De Anza Youth Soccer League Recreational/Development Program: How To Skill Videos & Articles

USYSAStickleyjuggle
Monday, December 8
Super Skills Videos, The Case for Street Soccer and Small Sided Games
Soccer, like learning to play piano, requires practice.  Be patient and keep playing! 
Excellent Soccer Training Videos may be found at: 
Youtube has many soccer skills and drills videos.  Please check them out....
 

Why Small-Sided Games?

US Youth Soccer (no affiliation with AYSO, USYSA is affiliated with the US Soccer Federation, in turn affiliated with FIFA, CYSA is affiliated with USYSA) has thought long and hard about the answer to the question, "Why Small-Sided Games?"

What does "Small-Sided Games" mean? These are soccer games with fewer players competing on a smaller sized field. These are fun games that involve the players more because fewer players are sharing one ball.

All ages can play "Small Sided Games", but it has a definite developmental impact on our younger soccer players. US Youth Soccer recommendations for "number of players" at the various age groups are as follows:

U6 | 3 against 3 no goal keepers
U8 | 4 against 4 no goal keepers
U10 | 6 against 6 with goal keepers
U12 | 8 against 8 with goal keepers
U13+ | 11 against 11 with goal keepers
 

Here are some of the reasons why we believe, as soccer coaches, administrators and parents must guarantee that our young soccer players play small-sided games:

1. Because we want our young soccer players to touch the soccer ball more often and become more skillful with it! (Individual technical development)

 

2. Because we want our young soccer players to make more, less-complicated decisions during the game! (Tactical development)

 

3. Because we want our young soccer players to be more physically efficient in the field space they are playing in! (Reduced field size)

 

4. Because we want our young soccer players to have more individual teaching time with the coach! Less players on the field and less players on the team will guarantee this! (Need to feel worthy and need to feel important)

 

5. Because we want our young soccer players to have more, involved playing time in the game! (More opportunity to solve problems that only the game presents)

 

6. Because we want our young soccer players to have more opportunity to play on both sides of the ball! (More exposure to attacking and defending situations)

 

7. Because we want our young soccer players to have more opportunities to score goals! (Pure excitement)

 

These are the reasons why we adults must foster "Small-Sided Games" in our youth soccer programs. The "Small-Sided" environment is a developmentally appropriate environment for our young soccer players. It’s a FUN environment that focuses on the young soccer player.

 

It just makes sense doesn’t it?

More on Small Sided Games... (article courtesy of Norcal Premier Soccer, a US Club affiliated soccer league)
 

Manchester United Youth Academy Focus On Small-sided Games By Henry Winter, Daily Telegraph

  

When Manchester United's Academy boys glide from their dressing rooms at the club's

magnificent skill factory hidden deep in the Trafford countryside, they run past 10-foot high

photographs of David Beckham, Sir Bobby Charlton, Duncan Edwards, Ryan Giggs and George

Best. "We want them to be inspired," said Rene Meulensteen, United's skills development coach.

 

They are inspired. In the ensuing sessions of drills and small-sided games, the technique,

ambition and vision of United's youngsters borders on the breath-taking. "If this generation

carries on maturing," confided Meulensteen on Monday night, "they will steamroller everyone at

Under-18 level. They'll have skills coming out of their ears."

 

Sited adjacent to United's senior complex at Carrington, the Academy heaved with 10-year-olds

dropping shoulders, rolling the foot over the top of the ball a la Zidane, and executing the type of

step-over that Cristiano Ronaldo inflicted on Benfica the following evening.

 

At the end, as sweat and smiles lit up the young faces, Meulensteen gathered the boys together in

a circle. "You all have the ability," he told them. "But do you have the confidence to play in front

of 10,000 people, 20,000, 30,000? Use all your time training. Don't waste it. Learn. Train hard,

work hard. Take responsibility."

 

The kids ran off, replacing lost fluids with isotonic drinks, laughing among each other about

tricks they had tried out. They all changed, some pulling on the shirts of their home-town clubs

like Preston and Burnley, and walked into the coaches' room to shake hands with Meulensteen

and his chatty staff.

 

"Any kid who comes here will leave a better human being, and a better player," said the

Academy director, Les Kershaw. "We try to teach them right and wrong things. When they come

in, they come and shake hands. 'Hello, how are you.' It's proper. When Sir Alex Ferguson came

once, one of the little lads said: 'Hiya, boss. How are you?' Two lads misheard him and said:

'Hiya, Bob. How are you?' Bob!"

 

Laughter is a constant sound at the Academy. Yet there is a serious issue that United want

brought into the open, much as it may antagonise other clubs. United want to revolutionise

coaching of the Under-9 to Under-11 age-group, focusing more on developing skills in four-v-

four games than contesting blood-and-thunder eight-v-eight club skirmishes.

 

Sitting next to the famous 1970 photograph of Bobby Moore embracing Pele, Meulensteen called

for a fusion of English zeal and Brazilian flair. "In Brazil, if a boy goes on the beach with a nice

swimming bottom on but he hasn't got any skill, everyone says 'you just sit down'," Meulensteen

said.

 

"Here the football culture is more 'get stuck in'. We are trying to marry the two cultures together.

Wayne Rooney has that character of wanting to win, and the skill to beat players."

 

"Why did Eric Cantona, Pele and Romario make the difference? Why does Ronaldinho? Under

pressure, they have the ability to create a better situation. You can be as physically strong as you

want, as tactically well-organised as you want, but you can never beat players like Maradona,

Cruyff, Best or Zidane. They can unlock defences."

 

"In the last 15 years, the emphasis has been on physical and tactical development, not conceding

goals and getting something from a set-play. That's not entertainment. We have been relying on

God-gifted players - Cruyff, Best, Maradona - and once every five years somebody else pops

up."

 

"Somebody [Rooney] popped up at Everton a couple of years ago. We want a development

programme that gives us four or five Rooneys." With United's Academy complex costing a third

of the £27 million Ferguson spent on Rooney, it makes sense to groom your own."

 

"We want players who can do the unpredictable like Rooney," Meulensteen continued. "I see too

many one-dimensional players at the top level. We inspire kids to take players on. In the

attacking third, it's all guns blazing. Sir Alex has been totally supportive. He came and watched

what the little kids can do and said: 'Carry on.' The manager has experience of what it means

when local lads come good."

 

Pictures of the class of 92, of Beckham, Giggs, Butt, Scholes and the Nevilles, line the walls of

Carrington. Kershaw worked with them and is passionate about giving tyros time to blossom.

"How many clubs would have taken Scholesy on at 16?" mused Kershaw a few nights earlier,

while watching the Under-9s strut their stuff over on the club's small-sided pitches at Littleton

Road in Salford.

 

"At 16, we could play Scholesy for only 20 minutes a game. He couldn't run. He was a little one.

Had asthma. No strength. No power. No athleticism. No endurance. 'You've got a bleeding

dwarf,' I remember somebody said to Brian Kidd [the then youth-team coach]. 'You will eat your

words,' said Kiddo. If Scholesy had been at a lesser club, they would have got rid of him and he

would probably not be in the game now. We stuck with Scholesy, a wonderful technician. How

many caps did he get? Sixty-six?!"

 

In the 21st century, when street football has largely disappeared, Kershaw asked Meulensteen to

come to Carrington and hone the techniques of the heirs to the Scholes generation. The

Dutchman put on a coaching demonstration for Ferguson and was appointed immediately. "Rene

has spells working with Van Nistelrooy, Chris Eagles and Giuseppi Rossi, who all pick at his

brains, but his role is development of young boys," Kershaw said. "He is the best coach in the

world for kids."

 

Raised in the land of Total Football, Meulensteen's obsession with encouraging skills dovetailed

perfectly with the creed of Ferguson, Kershaw and enlightened Academy stalwarts like Brian

McClair and Tony Whelan. "Seven to 10 is the golden age of learning, so we work on their

technique at a young age," Whelan said.

 

"Rene came in," Kershaw continued, "and said it was not helpful to put Under-9 kids into

Premier League eight-a-side football games against other clubs with mums and dads on

touchlines shouting 'get stuck in'. When we played some teams it was like World War Three.

When we played Man City last year, we had to frogmarch a City parent from the training ground.

He was effing and blinding, telling the referee he's an effing cheat. When we play City now, I tell

the groundsman to shift the rope away from the pitch so the parents are 20-30 yards back."

 

United know kids will always be competitive, so they work on their technique first and are

prepared to "isolate" themselves from those clubs sticking to Premier League rules. "In eight v

eight, the three biggest kids dominate,"

 

Kershaw said. "So we decided we would go on a four-a-side programme of development that

initially revolved virtually solely around technique."

 

United commissioned a report from Manchester Metropolitan University which praised the

"number of dribbling skills - step-over, drag-back, Cruyff Turn, feint and others - demonstrated"

by the Academy's Under-9 players while involved in four-v-four games on pitches measuring 25

metres by 25 metres.

 

Armed with this backing from respected sports scientists, United went to the Premier League

Academy directors' meeting and argued for a change in the rules, replacing eight-v-eights for the

youngest kids with four-v-fours. As one coach present described it, other clubs reacted to

Kershaw's request as if he had "thrown a hand-grenade at them".

 

Kershaw himself said: "The supposed experts at other clubs went: 'Bloody ManU, if they don't

fancy it, they can pull out of the games programme.' They didn't listen to the argument that what

we were doing was good for kids' development."

 

Whelan sighed: "On Sunday morning, some clubs will travel three hours to Newcastle for one

hour's football of eight v eights for their Under-9s. Some of the players stand around a lot of the

time. We refuse to go. It is far better to stay and train at home." As Kershaw stressed: "Once a

nine-year-old has learned a trick, it's like learning his tables, it stays with him for life."

 

Evidence that something special was occurring at United could be found at Littleton Road with

the merry bands of Under-9s and Under-10s, on Carrington's indoor pitch with Meulensteen and

the Under-11s and outside under floodlights with the Under-12s. United have become the Eton

College of football.

 

Practice makes perfect. "Experts reckon it takes 10,000 hours of training to make a top athlete,"

remarked coach Eamon Mulvey. So United ensure training is fun. "At the start we often put on a

five-minute DVD with tricks from Best, Maradona and Ronaldo. We'll say, 'Who wants to be

Ronaldo? Hands up.' Then they go off and try the tricks in a game."

 

All those skills are cultivated and paraded in the four-v-four contests. "We feel like a voice in the

wilderness," observed Whelan. "We'd love it if someone else did a four-v-four pilot. We need

more allies. We do have some. Derby, Leicester and Liverpool are good collaborators."

 

Others aren't. "When we play Huddersfield or Stoke, they are so up for it because they are

playing against United," Meulensteen said. "They work twice as hard. It's a battle. That cannot

develop players. One manager of another Academy said to me: 'I want to see eight v eight and a

nice cup of tea afterwards.'"

 

"Being technical director of the FA is almost an impossible job because there are so many

narrow-minded people out there. There's a negative coaching culture in England. It's crash, bang,

wallop coaching. We are different. If someone makes a mistake, nobody has a go at them."

 

Kershaw agreed, adding: "Our poorest Under-16s are light-years in front of anything they have at

Bury, Rochdale and all those clubs. We are producing very, very skilful young boys, who do the

tricks and compete. By the time they are 12, they are ready to enter 11-a-side.

 

"The Premier League have a set of rules which now need a major revision. But I am stopping

going to Academy managers' meetings. They just spout hot-air. We have little Tin-Gods trying

to do big jobs. Some clubs are in disarray with their Academies. The Premier League should be

saying: 'You out.' But they won't.

 

"Barnsley's Academy was magnificent when it was built, but unfortunately they have hit the

buffers, they don't meet the rules so they should be chucked out. We are continuing to invest.

Other clubs aren't. Chelsea were the worst, but in fairness they will be the tops now."

 

"The FA set up a system with Academies to develop kids to win England the World Cup. I don't

care if England don't get in the top 32 in the world. My job is to get a player in United's first

team. But he doesn't need to be English. Rossi [the Italian teenager] has a wonderful chance. He's

like Jimmy Greaves: left-kicker, tucks the ball away. But not English."

 

With Kieran Richardson and Phil Bardsley maturing, the English production line still rolls at

United and will accelerate in the future. "Some other clubs don't see English nine-year-olds as

cost effective," Kershaw concluded. "Some clubs would rather take a rag-arsed Irish lad at 16,

who is a hardened competitor because the Dublin and District Schools League is tough but he

doesn't have great technique." And great technique is a quality cherished at the club that

produced Charlton, Beckham and company.'

 The Case For Street Soccer:

NorCal Premier Member Clubs:

Here are three soccer articles that may be of interest to you.

Benjamin,

League Manager

 

"My position is this: street soccer is the most natural educational system that can be found."

Rinus Michels

 

Street Soccer - Missing in America?

By analyzing street soccer yourself, you will conclude that its strength is that it is played daily in a competitive form, with a preference for the match on all sorts of 'street playing fields', usually in small groups. Rarely in street soccer do you see youths busy practicing isolated technical and tactical drills. No, it is always the competitive form, where youth players learn from their mistakes, unconscious of the technical, tactical, mental and physical qualities they are developing through the scrimmages being played.

Playing soccer every day ensures this development. It is a process where it is not necessary for adults to be present. You also learn the team tactical principles without effort through playing the game. Your teammate, higher in the street soccer hierarchy, forces you to comply...

In African and South American countries, where the conditions for street soccer are favorable, you can immediately notice that youth players have a head start. They go through a more varied technical and tactical development within their own experiences. Therefore, the "feeling" for the game is also better. They find their motivation on the street to play the games over and over again, no matter how simple they are. Even if there is only a wall at their disposal...

 

There is an argument that street soccer today is no longer possible. "Automobiles now drive where games were once played. The playgrounds are used as hangouts for older youth with other interests. Open grass fields are now dog parks. The conditions for street soccer in many countries are less than ideal." 6 Add bicycle unfriendly suburbs, the need for permits to use public fields, the managed schedules that most children have today and spontaneous play of any kind, let alone street soccer is hard to imagine.

 

In spite of all of these obstacles, which are solvable, there's another reason why street soccer doesn't enjoy the same popularity as pick up basketball. In his book, How Soccer Explains The World, Franklin Foer observes:

But for all the talk of freedom, the sixties parenting style had a far less laissez-faire side too. Like the 1960's consumer movement which brought American car seatbelts and airbags, the soccer movement felt like it could create a set of rules and regulations that would protect both the child's body and mind from damage. Leagues like the one I played in handed out "participation" trophies to every player, no matter how few games his (or her) team won... Where most of the world accepts the practice of heading a ball as an essential element of the game, American soccer parents have fretted over the potential for injury to the brain. An entire industry sprouted to manufacture protective headgear... Even though very little medical evidence supports this fear, some youth leagues have prohibited headers altogether.

This reveals a more fundamental difference between American youth soccer and the game as practiced in the rest of the world. In every other part of the world, soccer's sociology varies little: it is the province of the working class... Here, aside from the Latino immigrants, the professional classes follow the game most avidly and the working class couldn't give a toss about it. Surveys, done by sporting goods manufacturers, consistently show that children of middle class and affluent families play the game disproportionately... That is, they come from the solid middle class and above.

 

Observing youth soccer in America it is very difficult to argue with Foer's assessment that it is solidly a middle class sport. And the middle class brings it's values into the picture. Middle class values don't see street soccer as a legitimate educational method. It is recess as opposed to physical education. Children need to be taught and teaching should be done by experts. Few would argue that over the last 30 years children are being "taught" almost everything at increasingly younger ages. Soccer instruction now begins with four year olds, so that the children will have an advantage as six year olds. This need to get ahead brings with it the fear of falling behind and the need for accountability that only expert instruction can prevent and provide. This type of instruction leaves no room for the trial and error system of street soccer. Middle class values are in conflict with the basic ideas behind a street soccer culture. The following are a few ideas that demonstrate the conflict between the two.

 

One of those basic ideas in the street soccer culture is that you are assigned a role by a better player and are expected to play it for the good of the team, see Michels above. Such an assignment runs counter to the idea that every child needs to learn every position. This democratization of the team, where everyone is a jack of all trades and a master of none, is best achieved by an adult outside of the game itself. A responsible individual, (the coach) that can ensure that each individual child's needs are being met at every moment. In street soccer you fill the position that you are best suited for at the moment in the context of the team. While this position can change from game to game and team to team the purpose is always the same, to get the best out of each individual possible at the moment.

 

This brings up another difference. In street soccer children have to learn patience, to wait for their turn, that they are not entitled to lead, make decisions or even be listened to simply because they show up. Leadership is earned through competition within the pecking order inside of the team. Younger players in street soccer would wait their turn when they would finally be able to lead the group, and there are no guarantees. In the democratization of the soccer children don't have to learn patience, they are guaranteed their turn their time in the spot light. Whether it's a turn to be captain, to play center forward or to take a shot at goal middle class children learn that hard work and patience aren't really necessary.

 

Not only does everyone get a chance, but no one fails. The mantra, "Everyone's a winner, no ones a loser" is a benchmark in recreational soccer. The idea is to help build every individuals positive self esteem. No one can leave the game or practice feeling bad. In street soccer every game resulted in a winner and a loser and every one knew who was who. Failure was a common experience, as it is in life, and children learned early on how to handle the disappointments. Children learned self respect instead of self esteem.

 

A huge difference here is that in street soccer no standings are kept. You can lose this morning and win in the afternoon. Disappointment is only temporary and is forgotten within minutes of the end of the match. But in today's soccer society standings can be kept and the failures are cumulative. They are carried along all season. An eight year old will be reminded in November about a game they lost in September and how important that is.

 

This emphasis on self esteem brings up another difference between the cultures. If there really are no losers then why try at all? Since giving less then your best receives the same reward as giving your best why go to any extra effort? The implication for children is that mediocrity is acceptable and makes developing soccer skills a moot point. (Coaches often complain that getting children motivated is one of their biggest problems.) The bar of acceptance is set to the lowest common denominator and the children in the top percentage will be affected the most. In street soccer it's peers that will decide what is and isn't acceptable and it will be based on each players contribution to the game. Nothing politically correct here but an honest assessment from those that it matters most to. (Children can be cruel and lack good judgment about how to express themselves. This can be especially true when there is too big a gap in the levels of talent. But with proper guidance they can learn some basic lessons about relationships, such as working together with limited resources, a positive, instead of simply placing blame a negative.) Each child has the opportunity to decide for themself how important the game is and how involved they want to be.

 

But if the children set the bar of acceptable behavior how will they be held accountable? Can children really be trusted to guide the educational process? This brings back the need for educational experts yet also sets up the conflict between a coaches problems and the players problems. It also highlights the conflict between real and pretend leadership. Leadership involves a lot more then calling heads or tails or leading a set of stretches. Some ten year olds feel comfortable leading eight year olds, after all, they've been there, done that and the chance to show off their expertise is irresistible. But many parents can't trust that their children will be given the correct instruction by another child or see fail to see the benefits that their child will have when given the opportunity to do so themselves. Yet these are often the best coaches and examples for younger children to have. Someone with real empathy for the problems. Finally, the bottom line comes down to realizing that children need to learn how to play before they can play soccer. Physical activity, free spontaneous play, is rapidly disappearing as an activity of preference for youths much less meeting the demands of soccer. To think that adults are the best resource to teach play to children is questionable at best.

 

Many of today's parents live with a fear that their child will be left behind, that they will lose control. Learning in street soccer is subtle, control is exercised by peers. There is no adult to report that "today Jimmy learned how to dribble with the outside of the foot. He's getting better. Thursday we'll work on shooting." This type of reassurance is comforting to any involved and concerned parent. But, in a pure street soccer culture, most parents have no idea of what is going on. This part of childhood belongs to the child. Reports to parents were brief and to the point, "I was with the guys, we played some, it was good. What's for dinner?" Not the type of things that involved parents want or expect to hear. These parents want accountability and guarantees which is difficult to demonstrate in street soccer

 

One way to bridge this cultural gap is through the use of soccer festivals or tournaments with an individual winner. These play days give the game back to the children yet allow adult supervision from a distance. Ages can be mixed so that one week the ten year olds are at the bottom and the next they're at the top. Leadership can be learned from the position of the leader and the follower. Children can learn new tricks and ideas from a wide variety of sources. New faces bring fresh challenges and problems.

 

 

Without question, the vast majority of American youths playing soccer today have never experienced street soccer. Yet, this concept is not foreign in American culture. Millions of adults today remember "the good old days" of sand lot baseball, pick up basketball and neighborhood football games. Games, and childhood's, built exactly as Michels outlines above. Older players organizing the teams, coaching the younger ones and having the opportunities to lead. Children had a responsibility to the game and each other. Play brought everyone together, and it took everyone together to play. Sadly, today's soccer children are denied this. What was good enough for the parents is not good enough for the children. Instead, they are getting something that is supposedly better, after all, we wouldn't knowingly create something worse. In the world of adult supervised soccer control and accountability have been gained for the adults. But what has been lost is the sense of accomplishment and the entrepreneurial spirit for the most important people involved, the children.

 

By Larry Paul

 

Street life

Wednesday, 18 February 2004

By Luke Williams Street life

Wednesday, 18 February 2004

By Luke Williams

 

Street football is alive and well in Africa In 2001, a group of coaches met in Geneva and concluded that the decline of 'street football' was damaging youth development.

 

Breeding ground

How so? Most people's ideas of street football revolve around memories of unsupervised and anarchic scrambles for the ball, jumpers for goalposts, and close encounters with broken glass. Hardly the breeding ground for future world beaters ... or was it?

  

Increasingly rare

The sight of children playing impromptu football matches in city streets has become increasingly rare. Increases in traffic and crime levels are two reasons cited for this decline, while rises in living standards and the development of computer games and satellite television have increased levels of child passivity, not to mention obesity. Many cities barely tolerate street football now - for example in Bradford, England in 2000 the local council issued a warning to children not to play in the streets.

 

Improvisatory aspects

Where once youngsters learnt their skills through experience and improvisation, now they pick them up in the more clinical environment of football schools and development programmes. This is no bad thing, but regimented coaching does seem to neglect the improvisatory aspects of the game which street football nurtured.

 

Less flair?

It is no accident that the most gifted English player to emerge in the last decade, Wayne Rooney of Everton FC, is primarily a street-bred talent, Liverpool being one of the few British cities where street football survives. However, generally among European-born players, there seems to be less flair than in years gone by.

 

Buying flair

""You notice how many European teams go and buy their flair from Africa and South America"," said UEFA technical director Andy Roxburgh recently. And it is true - in both these relatively impoverished continents street football is alive and well, and so is flair and invention.

 

Back to the streets

Many UEFA member associations are now developing programmes which bring back elements of street football to nurture players for whom spontaneity is the norm. "The truth is it's not easy for kids now to just go out on the street and have a game," Les Reed, acting technical director of the English Football Association told uefa.com. "One of the key factors of football on the street is that there was very little adult inrterference.

 

Too coach-centred?

"We may just have become too coach-centred over the years. "We're trying to introduce schemes which replicate street football". We let the kids make up the rules and give them a bit more freedom because that helps in their decision-making when they get older."

 

Football tennis

Roxburgh also cites the example of AFC Ajax as a club who have integrated more 'free' programmes into their youth develoment. Several nights a week the Eredivisie side provide sessions at which coaches encourage, but the children choose what they want to do. "I saw four kids practise scissors kicks while playing football tennis," Roxburgh recalled. "No coach in the world would ever have developed a game like that."

 

Free play areas

In order for unsupervised football to thrive again, more free play areas are needed across

USYSA