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Understand why children participate in soccer
The
majority of the reasons children participate in sport are intrinsic.
The top priorities are:
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To learn and
improve their skills
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To have fun
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To be with
friends
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To experience
the excitement of competition
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To enhance
their physical fitness
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To demonstrate
their competence
Notice that the
extrinsic goal of winning and beating others is not at the top of the
list.
Similarly, when
children drop out of soccer, their withdrawal can be traced to the
inability of the sport experience to meet their primary motivations
for participation. The common reasons are:
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Failing to
learn or improve their skills
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Not having fun
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Not being with
their friends
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Lack of
excitement, improvisation and creative opportunities
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Lack of
exercise, meaningful movement and fitness improvements
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Lack of
optimal challenges and/or consistent failure
Practical
suggestions for coaches:
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Encourage
players to measure their performance by improvements in their own,
personal levels of proficiency and ability rather than by comparing
themselves to other players or to other teams based on the game
outcome.
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Because
children have several reasons for participation and not just one,
design practices to meet as many different participation motives as
possible (i.e. learning, fun, friendship, fitness, challenge, etc.).
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Utilize the
K.I.S.S. principle (Keep It Short and Simple) when introducing new
skills:
- Give short effective demonstrations while briefly explaining the
new skill or concept use picture cues liberally;
- Focus only on one or two important aspects critical to performance
success (avoid "paralysis by analysis");
- Decrease time spent in transition between activities, drills and
games. Keep practices short, clear and well planned.
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Utilize a
positive approach to skill instruction by focusing on what the
athlete did correctly ("catch them being good").
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Make practices
meaningful, fun challenging and exciting
- Avoid static line drills;
- Encourage creative improvisation by players;
- Optimally challenge all athletes throughout the full range of
abilities (avoid coaching only the mid-ability performer
- Eliminate "elimination games" because players most in need of
improvement and repetitions are usually the first to be eliminated;
- Be fully focused on the players and the activity (coach the
players as well as the game).
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Plan time for
the children to meet and make new friends (ice cream stops after
practices, pizza parties, watch a video, free time before and after
practice).
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Focus on
teaching players the active, ever-changing game of soccer rather
than the static, predictable soccer drills.
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Utilize dual
function fitness activities that concurrently enhance fitness and
also improve soccer skills (i.e. soccer tag with a ball) and/or
psychological dispositions (players are having so much fun they
don't realize that they are conditioning too).
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Provide
competitive challenges for athletes that can help define success not
only by comparison to others but also by improving one's own
standard of accomplishment.
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Know the Factors That May be Stressful for Youth
Players
Coaches and
parents can do a great service to children by helping each athlete
develop self-confidence, a sense of personal worth and mastery, and a
constructive attitude toward failure and adversity. Behaviour that
adults view as encouraging can often be perceived by athletes as
stress producing and pressure-filled. Kids will freely choose to
participate in activities that they view as worthwhile, enjoyable and
fun. The challenge for adults is to maximize the inherent joy of what
Pele calls "the beautiful game of soccer" and minimize experiences
that increase children's anxiety and likelihood of burnout.
Practical suggestions for coaches:
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Avoid a "win at all cost" attitude.
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Transform parental pressure into parental interest, support and
encouragement.
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Avoid over training, long, repetitive practices and excessive time
and travel demands.
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Avoid using perfection as the standard for judging an athlete's
performance.
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Don't associate a player's worth or value as a person with their
performance and ability on the soccer field (i.e. winning or a great
performance means that I like you more).
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Make sure that your non-verbal behaviours are congruent with your
words and that the coaching is consistent across situations (i.e.
sulking after a loss even though the team played well or being happy
following a poor performance by a winning team).
Realise That Effective Feedback is the
Breakfast of Champions
The familiar coaching adage that "what you do speaks so loudly that no
one can hear what your saying" is especially important to remember
when dealing with athletes. Players benefit most from coaches whose
actions reflect both their implied and stated values. The ability to
observe, analyze and communicate are three of a coaches most valuable
assets. A word of caution, however, is that the beneficial effects of
verbal instruction decrease in direct proportion to the amount given.
Remember: Keep it Short and Simple. Take time to videotape yourself
coaching, not only at practice but also in games. Observe yourself as
others see you. Frequently there is significant difference between how
coaches think they are talking, acting and communicating and what
athletes perceive.
Practical suggestions for coaches:
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Give specific, performance-contingent feedback to athletes rather than
general comments lacking performance-related information.
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Be
liberal with praise. Most athletes prefer coaches who shout praise and
whisper criticism rather than visa versa.
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Tell athletes what improvements need to be made, why and most
importantly, how to make those corrections successfully and
consistently.
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Observe and provide meaningful feedback to every athlete at least once
each training session and game.
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Combine verbal praise with consistent non-verbal forms of
encouragement (i.e. a pat on the back, smile, a high five, etc.).
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Maintain your credibility as a coach by being accurate and sincere in
your feedback and praise. Ignoring errors, giving excessive praise for
mediocre performance or excessive praise for performance on simple
tasks conveys to the athlete that either you don't know what you're
talking about or else you have very low expectations of them as
performers.
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Correct performance errors in non-threatening and non-punitive ways.
Finding problems is the role of a critic not a competent soccer coach.
Good coaching requires the ability to not only recognize problems but
also to solve them through effective, practical and successful
solutions.
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Reward effort as much as outcome. Repeated effort, especially in the
face of failure and adversity, is one of the most important
ingredients for future success.
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Use the "feedback sandwich" when correcting youngsters. Find something
the player did well and praise it. Next tell the athlete what they did
incorrectly, what they need to do to improve and why. Finish with a
positive, encouraging or motivational statement.
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Foster an environment that allows for trying new skills, approaches
and strategies without the fear of reprimand and punishment. Mistakes
are integral to sport improvement. Ridicule, sarcasm and fear are
impediments to both immediate and future performance successes.
Putting
it All Together
Athletes learn the game of soccer not only through the directed
learning experiences that coaches provide in practice and game play
but also through indirect means by observation and imitation. As a
sport leader, you are a powerful and lasting role model for athletes
by your thought, word and deed. Parents and coaches can serve as a
player’s greatest ally or worst nightmare depending on the attitude,
behaviour and motivation adopted for sport involvement. Remember, the
game is for the kids. It is not for the ego or bragging rights of
adults. Our role, as coaches, is to provide an opportunity for
participation for all interested youngsters, access to appropriate and
safe environments for instruction and competition, exposure to caring
and competent leaders, holistic consideration of the child's entire
development (physical, cognitive, social and psychological) and an
unwavering belief in the worth and ability of children to succeed at
their own unique level of accomplishment. When coaches expect every
athlete to succeed, it's amazing how many of them really do.
Rather than
measuring success in terms of numbers in the win/loss columns, perhaps
the ultimate standard of our success as coaches should be judged by
our ability to teach children to love and enjoy the game of soccer, to
feel more confident and self-assured in their abilities and knowledge
of the game, to experience mutual respect from both team-mates and
coaches, and most importantly, to feel appreciation and pride in the
opportunity they had to play a sport they love under your direction as
their coach.
Perhaps the most
appropriate summary can be found in the "Bill of Rights for Young
Athletes" (NASPE, 1977) written by medical, physical education and
recreation experts in the hope of creating guidelines to maximize the
beneficial effects of athletic participation for all.
Bill of
Rights for Young Athletes
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Right of the opportunity to participate in sport regardless of ability
level
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Right to participate at a level that is commensurate with each child's
developmental level
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Right to participate in safe and healthy environments
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Right to have qualified adult leadership
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Right of each child to share the leadership and decision-making of
their sport participation
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Right to play as a child, not as an adult
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Right to proper preparation
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Right to equal opportunity to strive for success
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Right to be treated with dignity by all involved
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Right to have fun through sport
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