training thing good or bad for youth soccer? I see or hear about a new trainer seemingly everyday.
Feels like it’s creating more bad players than good.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Is the whole technical training thing good or bad for youth soccer? I see or hear about a new trainer seemingly everyday.
Feels like it’s creating more bad players than good.
Technical skills is bad
Boot Ball is good
Or maybe pass the ball to the next open player?
Your company wants to hire the person who can solve problems or the person who hands off everything to coworkers?
How about a person who doesn’t just create problems? Pass the ball.
The world's top academies will prefer and take a kid who dribbles through everyone the wrong way and scores and own goal, than the passer who can't and treats the ball like a hot potato
A handful can dribble through a few defenders. The majority can’t, but that doesn’t stop them from trying over and over and over and step over and step over and losing the ball.
And they should keep trying over and over again and not listen to people trying to stifle their creativity
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Is the whole technical training thing good or bad for youth soccer? I see or hear about a new trainer seemingly everyday.
Feels like it’s creating more bad players than good.
Technical skills is bad
Boot Ball is good
Or maybe pass the ball to the next open player?
Your company wants to hire the person who can solve problems or the person who hands off everything to coworkers?
How about a person who doesn’t just create problems? Pass the ball.
The world's top academies will prefer and take a kid who dribbles through everyone the wrong way and scores and own goal, than the passer who can't and treats the ball like a hot potato
A handful can dribble through a few defenders. The majority can’t, but that doesn’t stop them from trying over and over and over and step over and step over and losing the ball.