Soccer Practice Games Make each practice more challenging, productive, and fun with 125 games! Divided into six sections, Soccer Practice Games presents games on the following aspects:
Warm-up and conditioning
Passing and receiving
Dribbling, shielding, and tackling
Heading and shooting
Tactical training
Goalkeeper training
Each game maximizes player involvement, activity, and learning and contains at least one major objective related to player or team development. A detailed explanation and accompanying illustrations are provided for each game to make application easy. Games can be easily adapted to accommodate players of various ages and abilities.
Designed for beginning youth through high school competitive levels, Soccer Practice Games is a big winner among coaches and those who teach soccer. Whether working with whole teams, small groups, or players one-on-one, it is a fun and effective way to instruct and learn the game.
Customer Review: Soccer Practice Games
Good book, easy games with comprensive images, is a good book to start to teach how introduce the principles of soccer.Is a book you must be have in your library.
Customer Review: Decent Resource for Youth Soccer Coaches
These game-style drills make soccer practices much more fun, and they help teach fundamentals at the same time. This book doesn’t really get into strategies or position playing, but it is a good collection of drills that will keep all of your players busy and learning.
Tags:
Book Images,
Detailed Explanation,
Easy Games,
Fun Games,
Game Review,
Game Style,
Illustrations,
Library Customer,
Objective,
Presents,
Review Games,
School Games,
Six Sections,
Small Groups,
Soccer Book,
Soccer Game,
Soccer Games,
Soccer Practice Games,
Soccer Practices,
Youth Soccer Coaches
No Comments »
The Junction Boys Tom Berenger leads an outstanding cast in this bone-crunching dramatization of legendary college football coach Paul “Bear” Bryant’s debut at Texas A&M in the summer of 1954. The often unnerving story finds Bryant ducking the school’s good ol’ boy network of rich, influential alumni by spiriting his new team away to a makeshift training base in a tiny town called Junction. There, Bryant runs the equivalent of a POW camp, brutalizing an oversized, underdeveloped bunch of rowdy young men and tormenting those who seek medical attention for cracked spines and deadly heat exhaustion. Berenger delivers a warts-and-all performance as the vulgar, monstrous, yet much-respected Bryant, and the direction by seasoned television vet Mike Robe (Son of the Morning Star) is brisk and almost explosively charged. Whatever one thinks of Bryant’s punishing methods, the film does not flinch from telling its powerful tale. –Tom Keogh
Customer Review: Football Coach
This is a semi-factual documentary of some brutal pre-season conditioning conducted by Paul “Bear” Bryant in his first year at Texas A & M. I’m a coach and think it’s a great what-not-to-do movie. However, the acting isn’t too bad and it might appeal to a non sports fan. Should be in every football fan’s library.
Customer Review: Beary Awesome
This movie is really worth watching. It has the movie,Sportcentury of Bear Bryant and interviews of the real people who were there. The movie is somewhat embellished abnd brings back memories of football camp. They believed you don’t give players water also. Just remember it is camp and camp never is supposed to be fun. Camp is grulling. Truly the Bear is the best. Six national titles and only one losing season. The only ring he wore was the Junction Boys ring. He truly had such great respect for these guys. A sports film worth owning. Don’t forget to buy Monday Night Mayhem.
Tags:
Coach Paul Bear Bryant,
College Football Coach,
Deadly Heat,
Dramatization,
Film Worth,
Football Camp,
Fun Camp,
Heat Exhaustion,
Library Customer,
Losing Season,
Monday Night Mayhem,
National Titles,
Ol Boy,
Paul Bear Bryant,
Pow Camp,
S Library,
Son Of The Morning,
Son Of The Morning Star,
Tom Berenger,
Tom Keogh
No Comments »