Showing posts with label Teamwork. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Teamwork. Show all posts

Thursday, January 6, 2011

Is Teamwork Really Important in the Game of Football?

Any football team has eleven first team players. Every other member of the squad is often regarded as a substitute. But the question is whether it is really important for a football team to apply teamwork. Read on and you will definitely find out what I think about teamwork in the game of football.

A football team is made up of individual players with individual talents and skills. A great football team has great goalkeepers, defenders, midfielders, wingers and strikers. A great team can hold the ball very well, defend very well and score good goals.

Research by top football experts has shown that the game of football is one sport that requires collaboration.

This means that a team may have seasoned goalkeepers, wonderful ball jugglers, fantastic dribblers, and mind blowing strikers but if these individual talents and skills don't blend into a team then there's no team.

By extension, they don't stand a great chance of winning matches.

I am yet to see players that can dribble all the 11 players of an opposing team no matter how weak the opposing team may be. However, if there are players that can do such, they stand a chance of sustaining life-altering injuries and consequently, having permanent disabilities because of the workload.

There is the word "team" in a football team just to show you that teamwork is very important to any team irrespective of the abundant talents in the team. No team in the world can do without teamwork because the team is bigger than any individual player just like any country is bigger than the President of the country.




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Monday, April 19, 2010

International Soccer Schools Teamwork Tips - Part II

Sometimes it happens. You end up playing on a team with less ability than you. Teams at our international soccer schools gel very well. Players travel halfway around the world to attend, so they all arrive prepared and focused on the same goal: to play soccer.

It can be a different story with local club teams. You're facing different levels of skill and motivation, and you have to work with what you have. Players coming home from our international soccer schools often face this dilemma, so we put together some tips for how to handle it.

Set the pace

Lead by example, and pull the team together with you. Work hard during practice, and let everyone see you're committed to the team. During games, don't let yourself shine above and beyond the team. Instead, focus on bringing everyone together to get the best out of every player.

Don't tear down your teammates

Sometimes on amateur teams, a player with more technical ability than others will berate their teammates for mistakes. Players in international soccer schools learn positive reinforcement, encouraging fellow players when they do well to bring them up. Practice this positive reinforcement at home.

If a teammate makes a mistake, it's not a problem. Give them a pat on the back, and say, "Let's not make this mistake again. We're all in this together." Players who do that make a difference with their attitude towards their own teammates.

Training like a pro

Players in international soccer schools concentrate on teamwork as well as technical skills. Don't forget to implement that at home. Coaches and parents talk about players showing better organizational skills, reading the game better, and helping organize their teammates into different positions on the field.

Are they talking about you? Start training like an elite international soccer schools player today, and they will be soon.




Take a virtual tour of EduKick International Soccer Schools at http://www.edukick.com or contact Joey Bilotta at 1-905-469-5661.

Our world-class soccer training facilities in England, Spain, Italy, France, Mexico, and Brazil help thousands of young players develop elite soccer skills, cultural awareness, and foreign language acquisition.