Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:i'm willing to spend perhaps $20/hr to hire a college kid to train 8-yo DS one-on-one to help him improve his game. he's not a fast kid so always late to the ball and never has a chance to take a shot. but if he has better foot skills and tactical skills i think he can perhaps have a better chance to score? he really wants to score some goals and i think it's important to keep him interested/motivated to continue to play...
would love to hear from those who've used private coaches before. tks!
OP here - his season ended yesterday, didn't score any goal since the first game, but he's had probably the most fun in two years (partly because they win a lot), responded well to the coaches, and was really happy he's part of the team. i'm just posting to share this but mostly remind myself that us adults sometimes over think too much and don't give the kids enough room to grow or trust them as big kids. he can't wait for winter soccer to begin. cheers!
(I've got one in travel, plus ODP, plus he does referring for the rec league. My other one does rec soccer and academy training).Anonymous wrote:i'm willing to spend perhaps $20/hr to hire a college kid to train 8-yo DS one-on-one to help him improve his game. he's not a fast kid so always late to the ball and never has a chance to take a shot. but if he has better foot skills and tactical skills i think he can perhaps have a better chance to score? he really wants to score some goals and i think it's important to keep him interested/motivated to continue to play...
would love to hear from those who've used private coaches before. tks!
Anonymous wrote:spaniards and dutch coaches reading this thread would be shocked.
He's u8, the MAIN thing he learns right now is a genuine love for the game, an immaculate first touch off both feet, and good technical skills such as passing and then moving into space to receive the ball again and dribbling the ball with confidence.
none of these things requires speed, forget scoring, forget any of these things. There are players even age at 20 (pro's) who get shifted later into positions they never knew they were good at before.
Anglo (american, british) football coaching is shambolic.
Anonymous wrote:OP - I'm the Gary Lineker poster. I think it's unlikely that your son is going to discover at the tender age of 8 whether striker is his true position or not. Don't listen to people who tell you (and him) that he should give it up now. Speed helps, but it's not everything. Build his skills, increase his game smarts -- he'll figure out which position he should play and whether this is his sport or not.
Also, as he gets older I hope he comes to understand, as some posters have noted, that scoring goals is a wonderful, essential thing, but it's not the whole thing -- and scoring is not done by strikers alone. Defenders who are good at winning head balls often score goals when they are brought up to be on the receiving end of corner kicks. Smart midfielders often find themselves in position to take a shot -- and usually it's the strength and accuracy of their shot, not their footspeed, that determines whether they will score regularly.
Finally, as a lifelong midfielder and sweeper, I would hope your son gets as interested in assisting on goals as he is in scoring them. There's an old saying among midfielders (who know the value of well-timed pass that enables another player to score): "I didn't score a goal -- but I MADE a goal."
Good luck!