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Author: Kevin Middleton⭐🔥 Date: Category: Likes: 0 URL: https://www.skool.com/coachingacademy/self-reflection
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Jamie Birch🔥
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Jamie Birch🔥 • Jul 29Actually laughed out loud then mate 😂 someone said to me once “is it football or does it just look like football” talking about over conditioning practice. Sometimes a game is fine, just with clear principles of what you’re looking to coach within that game1Reply













Jamie Birch🔥
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Jamie Birch🔥 • Jul 29Actually laughed out loud then mate 😂 someone said to me once “is it football or does it just look like football” talking about over conditioning practice. Sometimes a game is fine, just with clear principles of what you’re looking to coach within that game1Reply












Jamie Birch🔥
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Jamie Birch🔥 • Jul 29Actually laughed out loud then mate 😂 someone said to me once “is it football or does it just look like football” talking about over conditioning practice. Sometimes a game is fine, just with clear principles of what you’re looking to coach within that game1Reply

Kevin Middleton⭐🔥
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Kevin Middleton⭐🔥 • Jul 29@Jamie Birch I sometimes find no matter how experienced you are, how educated you are…….it doesn’t matter. You still make the same mistakes over and over sometimes1Reply
Jamie Birch🔥
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Jamie Birch🔥 • Jul 29@Kevin Middleton 100%0Reply
David Knox
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David Knox • Jul 29What are your views/thoughts on number of passes before scoring?. I do it at times but not sure why lol2Reply

Kevin Middleton⭐🔥
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Kevin Middleton⭐🔥 • Jul 29@David Knox It’s a way of allowing players to technically practice keeping the ball. It needs to transition into something more principle-based though, I feel.So, can we keep the ball for six passes? And then can we keep it for six passes and then play forwards? Can we recognise what happens when you keep it for six passes? Do you attract the press? If you do, can we play around it or over it quickly (less than 6 passes)?So it’s layered up.2Reply
David Knox
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David Knox • Jul 29@Kevin Middleton like that Kev,thank you2Reply
Gino Adolf
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Gino Adolf • Jul 29I think mine is allowing mistakes to be made on the training field and allowing my players to take their time in learning something new.We stay in one the most slowest development parts of South Africa and I mean in every way of life and I think with all the new things that I have gained as a coach I have to take into consideration the psychological aspect that being from a small town has on certain guys and therefore “patience in practice” is one of those things for me3Reply

Kevin Middleton⭐🔥
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Kevin Middleton⭐🔥 • Jul 29@Gino Adolf I love this, Gino. Thanks for sharing.0Reply
Jamie Birch🔥
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Jamie Birch🔥 • Jul 29@Gino Adolf mistakes will happen all the time. You want them to take risks and fail, you need to see their reaction to them. Do they throw their hands in the air or do they press or get back into shape when they lose the ball etc. Like Kevin’s said before if they same mistake keeps happening 3-4 times, maybe that’s a point to step in and coach 👍🏻0Reply
Enrique Fernandez
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Enrique Fernandez • Jul 30I would say explaining drills in the most efficient way possible. I sometimes over complicate the explanation of a drill and the players get lost with it.2Reply

Kevin Middleton⭐🔥
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Kevin Middleton⭐🔥 • Jul 30@Enrique Fernandez I feel your pain, Enrique.0Reply
Jamie Birch🔥
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Jamie Birch🔥 • Jul 30@Enrique Fernandez is that down to how you explain it or is the drill just too complicated?1Reply