Tryouts Soccer:Winning Tactics for Coaches

Andre Botelho
You might disagree, but hear me out on this. Who said tryouts soccer is to find the most competitive players? It is to sort out player and teams through successful tryouts.

The obvious thing is that many young coaches do not have the experience to distinguish between average players and good players. Their lack of experience proves that they do not recognize the promising players or overlook gifted players who can read the game and make quick decisions. And so they select players who effectively use the ball.

Youth soccer has got many common wrong beliefs about tryouts. For instance, there is a perception that one can get into a soccer team, if one is coach's daughter or a board member's son. Another example is the belief that good teams have no vacancies. The truth is: successful teams change their players every year for reasons like - player is injured, player has moved to a new location, or player's commitments to other sports. Even the soccer association encourages this.

In general, both good and average players are selected in tryouts soccer. Since even the skilled coaches have failed miserably in tryout soccer drills, we'll discuss some of the failures.

As coaches are also humans they have their favorites too. Sometimes, coaches allow players to be in the team even if they do not fit into team's skills and the team's long term objectives. Instead of doing like this, a player can be allowed to be on the team when he or she is consistent in his/her abilities and level of commitment.

Do your homework to attract the best players to your team. One should design a precise, logical, competitive training plan for a year. Nobody accepts to work as a coach for a year-long project without looking at the account of work or a project plan.

As you know, the kid is neither improving nor working hard to get better. It is your responsibility to replace such player with an ambitious player who deserves a chance. Don't be hard on you, and stop kidding from now on. It is the performance that matters, so consider replacing the player if a kid does not contribute much.

The truth is - good players both in terms of performance and behavior, are always hard to find. Never do this mistake of replacing an injured player who is likely to come back and can contribute in a big way. One can retain the player for the soccer tournament, if the player is just injured.

The selling point is that the coaches should use simple skill as part of their tryouts soccer sessions. This will help you to find whether the potential player actually has the intent of learning and developing the necessary skills. Our youth soccer coaching community has got the knowledge you will need to form a balanced team, why not subscribe to it?

Andre Botelho is an expert in Tryouts soccer. He influences over 35,000 youth coaches each year with his coaching philosophy, and makes it easy to explode your players' skills and make training fun in record time. Download your free Soccer Training guide at: Soccer Practice.

Published by Andre Botelho

Andre Botelho is a recognized authority in the subject of youth soccer coaching. Download your free soccer coaching guide at his website: www.SoccerDrillsTips.com  View profile

To comment, please sign in to your Yahoo! account, or sign up for a new account.