Field Hockey: print plan

May 2026

Watch any FIH Pro League fixture this season and you'll see the same pattern again and again. A team loses the ball, and instead of dropping back to reorganise, three or four players sprint forward to surround the new ball carrier. Within five seconds the ball is back, often closer to the opposition goal than when it was lost. This is counter-pressing, and in 2026 it has become the defining habit of elite hockey.

The principle is borrowed from football's gegenpressing, but hockey suits it better. With no offside line, fewer touch restrictions and a small playing surface, the moment after a turnover is genuinely chaotic for the team that has just won possession. Their shape isn't set, their heads are down on the ball, and the simple outlet pass is rarely available. Five seconds is enough to punish all of that.

Why the First Five Seconds Matter

When you lose possession, the opposition is in their most vulnerable state. Their players are still moving forward in attacking shape, their goalkeeper isn't set, and the ball carrier has barely controlled the tackle. If you can apply pressure before they organise, you create three scoring scenarios: a turnover deep in their half, a hurried clearance that comes straight back, or a foul that hands you a free hit in dangerous territory.

Wait six or seven seconds and the moment is gone. The ball carrier has lifted their head, the support runners have arrived, and an outlet down the line is available. The counter-press has to happen now, by the players nearest the ball, without waiting for instructions from the bench.

The mindset shift: The instant you lose the ball, your closest three players are no longer attackers. They are pressers. Teach this as an automatic reaction, not a tactical decision.

The Two Counter-Pressing Models

There are two ways to organise the counter-press, and most teams use a hybrid of both. Knowing the difference helps you coach it deliberately.

Space-oriented pressing targets the area around the ball rather than specific opponents. The nearest player closes the carrier hard, the next two cut off forward and lateral passing lanes, and the rest of the team squeezes the pitch from behind. The aim is to suffocate the space, force a poor pass, and intercept rather than tackle.

Man-oriented pressing sees each player pick up the nearest opponent the moment possession is lost. With no offside in hockey, this is highly effective because every potential outlet is marked. The risk is that one missed pickup creates a free runner; the reward is that successful counter-presses almost always lead to interceptions in dangerous areas.

For most club teams, start with man-oriented counter-pressing for the first five seconds, then drop into a zonal shape if the ball isn't won. This gives you the upside of intensity without the chaos of pure space-pressing in transition.

How to Train It

Counter-pressing fails when it is taught as a tactic in a team talk. It only sticks when players experience it again and again in training, with feedback in the moment.

Step one - the rondo with consequence. Play 5v2 in a 12m square. When the two defenders win the ball, they have five seconds to score by stopping it on a target line. The five attackers must counter-press immediately to prevent it. This compresses the whole concept into a 90-second exercise that you can run as a warm-up every session.

Step two - the transition game. Set up a 7v7 game across half a pitch. Every time possession changes, start a five-second clock. If the team that lost the ball wins it back inside the count, they score double on the next attack. If they fail, the new attacking team gets a free pass forward. Watch the intensity of those first five seconds rise sharply.

Step three - the full-pitch conditioned game. Play 11v11 with one rule: whenever a team loses the ball in the opposition half, they must counter-press for five seconds before retreating. Use a whistle to mark the five-second cut-off in the first few sessions, then let the players self-manage.

What to Coach When You See It Live

Freeze play in training the moment a counter-press starts. Ask three questions: who is pressing the ball, who is closing the forward pass, and who is covering behind? If all three roles aren't filled in the first second, the press will fail. Most counter-presses break down because the player furthest from the ball doesn't move - they assume someone else will cover, and a simple bounce pass releases the carrier.

Communication is the second checkpoint. The presser needs to be told what to take away. A simple call of "force left" or "lock the line" gives the chasing player a job. Without it, they go in flat and the ball carrier finds the gap.

Key Coaching Points

  • The moment of turnover is the trigger, not the bench
  • Three players minimum: presser, cover, screen
  • Five seconds is the limit - then drop into shape
  • Talk constantly to force the carrier into one decision
  • Reward turnovers in training with extra points or bonus possession

Recommended Drills

VIEW ALL PRESSING DRILLS

Unfortunately there were no results for your search! Please try again
print plan ANSWERS
View All

How can I save drills to view offline or as a PDF?

How can I save drills to view offline or as a pdf file ?

Archived User Coach

How Do I Organise Drills I Have Created?

I have created several versions of 'pig in the middle'. Firstly, how can I print them off so I can compare the coaches instructions and fill them out a bit more?Secondly , how can i replicate them so they are in an age related folder EG U 12 or U 14 . Also in a separate folder as in type of drill?Thanks

john jewell Coach, Australia

Is exporting to pdf possible?

Hey here! I would like to export files/maps a .pdf's. Is this possible? I can't find the option :)Thanks for your answer!

Bas Campbell Coach, Netherlands

how do i save my work as a pdf?

How do i save my work as a pdf

adea rexhepi Coach, Australia

Print

Hi I have the following membership, (Pro Football) Can you please tell me how I can print the sessions and drill please

dave mumford Coach, England

printing

pdf does not print now?

Mark Cronk Coach, England

how to print a plan

how do you print out a coaching plan ?

andy burrows Coach, England

Printing SportPlan Practices

hi allhow do you print out a practice plan created in SportPlan

Dave Hutchings Coach, Canada

Printing - Sportplan (Netball)

Can you please advise how to print a plan ? When I try to do this the plan is inserted 1/3 across the page and some of it is missing when I print. Thanks

Laura 0 Coach, Scotland

How do I print my plan

How do I print my plan

ROBERT DOKO Coach, Papua New Guinea

Printing

How do I print out a plan once I have it?

Richard Tunney Coach, Scotland

Session plans

How do. I add a drill to a session plan

Andy Kerr Coach, England

Sport Plan will not produce PDF or print

Sport Plan will not produce PDF or print

Andy Penniceard Coach, England

Extra Section

Can you help me how to find the printable coaching section. It mentions it in a Andswer about rotation Spreadsheets, but I cannot find this section.

Emily Elizabeth GARLICK Coach, Australia

clipboard

is there a way I can move a drill from the clipboard to a folder I created.

Kevin Eberwein Coach, United States of America

printing plans

How do you print plans if you have a paid membership

Fiona OFarrell Coach, Australia

how to print a plan - Sportpla...

how do you print out a coaching plan ?

andy burrows Coach, England

Rolling player substitution pl...

Need help with planning a rolling subs with 11 players and 5 subs.Keeper,4 backs, 4 midfied, 2 strikers.Any ideas please

Barry Prestney Coach, New Zealand

How do I print my plan - Sport...

How do I print my plan

ROBERT DOKO Coach, Papua New Guinea

Sport Plan will not produce PD...

Sport Plan will not produce PDF or print

Andy Penniceard Coach, England

JOIN SPORTPLAN FOR FREE

  • search our library of 1000+ hockey drills
  • create your own professional coaching plans
  • or access our tried and tested plans

Sportplan App

Give it a try - it's better in the app

YOUR SESSION IS STARTING SOON... Join the worlds largest hockey coaching resource for 1000+ drills and pro tools to make coaching easy.
LET'S DO IT