Many, many games are won or lost on restarts. The extent to which goals result directly from restarts remains an ongoing subject of debate, but research performed at the highest level of the game indicates that corner kicks, free kicks, and penalties produce nearly 30% of all goals. FIFA's official Technical Reports from eight recent championships provide the following data in support of this assertion:
Source: FIFA Technical Study Group What these statistics don't show is the impact all restarts (including throw-ins, goal kicks, and goalkeeper distributions) have on creating attacking chances and limiting defensive exposure. Even though your team may never score a goal directly from your own goal kick, failure to maintain possession following your goal kick could easily provide your opponent a chance to score against you in the run of play. With that said, we need to have a more precise understanding of what it means to "win your restarts". Where does a restart end and the run of play begin? In general, if your team had both the first and the second touches on the ball after it was put back in play, you can view that as a successful restart (the "first/second" rule). Any breakdown in possession or attacking execution beyond the second touch should be addressed as an error during the run of play. Of course, any restart that produces a goal for your team must be counted as a success as well! The corollary to this idea is that your restarts should be simple by design, requiring no more than two or three touches to execute. Make your approach more complex than this, and you introduce all the challenges and risks associated with free-flowing play. In addition, each situation has its own unique requirements for success, including the following points:
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Welcome to the Glens Falls Soccer blog. The purpose of the blog is to keep players in the Glens Falls City School District boys soccer program abreast of news from around the region and the world. It will also serve as a form of communication between the coaches, the players and their parents. Please feel free to contact me at anytime if you have questions or comments concerning the blog. Coach Shaver
Thursday, October 2, 2008
Winning Your Restarts
Friday, August 22, 2008
Defensive Organization
The goal of collective defending is to reduce attacking options for your opponents, thus making their play more predictable and attacks less threatening, and increasing the opportunties for your team to regain possession of the ball. Importantly, an organized defense will reduce the number of times an opponent can penetrate into the penalty area with the ball and should nearly eliminate breakaway attacks by the opposition. Good defensive shape will allow your team to withstand tough stretches of any match, and will provide your players with a firm foundation they can use to counter any opponent, even one that is significantly stronger "on paper". By working as a unit, you can enhance the effectiveness of your players' individual defending abilities to gain more than the "sum of their parts".
Consider several structural components, as illustrated below:
Of course, the defensive principles of pressure, cover, and balance must also be incorporated into your team's defensive posture. Pressure is especially important, as this is the cue that guides the positioning of all the other defenders. With tight pressure from the first defender, the rest of the team can become more compact because the first attacker will be less able to play long services to his teammates. In turn, increased compactness allows the defense to put even greater pressure on the ball, thus increasing their chances of forcing a turnover of possession.
Conversely, if the team is caught without good first defender pressure, the back line of defenders will likely need to drop off from the ball. This reduces compactness, but it also reduces the risk posed by a long service over the top or a penetrating pass through a seam. Here, the principle of immediate chase becomes critical, as the covering defenders can't step back up to increase compactness until a recovering teammate can press the ball.
Pressure from the first defender also signals which other defenders should drop into covering roles as second defenders. This adjustment by the second defenders limits space that could be exploited by a creative dribble, and also serves to tighten the seams among the defenders near the ball. Since a large seam can be split easily with a penetrating pass, your defense must constantly shift to reduce the size of these gaps.
The remaining members of the defensive unit provide balance by staying goalside of any runners off the ball. They must also work to limit defensive seams, though, by becoming more concentrated. Increased density will limit through pass and entry pass options, and will also reduce shooting lanes for the attackers.
Awareness and coordination of movement are vital, as the back line must continuously seek opportunities to become more compact and more concentrated without conceding penetrating chances to the opposition. Should the first attacker be able to play a ball that changes the point of attack, all the defenders must move while the ball is traveling so that they can get pressure on the ball as soon as (or before) it reaches its recipient.
Whenever possible, you want to keep the play in front of your defensive unit so that you never find yourself chasing a ball while facing your own goal (and, most likely, under pressure of an attacking player). Your defensive shape should force square or dropback passes by the opposition whenever possible, and prevent your opponent from ever gaining possession behind your back line. Your defense must react quickly to press the ball after each pass. Otherwise, a simple dropback pass might allow a long ball to be played over the top of a compact defensive unit that hasn't had time to drop off in anticipation of the new attacking threat.
Consider several structural components, as illustrated below:
- Compactness refers to the distance between the frontmost defenders and the back line of defenders. Players on the defensive team who are not ballside do not contribute to the team's compactness.
- Concentration refers to the horizontal spacing of the defensive players behind the ball. To increase concentration, defenders should "pinch in" toward the center to limit space in front of their goal.
- Density refers to the number of players per unit of area who are ballside and goalside within the defensive unit. Density increases as the team becomes more compact or more concentrated. You also can increase density by requiring more players to recover ballside and goalside when the team loses possession of the ball.
- Seams refer to the gaps between each ballside defensive player.
Of course, the defensive principles of pressure, cover, and balance must also be incorporated into your team's defensive posture. Pressure is especially important, as this is the cue that guides the positioning of all the other defenders. With tight pressure from the first defender, the rest of the team can become more compact because the first attacker will be less able to play long services to his teammates. In turn, increased compactness allows the defense to put even greater pressure on the ball, thus increasing their chances of forcing a turnover of possession.
Conversely, if the team is caught without good first defender pressure, the back line of defenders will likely need to drop off from the ball. This reduces compactness, but it also reduces the risk posed by a long service over the top or a penetrating pass through a seam. Here, the principle of immediate chase becomes critical, as the covering defenders can't step back up to increase compactness until a recovering teammate can press the ball.
Pressure from the first defender also signals which other defenders should drop into covering roles as second defenders. This adjustment by the second defenders limits space that could be exploited by a creative dribble, and also serves to tighten the seams among the defenders near the ball. Since a large seam can be split easily with a penetrating pass, your defense must constantly shift to reduce the size of these gaps.
The remaining members of the defensive unit provide balance by staying goalside of any runners off the ball. They must also work to limit defensive seams, though, by becoming more concentrated. Increased density will limit through pass and entry pass options, and will also reduce shooting lanes for the attackers.
Awareness and coordination of movement are vital, as the back line must continuously seek opportunities to become more compact and more concentrated without conceding penetrating chances to the opposition. Should the first attacker be able to play a ball that changes the point of attack, all the defenders must move while the ball is traveling so that they can get pressure on the ball as soon as (or before) it reaches its recipient.
Whenever possible, you want to keep the play in front of your defensive unit so that you never find yourself chasing a ball while facing your own goal (and, most likely, under pressure of an attacking player). Your defensive shape should force square or dropback passes by the opposition whenever possible, and prevent your opponent from ever gaining possession behind your back line. Your defense must react quickly to press the ball after each pass. Otherwise, a simple dropback pass might allow a long ball to be played over the top of a compact defensive unit that hasn't had time to drop off in anticipation of the new attacking threat.
Robert Parr
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