| LANE SOCCER |
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| Soccer Drills |
LANE SOCCER Use Lane Soccer to teach teach transition, communication, fitness, spacing and off-the-ball movement to young soccer players.one of Ken Gamble's favourite drills, from Decatursports.com illustration courtesy of FineSoccer.com
After a few scores, swap the players to a new zone. This taught my players to immediately get wide the minute that their team stole the ball and to space properly. Variations: 2. When playing 4v4 allow two players of each team to be in any lane at one time. If a third player from that team wants to enter that same lane, one of the two players from his team must leave the lane before he can enter it. This requires lots of communication and ingenuity to get numbers up quickly on your opponents. It also teaches players to make "ball side" runs within their lanes to receive the ball.
4. Do not assign players to a specific zone and allow movement between zones provided at least one player from each team is in each zone. Offensively, this activity will encourage teams to switch balls quickly (looking for 1 v 1 situations or numbers up situations before the other team can switch quickly) and defensively this is working on constant communication. If, at any time, a team doesn’t have a player in each section, it’s a point for the other team. Additional helpful ideas from Coach Orlay Johnson: I am really into running practices where players are forced to make various decisions on how they will play. So i used something similar to Ken's 1 and 2 options (above), but focus on defence and give them restrictions on how they play - one would be you must stay in your lanes, but one player can move lanes and be a stopper or sweeper, then after a few minutes tell them to switch to straight zonal defence. Then a combination. Another day you might tell them that the defence has to protect one of your defenders who is slow or hurt (tell her she can only walk, not run). Another is to switch from 2 defenders in centre lane, to 2 in left lane, and see how long it takes the offence to figure it out (longer than you'd think).
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The basic game of lane soccer: Each team must have at least one player in each of the three zones. They can receive, pass and dribble but can't go out of their zone. They run, get open and mark defensively inside their zone. If they leave their zone (even if it is just by stepping over the line), they concede a free kick wherever the infringement took place. 
