
When leading a soccer team, the organization of the sports team can often be the least fun part. You have to balance your players needs, with your coach’s needs, with your league’s requirements and finally, with the parent’s needs. With such a large cast of characters with sometimes competing interests, organizing this chaos isn’t easy. Here are just a few organizing (non-coaching) tips to help you get organized and to help ensure your soccer team accomplishes its goals.
Steps
1. Get the team roster down. Make sure you get every participant’s key information like their preferred contact method (email, cellphone, etc.). Set up an email list using services like http://www.qlubb.com so that everyone can send an email to the group email address rather than having to list everybody’s email address. Publish the roster on the web so that people can get to know each other, set up carpools, and have their own side conversations etc.
2. Get the 911. Set up the call tree so that you can get in touch with people when it counts. People’s preferred method of communication should be taken into account. Last minute rain outs of games and other postponements require a quick and reliable response so that nobody gets stuck. Maintain this roster online so that everyone has the most up-to-date contact information.
3. Understand your goals. Have that first team meeting where everyone can get acquainted but most importantly get agreement on the goals. Are you out to win the championship or to learn and have fun? Who is the right person to coach the team? Prior to any meeting you should do some informal polling and discussion so that you can go to the team meeting prepared.
4. Ask for volunteers. Don’t get stuck doing everything. People are really willing to help if asked. At every meeting look for a chance to recruit volunteers, especially based on any skills they might have. Some parents may have good soccer skills and can be an assistant coach during practice. Online sign up sheets are very useful so that everybody knows what’s been taken and what’s left to do and they can sign up on their own time.
5. Create the master schedule. Get a master schedule online published as soon as possible. It should include all practices, games and tournaments. Putting it online cuts down on needless email chatter and eliminates miscommunication. Be sure to include location, times and who is responsible for what. Remember to bring snacks for that half-time energy boost. Services like Qlubb (http://www.qlubb.com) has the ability to publish schedules either privately within the group or publicly.
6. Figure out the budget. Most budgets for recreational soccer teams are simple however, the numbers do have to add up at the end of the season. Make sure you account for all costs like league fees, equipment costs, tournament fees, transportation and housing costs. Remember that having a fundraiser costs money too. Look at ways to defray costs through activity fees, bake sales/car washes, sponsorships from local sports stores, subsidies from sports equipment manufacturers, etc.
7. Build on the community. A sports team is comprised of a group of people that form a community around the common interest of sport. However, over time as people get to know each other, bonds strengthen. Fostering the community through things like photo sharing, team picnics, after game dinners are a great way to have fun while also improving trust and teamwork.
8. Do something special. Getting your team excited about the sport can help enrich the experience. If the professionals are having a tournament in town, arrange for a field trip. If you are budget conscious, you can see some great competition at the college level. Most sports have a hall of fame that you could arrange a field trip to. And if you ask around you might be able to find a pro in the area who might donate some time to run a guest practice session or to give a pep talk.
9. Broadcast your accomplishments! Put up a public web page and talk about your wins! Nothing makes a team more proud than to let people know what you accomplished. It also lets players send that link to grandma. Sites like Qlubb have the ability to automatically generate a public site based on the content of the site, which minimizes the overhead.
10. Ask for feedback. Keep an open dialog with everyone and be flexible. It’s important to listen. Soccer teams live for months to years and needs change all the time. A good leader will be able to anticipate these needs by constantly listening and thinking ahead.
Watch the video related to Soccer team
Soccer skills and coaching tips; learn a good warm-up game you can play with your soccer team in thisfree online video guide to coaching a soccer team. Expert: Glenn Holzer Contact: www.revolution-sc.org Bio: Glenn Holzer has been coaching soccer at the youth and college level for more than 20 years and holds a USSF “B” License.
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Andrew Yang works for Qlubb, a provider of social collaboration Web tools for real-life groups.










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18 Comments
Coach tell them to open not like chickens !
Honestly Females can’t play?
im a guy and there are some great girls out there such as Matra Shes probably top soccer player along with rhonaldihno
americans cant play in general, but females are much worse ;D!
Take this Avice:
1. put your finger on your nose
2. hold your breath for 5 seconds
3. say the name of your love
4. that person will ask you out next Friday
5. you will have the best day tomorrow
6. if you don’t copy and paste to 2 other videos you will have bad luck and die in 2 days
Sorry, but you need ore than two weeks of Intermurals to make the High School team. all of the kids trying out probably have been playing travel for most of their lives. Even me, who has played intramural for 9 years, didn't make the team. I was literally miles behind eveyone else at the tryouts. You either need some amazing coaching, the like of Pele, or one of the other Soccer greats, or some crazy skills. But good luck anyway.
if you would put 11 star players in a team, that doesnt necesarily make it the best team…because they need to be able to play together…..
it has been proven so often in the past that the winning team is the one who has the best gelled group of players, with a few stars to bring that bit extra…..
females cant play shit dead truth
Try the activities section on chicago.craigslist.org
Also check the websites for MLSnet.com or USsoccer.com
play a formation like this
GK
CB CB
CM
CF
Play the ball through the CM, designating him/her as the main playmaker. One of the CBs should be more mobile going forward than the other so keep one back at all times and give the other one some freedom. Play a long ball to the CF in the air quite often if you struggle to keep the ball often, they should be able to lay the ball off to the CM behind them.
just an answer for the comment to drOpa, the answer you’ve already said it…. but let me put it this way… let me answer you with a question…. what level of soccrer does Africa has? and the US? there you go boy!!!!!
late…
You can organize a fundraiser, do a carwash, run a raffle to raise money. also you can ask a store or like a restuarant to be a sponser for your team. another thing you can do is write a petition Get students and parents signatures saying that they want a soccer team. Also get someone who can coach the team.
well fuck you.
NYC girls FC in brooklyn somewhere!
Women play better than you , so you get jealous ? LOL
stretching is probably the first and last thing any perfessional team does. the last thing you want is one of your players to pull a muscle.
take this avice
1.put your finger on your nose
2.hold your breath for 5 seconds
3.say the name of your love
4.that person will ask you out next friday
5.you will have the best day tomoorow
6.if you dont cpoy and paste to other videos you will have bad luck and die in 2 days
It can be difficult to ask a school to add a sport. However, i think you would have a good shot since your school already has a feeder program, with the junior high team. First you will need to be able to show that there is interest in the team. You could start a petition with interested players signing. You will also need to present the idea to your school board. You should be as prepared as possible. You may want to come up with an example budget for the soccer program. You should also look at other high school soccer programs in your area, are there other soccer programs within your school's athletic conference. You should also consider what teams you would play against. Does your school already have soccer facilities, or would these have to be build.
It is a lot of work to get a high school to add a sport. You may want to considered starting up an independant club team, which you could enter into a local league. You could also approach a local club, and see if you could form a team within their organization.
Well depending on what age they are the best thing to teach them would be the basics. I don't know volleyball but for soccer this would include dribbling, trapping, passing, shooting etc. Teach them proper technique and have them repeat it over and over. Also make sure to have them use their "weaker" foot when doing drills so that they do not become one-footed players. Positioning and tactics should also be worked on, but at a younger level the basic skills are more important. I have seen books on drills that you can use to teach certain skills. Books such as Dummy's Guide etc. Also through Eurosport you can order educational videos and such. Link below.