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Author: Jamie Birch🔥 Date: Category: Likes: 0 URL: https://www.skool.com/coachingacademy/quickfire-tactical-video-compactness-in-defence


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Kevin Middleton⭐🔥

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Kevin Middleton⭐🔥 • Aug 13Brilliant video1Reply

Kevin Middleton

James Langley

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Christian Garcia

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Christian Garcia

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Kevin Middleton

Sean McMahon

Kevin Middleton

Jamie Birch

Jamie Birch

Sean McMahon

Stephen Kavanagh

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Kevin Middleton⭐🔥

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Kevin Middleton⭐🔥 • Aug 13Brilliant video1Reply

Kevin Middleton

James Langley

Jamie Birch

Christian Garcia

Jamie Birch

Christian Garcia

Jamie Birch

Kevin Middleton

Sean McMahon

Kevin Middleton

Jamie Birch

Jamie Birch

Sean McMahon

Stephen Kavanagh

Kevin Middleton⭐🔥

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Kevin Middleton⭐🔥 • Aug 13Brilliant video1Reply

Kevin Middleton

James Langley

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James Langley • Aug 13Great video 👍2Reply

James Langley

Jamie Birch🔥

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Jamie Birch🔥 • Aug 13@James Langley thanks mate appreciate it - if there’s anything you’d like a video on let me know 👍🏻2Reply

Jamie Birch

Christian Garcia

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Christian Garcia • Aug 13been watching a lot of these videos on TikTok haha2Reply

Christian Garcia

Jamie Birch🔥

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Jamie Birch🔥 • Aug 13@Christian Garcia thanks mate appreciate it. My videos are a bit surface level on there but try to do more in depth on here! Hope you’re enjoying the community so far?2Reply

Jamie Birch

Christian Garcia

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Christian Garcia • Aug 14Loving the community and resources you guys are legends for creating something like this !3Reply

Christian Garcia

Jamie Birch🔥

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Jamie Birch🔥 • Aug 14@Christian Garcia great to hear 👍🏻 if you need anything at all just message Kevin or I1Reply

Jamie Birch

Kevin Middleton⭐🔥

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Kevin Middleton⭐🔥 • Aug 14@Christian Garcia Thank you, Christian, this is brilliant feedback 🤝1Reply

Kevin Middleton

Sean McMahon

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Sean McMahon • Aug 14Like that a lot. Easy explanations for our young people to understand too. I coach U16s and often use the 4-3-3 and was thinking that OOP could we adopt something different to achieve the objectives you mentioned. An idea I have was to try and move either left or right forward to drop in to make the 4, leaving only 2 up. Perhaps one striker stays high with the other picking up the cdm? Thoughts? Another option I had was a 4-1-4-12Reply

Sean McMahon

Kevin Middleton⭐🔥

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Kevin Middleton⭐🔥 • Aug 14@Sean McMahon Sean, if the team you are playing against always tries to play out from the back, then sometimes going into a 4-4-2 oop is best.When the ball goes to one side, one ST presses and the other swings around to the CDM.When they switch sides to try and play out, the opposite happensAt certain levels, I’ve seen it totally bamboozle teams who are used to space and time as only one striker presses3Reply

Kevin Middleton

Jamie Birch🔥

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Jamie Birch🔥 • Aug 14@Kevin Middleton Great detail!1Reply

Jamie Birch

Jamie Birch🔥

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Jamie Birch🔥 • Aug 14Thanks Sean - yes it’s completley normal to drop into a different formation when you don’t have the ball, the most common would probably be a 4-5-1 with the wide players dropping into the midfield line. We’re talking meters on a pitch normally so a 4-1-4-1 is essentially a 4-5-1 but you’re being very specific in that you want the DM to sit between the lines and block passing lanes into the striker. From a 4-3-3 you could also transition into a 4-4-2 with the non-ball side winger taking up a stri… See more1Reply

Jamie Birch

Sean McMahon

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Sean McMahon • Aug 14@Jamie Birch you’re definitely right about it not always playing out the way you expect! I’m really trying to empower my players this year. Trying to get them to identify oppositions movements and also communicate more to help teammates out. Those higher oppositions are so well drilled and their recovery runs are ridiculous1Reply

Sean McMahon

Stephen Kavanagh

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Stephen Kavanagh • Aug 25@Jamie Birch I’m coaching grassroots so out my depth on this conversation - I’d echo the tactics board comment though. I say to our group that what we look at on the board is the framework or anchor - the game doesn’t look or feel like that in the moment but remember the principles if you are thinking “where should I be now”. The chaos of the game means they have to work it out in-the-momemt.2Reply

Stephen Kavanagh