1000 Touch Workout
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It is imperative that we not lose sight of the most important skill of soccer. And that is TOUCH. Touch determines what happens when the ball finally gets to YOUR FOOT.
The
other important thing about TOUCH is that players can develop this
skill and ability on their own away from team practice! And that is
what you should be doing. That way, we can incorporate these growing
skills INTO team sessions and make team sessions far more interesting
(i.e. FUN) rather than spending 30-45 minutes of valuable team time
learning the very basics.
You need to MASTER at least 3
different moves. And I mean MASTER. That means on both the left AND
right foot, or in both directions. That means at game speed. And that
means as a reflex – without having to think to yourself “ok,
I want to do such & such move now, so the 1st step is”…etc.
That also means including the exploding acceleration into the space
you just created for yourself every time you use (or even practice)
the move. Of course, the more moves beyond 3 that you master, the
more dangerous you will be to opponents because they will not know
how to defend you. There are over 20 skills, feints, turns, and moves
in our basic warm-up for you to learn. Just imagine how deadly a
player you can be.
1000
TOUCH WORKOUT. The footwork activity here is designed to give you
about 1000 touches in seven minutes. And I know that everyone can
find seven minutes a day to work on their soccer skills. This warm-up
should be done daily as a regular part of exercise and training
preparation. Ideally, on practice days and match days, I would love
to see everybody arrive 15 minutes early and get this warm-up in
before we even begin the regular training session or match
preparation.
1000
TOUCH WORKOUT
SEVEN
MINUTE DRILL
50
BALL TAPS
BASIC ROLLS (10 each foot)
1) Inside
Roll
2) Outside roll
BELL TOUCHES (50
touches)
FOUNDATION SKILLS (10 each)
1)
Inside-Outside
2) Triangles
3) Vee
PULL-BACK SKILLS
Do sequence with one foot then switch (4 times each foot )
1)
Pull, Instep Push
2) Pull a Vee
3) Pull & Take with Outside
of foot
4) Pull & Roll Behind
TURNS: from
moderate speed turn 180 degrees and explode/accelerate for 3 touches.
Then bring it back down to moderate pace for the next turn (4 times
each foot)
1) Pull Turn
2) Drag-Back
3) Inside Chop
4)
Outside-Cut
5) Cruyff
6) Stepover Turn
7) Step-On Shield &
Turn
TAKE-ON MOVES, explode/accelerate after the move
for 3 touches. Then bring it back down to moderate pace for the next
move (4 times each foot)
1) Hip Swivel
2) Roll-Touch
3)
Roll-Push
4) Inside-Outside (Mathews)
5) Stepover
6)
Rivolino
7) Body Swerve (Scissor Behind the ball)
8) Scissor
9)
Double Scissor
10) Ba-Dink (Cap)
Complete as indicated in
the summer program. Recommended 6 days a week (6000 touches/week).
FULL
1000 TOUCH WORKOUT
To
continue with the FULL 1000 TOUCH WORKOUT, add the following cycles:
BALL & A WALL
Spend another ten minutes passing
against a wall. Use both feet. Use one-touch, two-touch, and
three-touch pass backs. Pass back with both the instep and inside of
feet. Include fake kicks. Keep feet moving and your weight on the
balls of your feet. Receive balls with your body square behind the
ball and work on accuracy with your passes.
JUGGLING/TOUCH
LADDER
Spend ten minutes juggling the ball trying to get 100
consecutive juggles or, if you are not yet proficient enough a
juggler, work the Touch Ladder.
PATTERN DRIBBLE
Pattern
Dribble for 10-15 minutes.
(IR=inside right; OR=outside right;
IL=inside left; OL=outside left)
Begin with easy 1 foot patterns:
IR-OR-IR-OR-IR-OR-IR-OR-IR-OR
and
IL-OL-IL-OL-IL-OL-IL-OL-IL-OL
Progress to more complex
patterns. For example:
IR-OL-IL-OR - IR-OL-IL-OR - IR-OL-IL-OR -
IR-OL-IL-OR
IR-OL-IL-IR-IL-OR - IR-OL-IL-IR-IL-OR -
IR-OL-IL-IR-IL-OR
IR-OL-IL-stepover-OL-IL-OR-IR-stepover-OR -
IR-OL-IL-stepover-OL-IL-OR-IR-stepover-OR
Make up your own
patterns. Be Creative. Have fun with it.
RUNNING, SPRINTING
& SLOWING WITH THE BALL
Accelerate & Decelerate under
full control of the ball. This is different from dribbling. Dribbling
is about change of direction. This is about pace and change of pace.
The ability to change you pace - explode or come to a dead stop with
the ball under full control - is as important as any take-on move you
can ever learn. The direction is roughly straight ahead. Start from a
moderate pace and then explode for 10-20 yards then bring the ball
back down to moderate pace all the while not breaking stride. 10-15
minutes.
1000
TOUCH WORKOUT
Descriptions
of moves
Below
are descriptions of many of the Coerver moves learned over the years.
The names I have applied to them are not the end all and be all. Some
are given the names as I refer to them. Some are given the Coerver
names that I have learned them as. The point is not to learn the
names as you would a list of the state capitols – but to learn
the moves. The names just help to keep track of what you’ve
learned and what you have done in the warm-up.
Of course, the more
moves beyond 3 that you master, the more dangerous you will be to
opponents because they will not know how to defend you. There are
over 20 skills, feints, turns, and moves in our basic warm-up for you
to learn. Just imagine how deadly a player you can be.
FAST
FOOTWORK
Inside Roll -
Roll the ball across your body from outside to inside with the inside
and sole of the foot and stop the ball with the inside of the other
foot.
Outside Roll - Roll
the ball across your body from inside to outside with the outside and
sole of the foot and stop the ball with the inside of the same
foot.
Bell Touches
Step
up and down to pass ball 4-6 inches between feet. Ball is passed
between the feet with very soft, light touches.
Be sure weight is
forward on balls of feet. With each step you should be coming down on
your toes first; then your heels.
Knees stay bent at all
times.
Move the ball forward and backward.
Be sure you are
stepping up and down; not sideways.
Work at getting a comfortable
rhythm.
Inside - Outside –
Tap ball with the inside of the right foot across your body, tap with
the outside of the left foot, then inside with the left foot and
finish with outside of right.
Triangles
– Tap forward with your right foot, pull back towards you with
the sole of your left foot, then tap towards your right foot with the
inside of your left. Repeat starting with opposite foot.
Vee
– push ball forward and slightly to the outside right with
inside of right, pull back and across your body with sole of right
foot, then push ball forward and slightly to the outside left with
inside of left, and pull back and across your body with sole of left
foot.
Pull
Instep Push - Push ball forward and pull it back with the
sole, then tap ball forward with the instep of the same foot.
Pull
a Vee - Push the ball forward and pull it back with the
sole of the foot while turning and then take the ball with the inside
of the same foot.
Pull
& Take with Outside of foot - Push the ball forward
and pull the ball back with the sole then push the ball diagonally
forward with the outside of the foot.
Pull
& Roll Behind - Push the ball forward and pull the
ball back with the sole of the foot then pass the ball behind the
standing leg with the inside of the foot. Control the ball with the
sole of the other foot.
TURNS
Pull
Turn -Push ball forward with one foot and pull it back
with the other while turning toward ball and take the ball in the
opposite direction with the outside of the first foot.
Drag
Back - Push ball forward with one foot and pull it back
with the same foot while turning toward (and with) the ball. As you
complete your turn, drop your foot from the top of the ball and take
the ball in the opposite direction with the inside of the drag-back
foot.
Inside Chop - Push
ball forward, move past ball and turn toward ball and take it with
the inside of the foot in the opposite direction.
Outside
Cut - Push ball forward, move past ball and turn toward
ball while taking it with the outside of the foot in the opposite
direction.
Cruyff - Push
the ball forward, fake kick with inside of foot, but instead pull
ball behind the standing leg and change directions.
Stepover
Turn – Push ball forward, step over ball with one
foot in the following manner:
The step begins from the outside and
moves across the body (Close the Gate fashion). The stepover foot
plants alongside the ball with the outside of the stepover foot
facing the ball and your legs are sort of crossed.
Next: Bring the
back (non-stepover) foot all the way around to the back of the ball
whilst pivoting on the stepover foot and turning 180 degrees in the
direction toward the ball…
Continue the flow of the motion
and carry the ball away with the non-stepover foot. Accelerate to
space.
Step-on Turn –
While dribbling forward, Stop the ball with the sole of your foot
(“stepping” on it) and allow your body’s momentum
to carry you over to the back side of the ball.
Stop your own
forward progress once on the other side of the ball with your body
should now be in a sideways-on relation to the ball.
With you now
positioned between the ball and the (real or imagined) defender you
have effectively shielded the ball.
With the outside of the foot
which is now next to the ball, push accelerate and carry the ball
back to the direction you came from and away from the defender.
TAKE-ON
MOVES:
Hip Swivel - Fake
with inside of one foot by swiveling hips toward ball, then reverse
direction and take the ball with the inside of the other foot.
Accelerate to space.
Roll-Touch-
While moving forward, pull ball across body with sole and touch in
into space behind the defender with the inside of opposite foot.
Accelerate to space.
Roll-Push
- While moving forward, pull ball across body with sole and take with
outside of opposite foot. Accelerate to space.
Inside-Outside
(Mathews) - Fake with inside of foot nudging ball by dipping
shoulder, then take ball in the opposite direction with the outside
of same foot. (explode)
Stepover
– As covered above - With ball moving, stepover ball so ball is
outside of stepover foot, turn and take the ball with the other
foot.
Rivolino –
Begin as with the Stepover: The step begins from the outside and
moves across the body (Close the Gate fashion). The stepover foot
plants alongside the ball with the outside of the stepover foot
facing the ball and your legs are sort of crossed.
Next: Bring the
back (non-stepover) foot up from behind and plant it next to the
stepover foot.
Next: With the outside of the stepover foot which
is still next to the ball, push accelerate and carry to space.
Body
Swerve - Fake with outside of one foot, step behind and
take with outside of opposite foot. Accelerate to space.
Scissors
- step in front of or over ball with one foot in the following
manner:
The step begins from the across the body and moves to the
outside of the body (Open the Gate fashion). The motion is very
similar to the Body Swerve motion – as though you were going to
push it with the outside of the foot. The only real difference is
that the fake comes over or in front of the ball rather than behind
it.
The faking foot plants alongside the ball with the inside of
the foot facing the ball and your legs wide open and you are rather
straddling the ball.
Next: Take the ball in the opposite direction
with the outside of the other foot. Accelerate to space.
Ba-Dink
(Cap) - Cut ball with inside of foot slightly backward and take ball
ahead with the inside of the opposite foot. Accelerate to
space.
There are other moves. Some very fancy and flashy, but
perhaps not so practical (like the rainbow for example). I don’t
mind if you seek out and work on others – but only in addition
to these more fundamental and functional moves (not in place of
them). These are the ones I want you to work on the most because
these are the ones which will serve you best.
Work hard.
Commit yourself to your own soccer future. And have fun! (knowing all
of these IS fun!)
5
Steps To Mastering Touch On The Ball
This
is a progressive 5 step system of developing your juggling skills.
It is important to understand that juggling is not a soccer
skill, as it were. You don’t see professional players juggling
the ball up and down the field during matches. However, what you DO
see is spectacular 1st touch by most professional players. And that
is something that juggling will help give you. Absolute
mastery of the ball is the 1st step in soccer success. And juggling
off any desired surface at will and from surface to surface at will
IS mastery of the ball.
So juggling is something beneficial
and to master the skill WILL greatly enhance your game. Here is a
straightforward 5 step system to get there.
LEVEL 1 -
(All
players start here). The player drops the ball and touches it once
with the foot he prefers. The ball then bounces onto the floor, only
once, then the player touches with his foot again, then the ball
bounces, the player touches with his foot, the ball bounces and so
on. If the ball bounces more than once on the floor then the counting
starts again. For Level 1, either foot may be used anywhere within
the touch cycle. So that the pattern goes like this:
foot -
bounce - foot - bounce - foot - bounce - foot - bounce - etc.
50
consecutive touches completes this level.
(Hints:
visualize
the “bottom flat” of the ball.
keep the foot straight
with the toes pointing down so that the foot presents a flat surface
and the ball strikes cleanly.
Strike flat level surface of your
foot precisely to the “bottom flat” of the ball)
LEVEL
2 -
(For those who have completed Level 1). This exercise is
very similar to the previous one but this time the player touches the
ball 3 times with his stronger foot and lets the ball bounce on the
ground and then touches once with his weaker foot and lets the ball
bounce (this completes one round).
So that the pattern goes like
this (assuming your right foot is your strong foot):
right
foot - right foot - right foot - bounce - left foot - bounce (one
round) - right foot - right foot - right foot - bounce - left foot
- bounce (two rounds) - right foot - right foot - right foot -
bounce - left foot - bounce (three round3) - right foot -
right foot - right foot - bounce - left foot - bounce (four
rounds) - etc.
(Remember that the sequence is always 3
touches with the stronger foot, bounce, 1 touch with the weaker foot,
bounce (1 round), 3 touches with the stronger foot, bounce, 1 touch
with the weaker foot, bounce (2 rounds) etc.)
25
rounds completes this level.
LEVEL 3 -
(For those
who have mastered Level 2). The player starts with the ball in his
hands. He throws it into the air and with his INSTEP (the
INSTEP is the SHOELACE portion of your foot; not to be confused with
the inside of your foot) returns it to his hands. He repeats
this with his weaker foot, then with both thighs and lastly with his
head and always returning it to his hands after each touch.
The
sequence then is:
hands - instep - hands - other instep -
hands - thigh - hands - other thigh - hands - head – hands
(one round)
25 rounds completes this level.
LEVEL 4
-
(for those who have completed Level 3). In principle, the
exercise is the same as the one in Level 3 except this time there are
3 touches with the stronger foot, one with the weaker, 3 with each
thigh and 2 with the head.
The sequence then is:
hands
- r. instep - r. instep - r. instep - hands - l. instep - hands - r.
thigh - r. thigh - r. thigh - hands - l. thigh - l. thigh - l. thigh
- hands - head - head - hands (one round)
25 consecutive
rounds completes this level.
LEVEL 5 - EXCELLENCE
The
same sequence that was started in Level 3 but this time we increase
the number of touches for each round.
Eg. - Hands, instep,
hands, other instep, hands, thigh, hands, other thigh, hands, head
(one round); hands, 2 touches with the instep, hands, 2
touches with the other instep, hands, 2 touches with thigh, hands, 2
touches with other thigh, hands, 2 touches with head (2 rounds);
3 touches with each surface for round 3 and so on up to 20 rounds.
If the sequence is broken or the ball falls to the ground you
start again from the beginning.
Congratulations! Your have
now mastered quality touch on the ball! With this kind of touch
quality, you are probably already better than 99% of players your
age. And with this kind of touch quality, there is no other soccer
skill you cannot learn. You have laid the foundation to every
dribbling move, every kind of shot & pass, and every collection
method this sport has to offer.
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8/12/04 Page