User: Password:
   Keep me logged in.
Register  |  I forgot my password

Login  |  Register

border
border leftborder right
Soccer Directory » Article Details
STATISTICS
  • Active Links: 116
  • Pending Links: 1819
  • Todays Links: 2
  • Pending Articles: 110
  • Total Articles: 124
  • Total Categories: 21
  • Sub Categories: 83
top left cornertop right corner

Soccer Coaching Tips To Help You Integrate New Players

Date Added: May 24, 2010 10:40:21 AM
Author: dave clarke
Category: Coaching & Training

A successful soccer team is often a stable team. Here are some soccer coaching tips to reduce the sometimes unsettling nature of adding new players to the team.

 

1. Get to know your players

 

You may have a very clear idea of the particular soccer qualities that a new player possesses, but what do you know beyond that? By gaining a greater understanding of your players as individuals, you can help improve your ability to integrate and motivate them. Players care about what you know when they know that you care about them. Get them to complete a player information sheet that asks them about all areas of their lives (see below). Encourage the players to be as honest as they can. Emphasise that it helps build effective teams and encourages clear communication. Most importantly, once you have collected this information – use it! By making the effort to get to know the player, and not just for their soccer playing skills, you can help understand their wider motivations. The process of asking is a classic motivational tool for the player – it shows you care.

 

2. Make use of your senior players

 

Ask them for their opinions on how best to integrate new players, as well as feedback on how the new players are settling in. Pair up new players with experienced team members. This will help the new players feel less like outsiders and will help them quickly pick up the values and behaviours expected of and by the squad.

 

3. Avoid cliques

 

Cliques are groups of players who stick together. Avoid cliques by splitting up players to work in different groups or on different teams in training. If you have the opportunity, for example on tour, vary whom the players room or eat with. Team discussions (see below) can also promote positive relationships within the team and make players aware of the damage cliques can cause. Whilst it is inevitable that players will spend more time with some team-mates than others, cliques tend to be disruptive and are exclusive.

 

4. Team meetings

 

Spend time before or after training with team meetings. New players can be given the opportunity to work with other players in small groups (thus continuing the work of avoiding cliques), can be given the responsibility of feeding back to the whole squad, or their views on a particular issue, for example match strategy, can be invited. To help the new player the coach can let them know in advance, or even discuss on a one-to-one basis, what they will be required to comment on. This gives the player time to prepare and approach the meeting with more confidence. In this way the new player can begin to feel a part of the squad as his views are shown to be valued.

 

5. Roles and responsibilities

 

Make sure a new player understands (and accepts) his role within the team and any responsibilities that go with it. Clarify any other expectations concerning for example, behaviour, match day dress, and so on. All players hate being criticised for doing (or not doing) something they did not know about in the first place! As with all the other points, this is about maintaining clear and open communication. One useful exercise for clarifying responsibilities is to list all the responsibilities a player has in a specific position whilst asking them to do the same. Any discrepancies can then be clarified, and the role can be understood and agreed to by the player.

 

Article provided by Better Soccer Coaching.

 
Ratings Average rating: (0 votes)
Comments

No Comments Yet.


You must be logged in to leave a Comment.
bottom corner leftbottom corner right
SPONSOR
Bwin Betting Guess what? You can try out your football predictions and tips for free with your friends on TipsterCup.com or bet online for real money with Bwin's in-play football betting games as well as various online sports betting events. Once you want something else, try playing online poker games with actual money on Europe's largest legal poker network.

ARTICLES
Oxlade-Chamberlain nears England call
Arsenal youngster Alex Oxlade-Chamberlain could be on the verge of an England call up according to reports in the press today, with Three Lions boss Fabio Capello reportedly set to give the young winger his first cap ahead of the European Championships over the summer with the view of including him in his final squad for the competition.

Henry, the return of a legend
He is a Premier League legend. One of the finest players to grace a football pitch.

Tamworth to face the big boys
Tamworth have done it tough on their way to the FA Cup third round and a dream tie away at Everton.

Local paper cranks up pressure on Steve Kean
He has already had to cope with the fury of his own fans on a weekly basis, but now Blackburn boss Steve Kean has seen his local paper turn well and truly against him.

Are EPL sides on the fade?
Usually the Champions League is seen a bastion of English footballing strength.


VISIT
Football Betting Sites Reviews & Football Betting Tips

TitanBet.com is offering all new players £25 free bets money with absolutely no deposit required.