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Coach Pro
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A complete session design philosophy for grassroots football
“It doesn’t matter what age you are — whether you’re 10 or 40 — you have to enjoy what you’re doing. That’s the same for players and coaches.”
— The Coach Pro Philosophy
Every great coaching session follows a logical journey. Players arrive cold, both physically and mentally. The session builds them up progressively, develops a specific skill, applies it in a team context, and then lets them express it freely. This structure works for every age group, every ability level, and every theme.
Get bodies and minds ready for work. Light movement, dynamic stretching, and small activation games. This is not wasted time — players who are properly warmed up learn faster, perform better, and get injured less. Keep it enjoyable. A happy warm-up sets the tone for everything that follows.
💡 Coach Pro Tip
Use a simple keep-away game or the Brazilian Square from the drill library. If players are laughing within the first 3 minutes, you have nailed the warm-up.
Wake up the feet and the brain simultaneously. Passing circuits, rondos, wall ball, rhythm passing. This phase bridges the warm-up and the technical work. It develops the touch, the speed of thought, and the team connection that makes everything else in the session flow better.
💡 Coach Pro Tip
The Streets Meet Tiki-Taka Passing Activation drills were built specifically for this phase. The Heartbeat Drill, Brazilian Square, and Speed Passing Gates all work perfectly here. Keep the energy high and the ball moving constantly.
The core of the session. Isolated skill work focused on the specific technique you want to develop that day. Dribbling, finishing, heading, 1v1, first touch — whatever the session theme is, this is where the technical habit is built through focused repetition. Players need to know exactly what they are developing and why.
💡 Coach Pro Tip
One technique per session. Not three. Coaches who try to develop too many things at once develop nothing properly. Pick one drill from the Technical category, explain the purpose clearly, and give every player enough repetitions to actually feel improvement before moving on.
Apply the technical skill in a structured team context. Small-sided games with a specific rule or constraint that encourages use of what was just practiced. The technique learned in Phase 3 now has to work under pressure, with teammates, and against opponents. This is where individual skills become team weapons.
💡 Coach Pro Tip
The constraint is the coaching tool. If Phase 3 was dribbling, Phase 4 might be a 4v4 where you can only score after beating a defender 1v1. The constraint forces use of the skill without removing competition. Never use a constraint so strict it makes the game feel unnatural.
Free play. No constraints. No interruptions. Let them play and express everything they have learned. The game is the reward for the work done in Phases 1–4. Players who have been engaged, challenged, and developed throughout the session arrive at the game phase with confidence, energy, and the skills they need to perform. This is where football is played for the joy of it.
💡 Coach Pro Tip
Step back in the game phase. Your job from Phases 1–4 is done. Watch, enjoy, and let the players express themselves. The coach who cannot stop coaching during the game phase is the one who is enjoying it least — and so are the players.
Total session: approximately 75–80 minutes
Theme: Dribbling and 1v1
Recommended age: U10–U13
Keep Away 4v1 — 3 min, then Colour Freeze reaction game — 4 min, then light dynamic stretching — 4 min
Brazilian Square — Pass and Clap (10 min). Focus on quick feet and early pass release.
1v1 Attacking Fundamentals drill (15 min). Change of pace, reading the defender, accelerate after the beat.
3v3 small-sided game. Constraint: can only score after dribbling past a defender inside the penalty area. (15 min)
Free 5v5 or 6v6 match. No constraints. Let them dribble, express themselves, and play. (20 min)
Theme: Passing and Possession
Recommended age: U12–U15
3v1 keep-away — 5 min, dynamic stretching focused on hips and groin — 5 min
Iniesta Pattern — The Pivot Pass (12 min). Half-turn receive, immediate pass forward.
Wall Pass and Overlap Combinations drill (15 min). When to play the wall pass versus the overlap.
Possession Under Pressure 4v4+2. Constraint: goals only count after a switch of play. (18 min)
Free 7v7. No constraints. Watch how possession principles transfer to the game naturally. (22 min)
Theme: Finishing and Attacking
Recommended age: U13–U16
Reaction speed games — Ball Drop and Mirror Hands — 6 min, then light shooting against keeper at 50% — 5 min
Speed Passing Gates (10 min). Accuracy under speed, both feet, passing into channels.
1v1 to Goal — Finishing Under Pressure (15 min). Composure, read the GK, finish low.
Creating Chances in the Final Third. 5v4+GK. Chance quality scoring system. (18 min)
Full game or 8v8. Bonus point for any goal scored from inside the box. (22 min)
Theme: Defending and Pressing
Recommended age: U13–U16
Chase Back relay — sprint and recover — 5 min, then defensive stance and jockeying warm-up — 5 min
Shadow Passing — Mirror Your Partner (10 min). Anticipation, leading passes, always moving.
Pressing as a Forward — Cover Shadow technique (15 min). Pressing angle, intensity, triggers.
High Press Structure and Triggers. Full team shape, press as a unit, recovery when beaten. (18 min)
Full game. Bonus: 3 points for any goal scored within 5 seconds of winning the ball from a press. (22 min)
One Theme Per Session
Every session has one clear theme that runs through all five phases. The warm-up, the passing activation, the technical work, the tactical game, and the free game all connect to that theme. Coaches who try to cover three themes in one session develop nothing properly.
Enjoyment Is Not Optional
It doesn’t matter what age you are — whether you’re 10 or 40 — you have to enjoy what you’re doing. That’s the same for players and coaches. If the session is not enjoyable, it is not effective. Joy and quality are not opposites — they are partners.
Progression Is the Structure
The five-phase structure is a progression from simple to complex. Each phase prepares players for the next. A player who has been properly warmed up, passed actively, developed a skill technically, and applied it tactically arrives at the game phase fully prepared to perform. Skipping phases removes the preparation that makes the game phase valuable.
The Game Is Always the Goal
Everything in Phases 1–4 exists to make Phase 5 better. Drills, patterns, and constraints are tools for developing players who perform better in the game. The game is always the destination. Keep this in mind when designing every session.
Celebrate Everything
Players who feel celebrated learn faster. Celebrate correct technique, great effort, good decisions, team moments, and individual expression equally. A session where players feel seen and valued produces better footballers than one where only goals and wins are acknowledged.
Use the drill library to find drills for each phase. Search by category and age group. Build your session around one clear theme.
Session Theme
Choose one focus: Technical (e.g. finishing), Tactical (e.g. pressing), or Physical (e.g. speed). Everything in the session serves this theme.
WARM UP
Any category
10–12 min
PASSING
Streets / Technical
10–12 min
TECHNICAL
Technical cat.
15–20 min
TACTICAL
Tactical cat.
15–20 min
GAME
Free play
20–25 min
A complete session design philosophy for grassroots football
“It doesn’t matter what age you are — whether you’re 10 or 40 — you have to enjoy what you’re doing. That’s the same for players and coaches.”
— The Coach Pro Philosophy
Get bodies and minds ready. Light movement, dynamic stretching, and small activation games. A happy warm-up sets the tone for everything that follows.
💡 Coach Pro Tip
Use a simple keep-away game or a Streets Meet Tiki-Taka drill. If players are laughing within the first 3 minutes, you have nailed the warm-up.
Wake up the feet and the brain simultaneously. Passing circuits, rondos, wall ball, rhythm passing. This bridges the warm-up and the technical work.
💡 Coach Pro Tip
The Streets Meet Tiki-Taka Passing Activation drills were built specifically for this phase. Keep energy high and the ball moving constantly.
Isolated skill work focused on the specific technique you want to develop. One technique per session. Give every player enough repetitions to actually feel improvement.
💡 Coach Pro Tip
One technique per session — not three. Coaches who try to develop too many things at once develop nothing properly.
Apply the technical skill in a structured team context. Small-sided games with a specific rule or constraint that encourages use of what was just practiced.
💡 Coach Pro Tip
The constraint is the coaching tool. If Phase 3 was dribbling, Phase 4 might be a 4v4 where you can only score after beating a defender 1v1.
Free play. No constraints. No interruptions. Let them play and express everything they have learned. This is where football is played for the joy of it.
💡 Coach Pro Tip
Step back in the game phase. Your job from Phases 1–4 is done. Watch, enjoy, and let the players express themselves.
Total session: approximately 75–80 minutes
Use the drill library to find drills for each phase. Search by category and age group.
A complete session design philosophy for grassroots football
“It doesn’t matter what age you are — whether you’re 10 or 40 — you have to enjoy what you’re doing. That’s the same for players and coaches.”
— The Coach Pro Philosophy
Get bodies and minds ready. Light movement, dynamic stretching, and small activation games. A happy warm-up sets the tone for everything that follows.
💡 Coach Pro Tip
Use a simple keep-away game or a Streets Meet Tiki-Taka drill. If players are laughing within the first 3 minutes, you have nailed the warm-up.
Wake up the feet and the brain simultaneously. Passing circuits, rondos, wall ball, rhythm passing. This bridges the warm-up and the technical work.
💡 Coach Pro Tip
The Streets Meet Tiki-Taka Passing Activation drills were built specifically for this phase. Keep energy high and the ball moving constantly.
Isolated skill work focused on the specific technique you want to develop. One technique per session. Give every player enough repetitions to actually feel improvement.
💡 Coach Pro Tip
One technique per session — not three. Coaches who try to develop too many things at once develop nothing properly.
Apply the technical skill in a structured team context. Small-sided games with a specific rule or constraint that encourages use of what was just practiced.
💡 Coach Pro Tip
The constraint is the coaching tool. If Phase 3 was dribbling, Phase 4 might be a 4v4 where you can only score after beating a defender 1v1.
Free play. No constraints. No interruptions. Let them play and express everything they have learned. This is where football is played for the joy of it.
💡 Coach Pro Tip
Step back in the game phase. Your job from Phases 1–4 is done. Watch, enjoy, and let the players express themselves.
Total session: approximately 75–80 minutes
Use the drill library to find drills for each phase. Search by category and age group.