Field Hockey: push passing

June 2026

Until recently, video analysis in hockey meant Hudl Sportscode, a paid analyst and an elite budget. That world still exists at international level - Belgium's Red Lions and Red Panthers run sophisticated tagging workflows that feed directly into their tactical reviews. But in 2026 the same fundamental approach has trickled down to club hockey, and it doesn't need any of that infrastructure.

A phone on a tripod, a free cloud folder and a thirty-minute weekly review meeting is now enough to give your club team a meaningful edge. The teams using it well aren't doing complex statistical analysis; they are simply showing players what happened, what was good, and what could be different. That is enough.

Why Most Clubs Get Video Wrong

The classic failure mode is the recorded match that nobody ever watches. The phone goes on the tripod, the game gets filmed in one long take, and the file sits in a Google Drive folder for the rest of the season. Nothing changes because nothing is reviewed.

The second failure mode is the marathon team meeting where the coach plays forty minutes of footage and gives a monologue. Players switch off after five minutes, the message is lost, and the habit doesn't survive past the third week of the season.

The teams that benefit do two things differently. They edit ruthlessly, and they involve the players. Three minutes of clips that the players themselves help select is worth ten meetings of unedited match footage.

The 3-Clip Rule

Pick a single theme for each weekly review - press triggers, circle entries, set piece execution, whatever the previous match exposed. Then find three clips that show it: one that worked, one that didn't, and one ambiguous moment that prompts discussion.

Three clips is the magic number for club hockey. It is short enough to hold attention, long enough to make a point, and small enough that you can actually edit it in twenty minutes on a Sunday evening. The temptation is always to show ten clips; resist it. The brain only retains the first two or three anyway, so make those count.

Pro tip: Let players nominate one clip each week. The clip they choose tells you what they care about, and they pay attention to footage they have selected themselves.

A Practical Weekly Workflow

Here is the rhythm that works for a typical club coach with a full-time day job.

Saturday match day. Phone on a tripod at the halfway line, slightly elevated if possible. Wide angle covers most of the pitch. Hit record at the warm-up, hit stop at full time. Upload the raw file to a shared cloud folder before you leave the venue. Total time investment: thirty seconds either side of the game.

Sunday clip selection. Open the recording on your laptop. Use a free tool like Clipchamp, iMovie or DaVinci Resolve. Pick your theme based on the match - if the press fell apart, pick press; if you couldn't break the defensive line, pick circle entries. Find three moments, trim them to 10-15 seconds each, save the clip pack. Total time: 30 minutes.

Tuesday training. Show the clips on a tablet or laptop in the changing room before the warm-up. Spend ten minutes - no more - on three questions: what did you see, what should have happened, what will we work on tonight? Then walk straight onto the pitch and train that exact thing.

Wednesday or Thursday follow-up. Share the clip pack to a private team channel with a short text caption. Players who couldn't attend Tuesday can catch up. Players who were there get the reinforcement.

What to Look For

If you don't know what to film for, default to these four categories that almost always reward closer inspection.

The first ten seconds after every turnover. Counter-pressing only succeeds or fails in this window, and it is the most coachable moment in modern hockey.

Every entry into the attacking 25. Did the team build it, did they run it down the wing, did they cross it in? Patterns become visible after three or four matches of footage.

Every conceded goal and shot on target. Painful to watch and uncomfortable to share, but the most direct route to defensive improvement.

Every penalty corner you defended. Run them back at half speed. The body position of the first runner alone will tell you whether your defensive structure is working.

Key Coaching Points

  • Film every match, even with a single phone on a tripod
  • Pick one theme per week, not ten
  • Three clips, three minutes - never more
  • Players nominate one clip each week
  • Train the theme the same day you review it

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Question about a drill in the Sportplan session

Hi, in this week's session "My players lack the ability to pass accurately", there's a progressive exercise called "shoot and recover". Sorry if this is a dumb question but when a player is 'shooting' at their target goal, is the other player allowed to defend the goal?I ask because the diagram makes it look like you're pushing over around 12m and I'd have thought that unless you make the goals huge, with a player defending the goal, people just aren't going to score.Also, if you make the goals really big, it kinda defeats the person of the accuracy element to the exercise.Hope you can assist. Regards,Gary

Gary Thompson Coach, England

Defending against 2 center halves

Hi can you help me setting a defence against a team playing 2 centre halves. My team plays conventional style 5321 . Thanks

MARK Coach, Australia

Swinging stick in the air when passing ball

One of my players constantly swings her stick in the air when passing, or making a tackle. i have explained technique many times but it is not working. how can i help her?? May injure someone and also gets blown up for stick tackle.

Aurelie Charles Coach, England

Coaching plan (season outline) for coming season?

Hi all, after "volunteering" at the last minute to coach last season, I'm looking forward to coaching again this season but would like to be a bit more organised starting the season. Last season I used drills from here (thank you contributors) and put together a practice plan each week addressing what I thought were our weakness from the game just played. This got us through the season, we were promoted after grading and finished the season in the top 4 playoffs for our grade.I wonder if there is some kind of guide to putting a more coherent training plan together for the season.I'm coaching a boys secondary school team, aged 12-18. What kind of skills should they have mastered?What should they be attempting, working towards mastering (individually and as a team)?I last played as a collage boy on grass fields, the change to turf pitches has obviously obsoleted (along with age) much of what I knew as a player.Any pointers appreciated.David

David Smith Coach, New Zealand

Break through a team that is playing half court press?

How can you train to break through a team that starts half court and your team starts with the ball? Four players in the defence start maybe playing the ball first to the left wing and this player hits the ball back to the free defence player who passes the ball to the right defence player who is over the 23 meter line... I like to understand the different tactical approaches. Can you share some ideas with me?

R.P. Witkamp Coach, Netherlands

Pass under pressure drill

What drill I wanna give my players for push pass under pressure?

RIYAS MASTER MPM Coach, India

Problems Clearing the Circle

I'm in the U.S., coaching a team of 11-12 year olds, with 1-2 years of experience. Defending the circle, when the ball is loose, my players are not getting control of the ball to hit out of the circle. It's congested with opponent and my team's players. If my players get control, they lose it quickly. If the opponent has control, my players aren't very good at taking the ball or stopping the opponent from taking a shot. Luckily we have a good goalie but she can only do so much. (Full disclosure: I didn't play FH but have a decent understanding of the game. No one else in my community would step up to coach so it's fallen to me.)

Brandon Cowart Coach, United States of America

drills to teach a beginner on push pass

drills toteach a beginner on push pass

Collins Acheampong Coach, Ghana

passing drills for girls age 8 to 12

passing drills for girls age 8 to 12

Michelle Hart Coach, Australia

wing

how do you force them to play down the wing?

Caitlin John Coach, Scotland

can you give me passing drills for u12

can you give me passing drills for u12

Cathriona Coach, Ireland

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