This category focuses on possession-based drills that develop ball retention and team play.These drills help teams keep the ball, create chances, and control matches.Perfect for team training from U12 through Senior level.Ideal for coaches building teams that dominate possession and play attractive football.
Keeping possession of the ball will lead to more scoring chances, and limit your opponent's chances of scoring. If you encourage your players to use the passing game instead of booting the ball long, you'll get them playing top-class football - just like Barcelona with their tiki-taka pass and move style of play.
To do that you need to improve your player's ability to keep possession, even when under pressure. It's also important to get players talking and working on their communication. By talking and telling each other where other players are, it'll become a lot easier to keep possession. Develop their movement off the ball as well as their control when they receive, by using the small group possession drills and small-sided game videos below.
in more ways than one
Roughly a fifth of Premier League goals come from set pieces, and the gap between teams who plan their routines and teams who do not has never been wider. Here is how the modern set-piece specialists design attacking corners, free kicks, and throw-ins - and how you can apply their ideas at any level.
The next frontier in football coaching is not physical, it is mental. Cognitive load training - the deliberate use of perception, decision-making and dual-task demands inside football drills - is reshaping how the best academies develop players. Here is what it means and how to use it.
If the last decade taught us about pressing, this one is teaching us about what stands behind it. Rest defence is the shape your team holds while attacking, and it is the difference between dominating a game and getting picked off on the counter.