What is the most important / valuable position on a soccer team?

Filed under: Polls, Youth Soccer Coach, Youth Soccer Coaching by: Coach Mark

Coaches around the world have many thoughts on which position is the most important and valuable to a soccer team. Even the coaches in the Coach Mark Soccer Club can’t agree. So, let’s figure it out once and for all.

Some would argue that the goalkeeper is the last line of defense, so that position is the most important. Others would say you win by scoring more goals, so your Forward or Striker is the most valuable. Yet, other coaches say the Midfielders or Wings are the players that create the scoring opportunities, and act as stoppers to keep the ball in the offensive end. So, the discussion rages on and there is no end in sight.

Here is your chance to voice your opinion. Please choose one position from the list below and tell the world which position is the most important for you!

You will be able to vote one time, for only one position. Once you vote, you will be able to see the voting results.

What is the most important position on your team?

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Youth Soccer Formations – Using the 4-3-2-1 Christmas Tree Formation

Filed under: Game Strategy, Uncategorized, Youth Soccer, Youth Soccer Coach, Youth Soccer Coaching, Youth Soccer Formations by: Coach Mark
A 4-3-2-1 formation is a large youth soccer formation for youth players to play. The newer small-sided fields normally wouldn’t feature this number of players on the field at one time. If your team plays on a large enough field, many coaches consider the 4-3-2-1 or “Christmas Tree” formation.
This leaves coaches new to this youth soccer formation wondering how to teach it to youth soccer players. Well, here’s a few quick strategies from Coach Mark.
 
The 4-3-2-1 soccer formation is typically a narrow formation, with two of your midfielders having primary responsibility similar to a forward position. Your two forward-most midfielders are effectively playing forward or striker positions and primarily responsible for scoring along with your striker.
 
Your center midfielders play the standard midfielder role. That is; coming back to the defensive zone to move the ball forward, keeping the ball in the offensive zone, and setting up / passing the ball to the offensive midfielders and striker.
 
The center backs and full backs play the traditional defensive role, which is to clear the ball from the front of the net toward the closest sideline, and to move the ball / pass up to the center midfielders along the outside edge of the field.

The most important things to remember for youth players in this soccer formation are;

 

1) To stay in the designated lanes or area of the field. It gets too easy for youth players to “bunch up” or slide toward the middle of the field.

 

2) The six players that will be on the offensive end of the field can get to focused on the middle of the field. They need to remember to stay wider than their tendency might otherwise be.

 

3) This formation relies on your ability of your center midfielders and forward midfielders to possess the ball, and pass it effectively to the forward midfielders and the striker.

 

Below is an image you can use to help explain this youth soccer formation to your players.



The Coach Mark Soccer Club can provide a FREE, custom PDF diagram showing formations like this. Please visit the new website by clicking here – Coach Mark Soccer Club, and you’ll be downloading FREE documents, diagrams, strategies, and other resources within five minutes! The site helps coaches, assistant coaches and team managers organize and build better youth soccer teams.



To your soccer success,



Coach Mark



Youth Soccer Formations – Which One Should I Use?

Filed under: Youth Soccer Coaching, Youth Soccer Formations by: admin

By Nigel Reed

I am approaching the final year of coaching a team from the under 8’s through to Under 16’s, and during that time I have discovered the growth that players go through. both physically and also their mental approach and understanding of the game. It has been a great journey of discovery, and through substantial learning, both self help and formal education, I am now a firm believer in the “Principles of the Game” and how youth soccer formations fit in with the principles of the game. I will try to explain.

Lets say you have an 11 a side team and you decide on a 4-4-2 formation. So, our line up is:

One goalkeeper,

Four defenders (two central and two wide),

Four midfielders (again two central and two wide) and

Two strikers (mainly central).

Read more…