Field Hockey: create video

Connection-Based Coaching has emerged as a significant movement in hockey coaching. The core idea is simple but powerful: the relationship between coach and player is the foundation upon which all development is built. Without trust, without genuine connection, coaching effectiveness is limited.

This isn't soft philosophy. Research consistently shows that athletes who feel psychologically safe, who trust their coach, who believe their coach genuinely cares about them, perform better and develop faster.

What is Psychological Safety?

Psychological safety is the belief that you can take risks without being punished or humiliated. In a hockey context, it means players who feel safe to:

  • Try new skills without fear of criticism for failure
  • Ask questions without being made to feel stupid
  • Offer ideas without being dismissed
  • Make mistakes in matches without losing their place
  • Express concerns without negative consequences

When psychological safety exists, players are more creative, more willing to stretch themselves, and more honest about their development needs.

Building Connection

Know Your Players

Do you know what motivates each player? Their life outside hockey? Their hopes and concerns? Connection requires knowledge, and knowledge requires investment in getting to know people.

This doesn't mean becoming best friends. It means showing genuine interest, remembering what players tell you, and demonstrating that you see them as people, not just performers.

Listen More Than You Speak

Many coaches do too much telling. Connection-based coaching emphasises listening. When players speak, give them full attention. Ask follow-up questions. Reflect back what you've heard to show understanding.

Listening builds trust because it demonstrates respect. When players feel heard, they're more receptive to coaching.

Consistency and Reliability

Trust is built through consistent behaviour over time. If you say you'll do something, do it. If you have standards, apply them equally to everyone. Inconsistency destroys trust faster than almost anything else.

Appropriate Vulnerability

Coaches who admit mistakes, acknowledge what they don't know, and share their own development journey build stronger connections than those who project infallibility. Appropriate vulnerability models the openness you want from players.

Connection in Practice

Individual Check-Ins

Brief one-to-one conversations build connection over time. Not always about hockey - sometimes just "How are you?" delivered with genuine interest. These small interactions accumulate into strong relationships.

Personalised Feedback

Generic feedback shows you're not paying attention. Specific, personalised feedback shows you see the individual. "Good work" is less powerful than "I noticed you recovered really quickly after that turnover - that's the response we need."

Celebrating Progress

Connection-based coaches celebrate development, not just outcomes. The player who improves from poor to average has achieved as much as the player who was always excellent. Recognition should reflect effort and progress.

Managing Difficult Conversations

Strong connections make difficult conversations possible. When players trust you, they can hear hard truths. When they don't, the same truths are rejected as unfair criticism. Build the connection first; the honest feedback can follow.

Team-Level Application

Connection isn't just coach-to-player. Teams with strong player-to-player connections perform better. The coach's role includes creating conditions for these connections:

  • Team-building activities that build genuine relationships
  • Training structures that encourage collaboration
  • Addressing behaviours that damage team connection
  • Celebrating collective achievements

Common Barriers

"I don't have time": Connection doesn't require separate time - it's embedded in how you do everything. A two-minute conversation while setting up equipment still counts.

"It's soft": The evidence says otherwise. High-performance environments increasingly recognise that connection underpins performance, not detracts from it.

"Not all players want it": Different players need different levels and types of connection. Read what each individual needs and adjust accordingly.

Key Coaching Points

  • Psychological safety enables risk-taking and growth
  • Know your players as people, not just performers
  • Listen more, tell less
  • Be consistent and reliable
  • Personalise your interactions and feedback
  • Create conditions for player-to-player connection

Drills That Build Team Connection

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Hi. New to the site. Download or Saving drills?

Hi. New to the site. I am a fully paying member. I was wondering if anybody can tell me how to download the animations from the Sportsplan website? I want to download them to my tablet (similar to ipad) and show the team at training how the drill/skill etc is to be done. However, don't have internet access on tablet, so can't access drills online, and need to save it to tablet to show them. Can anybody help? Any suggestions?

Archived User Coach

How can I upload Youtube drills?

I will like to upload some youtube videos on my plans and i will really will like to know on how to go about Uploading this coaching drills from youtube.

vuyisile Coach, Netherlands

How do I share videos and drills I create with other coaches?

I have created lots of plays, sketches and animations etc and I have them in a folder and I would like other coaches I work with to be able to access them. How can I share folders

Steven Portplan Coach, England

What is Sportplan?

Archived User Coach

How do I create a folder of sessions?

Archived User Coach

I want to sketch a drill with the Chalkboard

Archived User Coach

How to use the Session Planner

Archived User Coach

How can I publish a Session?

Archived User Coach

creating own drills

How do I create my own drills?

Clarice Hoffman Coach, South Africa

my own drill

how to draw my own drill

Joe Sexton Coach, England

Upload a video form Youtube

How do you upload a video from Youtube. Previously you just had to copy the URL into the plan but I can't see how to do this.Thank you.

Pauline Madden Coach, England

Is there a help video for the Create tool?

I can't get this to work. I cannot add any shapes or arrows. It says just click and drag but nothing is working. I am a first time user and have just subscribed but if it doesn't work I will rethink.

Victoria Brindley Coach, England

Unable to upload youtube link

I'm trying to create a YouTube video upload link but when I paste the link, nothing happens. There are no options to save etc. This seems á¹­o happen on both the mobile app or the Web application/site. Any ideas?

BRFC Coaches Coach, Ireland

Unable to upload YouTube video

After clicking on Create and then "insert YouTube Video", I receive the prompt to inser the URL of the video. After that, nothing happens and the video is not downloaded.

Bob Powers Coach, United States

How To Create My Own Session

The following video tutorial will show you how to create your own session plan using the Sportplan website:

Cam Hughes Coach, England

How To Create A Lesson Plan

The following video tutorial shows you how to create a lesson plan for teaching by using the Sportplan lesson planner.

Sportplan Team Coach, United Kingdom

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