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December 10th, 2010 Leave a comment Go to comments

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Coach Youth Soccer: Killer Tips To Coach Youth Soccer

Ever wondered how difficult it may seem to coach youth soccer team? Honestly, it’s not that difficult for anyone having a style to handle the kids, right approach, and useful tips.

It’s best to initiate with the basics. This is the stage where they their interest in the game will develop and they’ll start to think and act professionally. Moreover, complete knowledge of the basics of the game will make players not only confident but also more positive about the game.

To teach youth soccer, the first things to do is to do nothing. But closely monitor them while allowing them to be themselves. Try not to arrange things too much or coach loads. In this way, kids will only take pleasure in the sport which is of essence.

Offer short and precise feedback to the kids to improve upon themselves. But remember to provide feedback while closing the session and not during it. Always keep in mind that it is important to interact with the kids in the language that they know.

Coaching Youth Soccer

Kid’s parents show a lot of concern in their advancement. Hence, it’s best to involve them at an early stage. This will also help you in making sure that kids sustain their interest in the game even when they are at home. Make sure that you understand their queries and answer them appropriately.

Please see that all available communication methods are utilized. Use of email, telephones, and one on one meetings are all suitable as well as valuable methods to communicate. But be careful! See that you or the kid’s parents don’t instruct them while they are on field. Besides, make it a point not to give negative feedback to any young player in the presence of everyone.

To effectively coach youth soccer, interacting with your fellow coaches is also essential. It provides an opportunity for the trainers to interact effectively as all of them have a lot of exclusive and important experiences to share.

Set up and arrange the drills in advance. So it basically requires you to do all preparations well ahead of time. The idea of coping with the kids makes some coaches to adopt an easy attitude. That is not right. In youth soccer also, proficiency and politeness have the same relevance similar to that in professional soccer.

Kids should be made to do interesting drills that teach them the fundamentals of the game. At times, it is also advisable to take them out on excursions and small picnics. Allow them to interact with each other and share their different views. It helps them trust each other more.

When teaching soccer, help the kids understand the value of regulation in soccer. It is extremely important for the kids to learn and practice best practices in football right from the very beginning.

As closing remarks, it is appropriate to say that teach the kids so that they learn to have fun with soccer. Take these tips to your team and you will be amazed by the results.

For more such tips to coach youth soccer, subscribe to our youth soccer coaching community. Here you will find several resources on coaching youth soccer as well as a strong and helpful coaching community.

ABOUT THE AUTHOR:

Andre Botelho is a recognized expert in youth soccer coaching. He influences well over 35,000 youth coaches each year with his unique coaching philosophy, and makes it really easy to explode your players’ skills and make training more fun in record time. To download your free youth soccer coaching guide visit: Coach youth soccer.

 

MONTA in the Bijlmer Trailer



 Loteria


Loteria


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A pastime, delightful—Chips, cards, and a table.The riddles insightful,the future, unstable! What is it?It’s Lotería, the Mexican game of chance! For the uninitiated, it might seem like bingo played with a riddling tarot deck. But this enthralling board game is more than entertainment. The images found on its cards—La Virgen, El Pan Dulce, La Telenovela—are miniature reflections of an entire culture, capturing the joys and sorrows of the Mexican people. Wildly popular on both sides of the border, Lotería cards originated in the Iberian peninsula in the eighteenth century but have been redesigned so many times as to defy expectation, with boards devoted to ecclesiastical figures, soccer idols, and even vaudeville starlets. With the dawn of a new millennium, American artist Teresa Villegas created a new Lotería set that is already gaining popularity in Mexico, and her striking images are also widely exhibited in galleries across the United States. This gift book, which will bring pleasure and bewilderment to children and adults alike, reproduces more than two dozen of Villegas’s 54 colorful cards, pairing them with insightful, humorous riddles written by award-winning author Ilan Stavans. Stavans also revisits his childhood in an essay that examines the role of luck in Mexican life and recreates the sort of poetry jam that often accompanies Lotería contests wherever they might take place. Delve into the emblematic pages of this marvelous volume to find your own Calavera. Let yourself unravel the paths of El Deseo and the mysteries of El Corazón. Before too long, you’ll realize that luck is never truly accidental—for a turn at ¡Lotería! is always an opportunity to come face to face with El Destino.

 Zeitung (Frankreich)


Zeitung (Frankreich)


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Kapitel: Le Canard Enchaîné, Liste Französischer Zeitungen, le Monde Diplomatique, 20 Minuten, Libération, France Soir, le Figaro, Dernières Nouvelles D’alsace, Midi Libre, L’équipe, Vorwärts, Courrier International, Nice-Matin, L’humanité, Berria, La Tribune, Les Échos, La Gazette de Berlin, le Journal Du Dimanche, le Parisien, Ouest-France, La Dépêche Du Midi, Présent. Aus Wikipedia. Nicht dargestellt. Auszug: L’Équipe (French for “the team”) is a French nationwide daily newspaper devoted to sports, owned by Éditions Philippe Amaury. The paper is noted for coverage of football (soccer), rugby, motorsports and cycling. Its ancestor was L’Auto, a general sports paper, whose name reflected not any narrow interest but the excitement of the time in car racing. L’Auto originated the Tour de France cycling stage race in 1903 as a circulation booster. The race leader’s yellow jersey (maillot jaune) was instituted in 1919, probably to reflect the distinctive yellow newsprint on which L’Auto was published. De Dion on one of his company’s early products.L’Auto and therefore L’Équipe owed its life to a 19th century French scandal involving soldier Alfred Dreyfus – the Dreyfus affair. With overtones of anti-semitism and post-war paranoia, Dreyfus was accused of selling secrets to France’s old enemy, the Germans. As different sides of society insisted he was guilty or innocent – he was eventually cleared but only after rigged trials had banished him to an island prison camp – the split came close to civil war and still have their echoes in modern French society. France’s largest sports paper, Le Vélo, mixed sports coverage with political comment. Its editor, Pierre Giffard, believed Dreyfus innocent and said so, leading to acrid disagreement with his main advertisers. Among them were the automobile-maker the Comte de Dion and the industrialists Adolphe
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