Score!: Soccer Tactics & Techniques for a Better Offense Reviews
Now any player can be the goal-scoring star of a -with the help of Wiel Coerver, a former top professional player and winning manager. Watch kids on the soccer field illustrate all the skills needed for excellent offensive play. Find out how to get a feel for the ball, control it while moving, and practice basic foot and body movements, passing, dribbling, kicking-and of course shooting. Coaches especially will like the fun skill-building games for various numbers of players. 192 pages
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(out of 9 reviews)
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I reckon it is vital to place the Coerver Method into its proper context.It cannot be emphasized enough that Coerver’s thoughts have transformed the thinking of soccer coaching worldwide over the last twenty years. His methods are endorsed around the world, and by some of the best coaches in the U.S. (e.g., Anson Dorrance of UNC, originator of the “Win Forever” slogan of U.S. women’s soccer – you must read his book if you coach girls/women’s soccer). Licensed Coerver Coaching youth soccer camps abound, and many of the better soccer camps have incorporated elements of the Coerver Method into their training.What gave Coerver his start was the trend for European soccer in the late 1960′s on through the early 1980′s to develop into a sterile, defensively oriented passing game. Teams that had gifted ball control artists were routinely strangled by the tactic of heavy fouling. The concept of “direct soccer” was developed to use as few passes as necessary to place players into scoring position.. Although highly useful as a tactic and style of play, used to the complete exclusion of developing ball control skill, it quickly degenerated into simple “kick and run” soccer. The English version of this became known as “English long ball”. Fortunately for world soccer, over the last fifteen years, by making a series of rules changes, FIFA has worked at both encouraging a more offensively oriented style of play and discouraging excessive fouling. FIFA came to realize that people the world over (not just Americans) despised having to watch dull soccer. Individual style and flair have reappeared in world soccer as South Americans, Africans, and Eastern Europeans have spread out to teams around the globe.. There continue to be proponents of the “kick and run” style of soccer coaching, especially in the United States. There is a simple reason for this. Due to the lack of an established soccer culture in this country, it takes an enormous amount of team practice time to train even one player how to properly do soccer moves. There is just so much that a team coach has to do already to get his team ready that there is simply not much time left to devote to practicing soccer moves. It is much simpler for a team coach saddled with highly athletic but relatively less skillful players to win games by playing “direct soccer” or some other version of “kick and run” soccer. Getting players to perfect one or two moves at the youth level is about all that can be reasonably expected, given the fact that most youth club teams practice only two to three times a week. If a player wants to progress at a greater rate, the players and their parents must have the dedication to go out and practice more frequently. A team coach can only show his/her players how the moves work, but the players must find the extra time to go out and practice on their own, or with their parents, siblings, or friends. In countries with established soccer cultures, that is exactly what happens, and that is how the really fantastic world class players develop. “Kick and run soccer” works until a team that only knows how to play this way runs up against another team that can both pass AND do moves. The team with the moves will win most of the time.I always like to compare the situation with U.S. soccer to the situation with U.S. basketball. Basketball is one sport where the rest of the world has pretty much caught up to the U.S. in tactics and coaching, and yet American basketball players remain superior in one area still, and that is in doing one-on-one moves to beat an opponent. These moves give an extra dimension to American basketball players that other countries simply can’t match. Why don’t other countries just teach their players how to do these basketball moves? Well, I’m sure they do, but, if you’ve ever watched the movie “Hoop Dreams” you will realize that the terrific basketball moves of American players are developed at an incredibly early age, out on the playgrounds, with weekly and daily episodes of one-on-one scrimmages. The intense culture of basketball that exists in the U.S. is what allows for such development. Eventually, by the high school ages, the speed of execution of these moves is just phenomenal, something that players in other countries that start basketball later (and don’t practice as often) can’t match. Not surprisingly, the basketball teams of other countries play mostly a game of “pass and shoot”, just like American soccer tends to play “kick and run”. Rarely do you see the artistry of a Michael Jordan or an Allen Iverson going one on one and beating his opponent with either a drive to the basket or a late dump off pass to an open teammate. Okay, enough philosophizing, back to the book.I view the Coerver books and videos now as only an inspirational starting point for thoughts, not as a cookbook recipe for success. There are simply too many moves, lumped together in too much of a jumbled fashion, to give a soccer coach a clear outline of how to proceed. Some vital concepts are simply not detailed in the core Coerver books and videos. Without meaning to sound like I know better than the Coerver Coaching staff, here are some of the things that I’ve learned on my own:1. A number of the moves described in the Coerver books and videos just won’t work very well in reality, especially the ones that don’t go the ball and take a long time to unfold (e.g., the double scissors go). At advanced levels, defenders are trained to keep their eyes on the ball, to ignore the body feints, and to go for the ball if need be with a slide tackle that will take out the offensive player if he happens to touch the ball past the defender. Rarely do you see the more complex moves used at the very highest levels of professional soccer 2. Each soccer go works best only for certain situations, which can be categorized by the direction that the defender is coming at the offensive player, relative to the position of the offensive player and the location of the ball. This is an organizational concept that is missing from Coerver’s teachings. As it turns out, the bulk of the moves in the Coerver books and videos are designed for getting an opening past a defender in direct head-on confrontations. Turn moves (for a defender coming from behind) and stop and go moves (for a defender running side by side) are also very useful, but are not covered in any detail by the Coerver books and videos. 3. Players blessed with exceptional speed and quickness don’t need to learn fancy moves. They can make one or two very simple moves (e.g., the left footed inside and outside cut moves of Maradona) work for them ALL THE TIME because of the speed, balance, and timing of their execution. Such players only get slowed down if you try to teach them too many of the complex moves. This would be like teaching Nolan Ryan in his prime how to throw the knuckleball and screwball, instead of just letting him use his fastball. 4. Learning the moves should be coupled with shooting/passing drills for timing and accuracy. At advanced levels, doing a go will often not spring the offensive player completely free but will only give him/her a half step opening in which to let loose either a pass or a shot on goal. The defensive marking at advanced levels is so tight that doing a go is often necessary just to get off a pass (hence the need for learning moves!). Moves are also an vital part of developing shooting touch. Frequently, the setup to a shot on goal requires that the player do a go to get an opening against a defender. 5. The Coerver teachings deal with only one aspect of ball control – that of using dribbling skills to beat an opponent one on one. There are a lot of other vital ball control skills that need to be practiced extensively as well, such as trapping balls from every height and direction, heading the ball, and developing shooting/passing touch. Watch the best players in the world at the World Cup. See Romario score against the Netherlands (1994) with a one-touch half-volley shot, taken at a full sprint, with a world-class defender glued to his side barely six inches behind him, off of a flighted crossing pass that only he could reach. Gorgeous soccer, a skill both conceptually simple and hard to master, executed with tremendous precision and speed, under enormous defensive pressure. He probably had practiced this several thousand times before in his lifetime, to reach this level of perfection, to score that one goal.I could just go on and on. It is crucial that these moves and skills be taught at the earliest age possible. With practice, children have the coordination to do simple cut moves already by the age of 5 or 6. If a soccer player has not learned moves by age 12, he or she will not likely have
Review by for
Rating:
Wiel Coerver has certainly proved that he is, once again, is truly the master coach of ball control. the drills in this book certainly outrank the drills I’ve seen in other books, and if you want visual layouts, this book is for you. Now on to the more critical part of my review.First of all, the reason why I gave this book 4 stars instead of 5 is that this book does not live up to what it was meant to be. I read in other reviews that this book was meant to teach one-on-one moves and creative dribbling, but instead, I found the information to be very basic. Moves such as the Cruyff Turn, the Rivelino(scissors fake), and the basic feints and fakes were basic moves usually taught in other books. (For REAL soccer moves, check out Play The Brazilian Way: By Simon Clifford. )Second, this book has a small too much visual attention drawn to it and too small text explainations. The only explainations of a certain drill or technique is described in usually a sentence or so, as headings in a line of images. To me, this is barely sufficient, for the images take up at least 4/5 of the book.But, despite all the gripes above, I found the book to be an fascinating read, and a perfect way for beginners to get a feel for the lost art of creative dribbling. The drills are perfect for coaches who want to emphasize on ball control, thus making this a fantastic all-around reference.
Review by for
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Well, I thought this should be a excellent book. It is not. All pictures that look like isolated freeze frames from a movie with zero intelligible explanation. For example, the “double scissors” is illustrated by about 30 pictures of a kid standing around a ball. A thumbnail text accompanies this, explaining nothing. Too terrible, but this is a book that is simply incomprehensible. Well intentioned though. Much better books on coaching fundamentals are out there.
Review by Peter C. Byrne for
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The video is brilliant for teaching ball feeling, quick footwork and finally dribbling moves. This will enable the coach to have players who are comfortable on the ball and can play possession soccer. Get the video (5 stars) as the book does not clarify or show (despite copious use of color pictures) clearly how to do most of the excercises.
Review by for
Rating:
The fundamental principle of Coerver is critical — kids need to be comfortable with the ball at their feet. Too many youth coaches in this country concentrate on tactics and team play, not techniques and fundamentals. Coerver’s view is a healthy corrective to this. That being said, this book is not as useful as the Coerver tapes series. Every coach should see or own “Play like a legend” and the first two in the 3-part series. By age 10, every player — even your unathletic players — should be able to clarify, and do 5-8 of the Coerver moves; by age 12, they should have another 5 or so in their arsenal. Even if they only use the Beckenbauer (a cutback with the inside foot) or the Littbarski (a step on and reverse direction) in games, they will likely be more skillful than their opponents.