Football: drive

May 2026

Watch any of the elite sides in 2026 and you will spot it within five minutes. Even when they are camped in the opposition half, two or three players never quite join the attack. They sit, they shuffle, they cover the channels. They are doing the most unglamorous and most important job on the pitch: rest defence.

Rest defence is the structure your team holds while you have the ball. It is the safety net that catches a turnover before it becomes a counter-attack. UEFA's technical observers at EURO 2024 singled it out as the defining feature of the best teams in the tournament, and the principle has only become more important since.

What Rest Defence Actually Is

The term comes from the German word "restfeldsicherung", which translates roughly as "spare field coverage". The idea is simple. When you attack, you should always leave a group of players in a balanced shape, ready to deal with the moment you lose the ball. That moment is called the transition, and it is when most goals are conceded at every level of the game.

Most modern positional play sides favour a 3-2 shape behind the ball: three defenders staying high enough to compress the pitch, and two midfielders sitting in front of them to screen counters. Some teams use a 2-3 or even a 4-1 depending on the opponent and the moment in the game. The exact numbers matter less than the principle. You must always have cover behind the ball.

The aim: When possession is lost, your shape is already set up to win the ball back within six seconds or, failing that, to delay the counter and force the opponent into long, hopeful balls.

Why It Matters More Than Ever in 2026

Three forces have made rest defence essential. First, pressing has become universal. Every serious team now hunts the ball aggressively, which means the moment a turnover happens, the game opens up immediately. Second, attacking transitions have got faster. Top sides can be in your box within seven seconds of winning the ball. Third, full backs have become hybrid players who tuck inside or push forward as wingers, which can leave huge gaps in the wide channels if rest defence is sloppy.

The teams that win consistently in this environment are not the ones with the best attackers. They are the ones whose shape behind the ball is always organised, even when their forwards are creating chaos in the final third.

How to Build Rest Defence Into Your Team

You cannot just tell players to "stay back". They need a framework, and they need to rehearse it until it is automatic. Here is a three-step approach you can use this week.

Step One: Define your shape. Decide whether you want 3-2, 2-3, or another structure when you have the ball in the opposition half. The simplest place to start with most teams is a 3-2 with both centre backs and the deepest midfielder forming the back triangle, and the two number sixes screening in front.

Step Two: Identify the trigger moments. Rest defenders need to know when to step up, when to hold, and when to drop. The basic rule: if the ball is being played wide and forward, step up to compress space. If the ball is being played centrally and your team is committed forward, hold and screen. If a turnover is about to happen, drop into delay mode.

Step Three: Rehearse turnovers, not just attacks. Most training sessions practise what to do with the ball. Rest defence training flips this on its head. Set up an attacking pattern, then have a coach blow a whistle at random to simulate losing the ball. The rest defenders must immediately switch on and react.

Common Mistakes Coaches Make

The biggest mistake is treating rest defence as a punishment for defenders. If your centre backs see staying back as boring, they will drift forward and leave gaps. Sell it as the most important attacking job in the team: without their cover, the rest of the side cannot commit forward with confidence.

The second mistake is rigid positioning. Rest defence is not about standing still on a chalk mark. It is about reading the game and adjusting. A good rest defender slides ten yards left when the ball moves left, drops five yards deeper when the attack overloads centrally, and steps up to compress when the ball goes wide.

The third mistake is forgetting the midfield screen. Your two screening midfielders are the difference between a turnover that becomes a recovered ball and a turnover that becomes a goal. They must be aggressive, mobile, and tactically intelligent. This is the modern number six role, and it is the most undervalued position on the pitch.

Key Coaching Points

  • Always have at least four players behind the ball when attacking in the opposition half
  • Centre backs should stay connected, never more than fifteen yards apart laterally
  • Screening midfielders should be on the same line, not stacked, to cover the central channel
  • Communicate constantly: rest defenders should be talking to each other every few seconds
  • Rehearse the moment of transition more than the act of attacking itself
  • Use video to show players where they should be at the moment of turnover, not just after it

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i currently run a u13 boy foot...

i currently run a u13 boy footballs team. What would be a good drill to get the players to shut the ball down.Because my defenders seem to stand back and let them shoot thanks dennis

dennis Coach, England

I am doing my level 2 football coaching and need help?

I am doing my level 2 football coaching and need help with my 12 session plans that i have to do 4 of them have to be linked can anyone help me Nigel

Archived User Coach

development over success?

I have just finished my first season coaching under 12's I coach them on Wednesday nights and the manager coaches on Fridays where I assist. When I came to the club at the tail end of last season, the subs were lucky if they got between 2-5 minutes on the pitch. My philosophy has always been to include every member of the team, especially with the role on role of rule.This seemed to work well this season, although one or two of the 'better' players didn't like coming off, but in the last game of the season, the manager had two subs, brought one on at half time and gave the other the last four minutes. ( We had a chance of finishing 4th in the league if results went for us, which they didn't and we ended up 5th) The subs that got 4 minutes was my son, which made it slightly harder for me to drive the point home that we needed to get him on.How do I encourage a philosophy where by everyone plays? because my son has said that if the team 'goes back to the old ways' he will not want to play anymore.

Steve ODonoghue Coach, England

Pass back to Defense/Midfield

I'm looking for a drill to teach my players to not always drive forward, but rather play the ball back away from pressure to a trailing player.. Any ideas? The players are between 10 and 13 yo.

Fritz Mizell Coach, United States of America

can i save the file?

hallo can i save my plan video on my pc?

Franz Coach Coach, Italy

Touch

I am looking for a session or drills that improve players first touch. Our biggest issues are First Touch so we need to work on this, another issue is the 'second ball' we always win the first header but never get to the second ball quick enough so any help with these issuse would be great!

Coach, England

5-6 Year olds- Participation in matches

hi Guys, i have a question about 5-6 year olds getting ready for next year when they start playing their football matches against other teams. i will use my son as an example,so i can use as a guide for some other parents in the team. average training is ball mastery and a trafficlight game and then into matches for the last half of the session. my sons ball mastery is as good as youd expect for a 5 year old and that always improves with repitition. my difficulty lies when we go into the matches. theres a lack of 'competitiveness' or confidence with my boy, compared to some of the other boys, skills-wise theyre on the same level, but the more confident boys will shine thru and theyre not nessesarily better, he has flashes in games where he will do good, drive with the ball, he is always involved, but im not sure if its confidence or maybe just not as good in the match situations. is there any advice that can be offered in terms of practice that we could work on at home?

Sammy Reen Coach, United Kingdom

how i do the drive shot the goal?

How i do drive shot to shoot the goal?

Jaxton Cser Coach, Philippines

progression

Give me a progression for shooting

Janez Coach, England

count attack

is that an effective plan to counter attack

Blessing Jani Coach, United Kingdom

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