
Two teams of four in a small sided grid area. Blue team: made up of the starting back four. Red team: Made up preferably of two wingers and two strikers. Red team: collects a ball from their end every time the game restarts and attempt to get over the far endline and touch their boot on the ball to score. Blue team: Must work as a unit to defend their endline and operate as a compact unit.
This practice has no coaching points
This practice has no progressions
in more ways than one
Set pieces account for roughly a third of all goals in football, yet many coaches spend surprisingly little time coaching defensive organisation at corners and free kicks. This article compares zonal and man marking systems, explores hybrid approaches, and provides a practical session structure for building set piece resilience into your team.
A player's first touch determines everything that follows: whether they can play forward, turn, or simply retain the ball. This article explores why training first touch in isolation is not enough, and how to design sessions that develop this critical skill under realistic game pressure.
The coaching methodology revolution sweeping grassroots football - and how to implement it at your club this season.