Soccer Kids

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If the following three aspects of communication can be kept in mind when talking to youth soccer players, a coaches message will be heard, understood and have a lasting impact:

  1. Tailor
  2. Terminology
  3. Tone

TAILOR
- It is a dynamite approach and works very well when one of your youth soccer strategies is to tailor your communications style to your team and your individual players. If your team thrives on the emotion of the moment, then show the emotion. If they seem to get nervous and be afraid to be aggressive when you get load, anxious or show your nervousness, then tone it down. In the situation where you're communicating one-on-one with a player, take them aside, keep your voice from being heard by the rest of the players, and feel free to get as emotional or as frantic or as calm as you see appropriate for that player. Of the many youth soccer strategies, this one works as well with your best players that can "take it to the next level" with some forceful direction by you, the coach, as it does with the player that you just want to encourage to "try to kick the ball at least five times this shift". Tailor your words, and your tone to your players needs. You and your team will benefit greatly.

TERMINOLOGY - Explain your strategy in terms the players understand. Be consistent with your terminology. Is the player a "forward", or a "striker", or playing "offense"? Do you want your players to "go to space" or "spread out" or "create passing lanes"? It always works best if you (and your assistant coaches) can use the same terms during the heat of game time situation that you used in practice. If your players have to pause to interpret your words, your message will not get through in a timely manner. When you and your assistant coaches are devising your youth soccer strategies, this one is a must to discuss!

TONE - Your youth soccer players are, on the whole, an excitable bunch! Constant, positive feedback will generally keep them pushing harder. Negative statements with a harsh tone can turn them off, and ruin their concentration for the remainder of the game, sometimes never to recover. If you sound desperate, anxious, nervous or even mad, the players may be at an age where they will pick up on this, and may react the wrong way. While some will sense your urgency and step-up their game, most, depending on the age, will crawl in a shell and be too afraid to make the mistake that cost the team the game. One of your strategies should be a team-appropriate tone, that isn't reacted to negatively is always the best way to communicate your soccer strategy. Yes, it can work out in a one-on-one situation, in your bag of youth soccer strategies tricks, to tell your superstar (that has yet another "level") that there is only two minutes left in the game and to pull out all the stops! But those situations are as rare as those little superstars are.

The coaches that can remember to "Tailor your Terminology with Tone" are the coaches that kids want to play for!

Coach Mark Soccer Club is dedicated to helping all youth soccer coaches that volunteer their time and effort, and want to improve their youth soccer strategies. Free videos, along with teaching aids, ebooks, field diagrams, youth soccer strategy, checklists, soccer positioning strategies and other documents are available for instant download at Coach Mark Soccer Club.

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