Helpful Hints (we hope):
Who are the A.Y.S.O. coaches ?
The players dads,
moms, uncles, aunts, grandpa, grandma, older brothers, older sisters...Anyone
18 years of age or older who has the desire to help children learn how
to play soccer through positive coaching in a safe, fun, and fair environment.
I don't know anything
about soccer, I've never played the game, I have not even watched a single
soccer game on TV.
We will provide
you with coaching clinics and classes prior to the start of the season.
You will also be given an easy to follow manual with simple instructions
and an explanation of A.Y.S.O. philosophies and regulations. Knowing the
game comes second to your desire to help the kids and to be part of A.Y.S.O.
Now that I have
volunteered to be a coach, what do I do now?
1. Don't panic.
2. Don't be
mad at your wife if she volunteered you without you knowing about it. 3. Attend the coaching
clinics, read the manuals given to you, watch a few games on TV or better
yet go to one of the local games. Talk to your friends or anyone you know
who is or has been a coach before.
Always remember you can call
the coach administrator, referee administrator or your division directors
for support and advice. We are all part of a team, we're here to help one
another for the benefit of the kids.
Although you may not be prepared for it, you will find that coaching
is a lot of fun and it can also be very addictive for all the following
positives reasons.
- Participating in your child's
activities.
- Helping other kids.
- Creating a fun and safe
environment for them to play soccer in.
- Being part of a community. (1800 players and counting).
- Taking on a new challenge.
- Learning new skills.
- Getting that exercise
you keep postponing.
- Meeting new people.
- Having fun.
- We need you!
Besides teaching kids how to play soccer you will also help
them build a positive attitude towards their teammates, referees, coaches
and toward themselves. Coaching is not just about teaching a striker how
to score or teaching a basketball player how to achieve a slam dunk. For
a coach, soccer becomes a tool to help the kids learn about themselves
and the people around them.
Here are a
few simple tips for first-time coaches.
- Learn as much about the sport
in the time frame you're given. Become familiar with the Laws of the game
and basic techniques of soccer. Some coaches will conduct training sessions
and coach games with no preparation. Attend coaching courses and clinics
to learn how to prepare and organize your practices and how to manage your
team.
- There are two major differences
between soccer and other sports:
1. Since you play soccer with your feet, there is no perfection;
the game is always unpredictable and game situations change, literally,
every second.
2. Given its unpredictability, soccer is one of the few sports
in which players must learn to make split second decisions to be effective.
In most sports, players "execute" or carry out the orders of the coach.
In soccer, players must execute movements based on the movement of the
ball and the players. Hence, players must learn to make their own decisions
on the field!
You, as a coach, provide advice,
direction, and instructions during practices. This is your "classroom".
The games on Saturday are the "tests" of what the players have learned
in training and self practice.
Coaches who provide a constant stream
of instruction during the game are giving their players the answers to
the test! The players will not learn to make their own decisions on the
field if coaches do that for them from the sidelines. In soccer, more than
in most sports, the game is the greatest teacher. The best training then,
is playing. Especially with the U-10 and younger player, skills can be
trained "incidentally" while playing soccer! Small sided games provide
players with maximum ball contacts and decision making opportunities. Standing
in lines, for example, does not occur in a game nor will it provide repetitive
ball contact and movement. The best youth soccer coaches teach players
the techniques in "game" environments which provide purposeful activity,
enjoyment, and relevance to the game.
Judge your success by how many players return
to play next season and continue to play through high school, not by how
many games you have won.
The biggest responsibility
youth coaches have is to provide an enjoyable learning experience.
Wins and losses at the youth level are insignificant relative to this responsibility.
The player's need for challenge is innate. Their perception that winning
and losing is the barometer for success is learned from adults. Your preoccupation
or focus on the final score as an indicator of quality will lead you astray
from the real focus: developing the player's techniques and their love
for the game. If wins and losses define success for you, you will begin
to teach strategy to the youngsters to win games, rather than to develop
their technical and tactical abilities. Coaching
to win at the youth level is the wrong focus. Train for
the long term and the future success of the children, not the current win
loss record.
You are a role model
to the players and families. Teach good sportsmanship to the players and
parents. During the games remain in your technical area when coaching (usually
10 yards on each side of the half way line). Support the kids with positive
encouragement but keep your technical coaching to a minimum, the game is
for the kids to implement what you taught them during practice. Play by
play instructions are counterproductive as they do not entice the kids
to think while playing.
If your team is losing, try not to show your disappointment, the kids
are still playing and they are still having fun, make the best of it, we're
here for them, not the other way around.
Remember that your behavior toward the referees dictates the way your
players and their parents will learn how to relate to referees. Referees
are volunteers just as you are.
Negative comments towards the referees have no place on the field
or on the sidelines.
Now that you know you made the right decision by volunteering
here's a few situation you may be confronted with.
- You could be presented
with situations where some parents may wreak havoc on the sidelines, disagree
with your methods, and complain. There is often a parent on the team who
knows more than you do (so they think) and who will not be shy about letting
you and the rest of the parents know. They know soccer better than the
coaches but they are never around when we need volunteers. Don't be discouraged
if your team isn't playing "soccer" like a pro team, we know you are here
for the kids and your knowledge of soccer comes second to your desire to
help the kids. Win or lose, if the kids are smiling then you've done most
of your job.
- Although it doesn't
happen often some parents will think of you as a baby sitter, they will
repeatedly be late to pick up their child from practices. It's up to you
to inform them that they need to show up at least 10 minutes before the
end of practice. That way they can enjoy watching their kids having fun
and you are not stuck waiting after everyone else is gone. As
a coach you should never be in a situation where you are alone with a child.
If you are a male coach and you have a girls team, you should always have
an adult of the opposite sex (preferably someone other than your wife)
with you during practices and until the last kid has been picked up. The
same applies for a reverse situation ( female coach for boys team).
- Some players will be late
at the games, some will not show up, some will let you know before hand
and some won't. All the time you spent staying up the night before to plan
your team line up won't be too helpful if two minutes before kick off you
still have 4-5 players who have not shown up yet. One way to prevent that
situation is to bring it up at your initial parent team meeting. Tell the
parents they should inform you at least one day in advance if their child
will be late or absent on game day. Remind them during the season if need be.
Please
remember:
- Players will not be allowed to wear jewelry and or hard hair
pins of any kind during the game.
- Players must wear shin guards in order to play or practice. Shin guards
must be worn under the socks.
- Long fingernails will have to be trimmed prior to entering the game.
- Referees have been instructed not to let players on the field unless the
above requirements are met.
- Have the game cards filled out before the game. If the players have
numbered jerseys, please sequence by card by number. If not, sequence
by players' last name.
- Be prepared before game time so your team doesn't lose playing time by
not being prepared.
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