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This training session is aimed at educating defenders in the skillsets, communication ability and decision making needed when they are goal-side of the ball and defending in either a 1v1 scenario or in an overload situation.
Area | Up to three quarters of pitch |
Equipment | Balls, bibs, cones, 2 goals |
No. of Players | Up to 20 players + 2 goalkeepers |
Session Time |
Defending 1v1, 2v1 & 3v1: 20mins, Defending 2v2, 3v2 & 4v2: 20mins, 10v10 game: 20mins |
This training session is aimed at educating defenders in the skillsets, communication ability and decision making needed when they are goal-side of the ball and defending in either a 1v1 scenario or in an overload situation.
In the modern game, when defenders are judged so much on their attacking instincts and on their qualities on the ball, sometimes the skill of defending is overlooked. But I believe that good, conscientious defenders actually pride themselves on the defensive aspects of their game.
This is a session that I would run fairly regularly but perhaps more importantly I would use it when we are due to face a team that plays in a more counter-attacking style, thus mirroring the type of situations that defenders will face at certain times during a game.
In this session defenders are put in situations where their decision making is important, so to get the best out of the players, coaches can make this session reward-driven by introducing a forfeit for the attackers or defenders that come off worst.
We set up in the final third of the pitch with a full size goal and a goalkeeper at one end and a central attacking channel the width of the goal marked with cones outside the penalty area. We’re using 12 outfield players split into seven attackers and five defenders, although numbers can vary depending on needs.
We start the session with the coach feeding a ball to the first attacker, who goes 1v1 against the first defender and tries to score in the goal.
The body shape of the defender is very important and he should get low and try to show the attacker onto the player’s weaker side if possible.
To progress the activity, two extra attackers can be added to the 1v1, with one placed on either side of the central attacking channel, making it first a 2v1 and then a 3v1. The additional attackers can only be used to bounce the ball off in order to help the main attacker get around the defender, as shown [1], but the defender mustn’t get beaten by wall passes and should not follow the ball – he should keep his attention on the main attacker at all times.
We play so each defender and attacker has three or four goes at the 1v1 before progressing the session every six minutes.
We progress the session further by increasing the width of the playing area. The size of the central attacking channel is now the width of the six-yard box.
We start by running a 2v2. The coach feeds a ball to one of the attackers in the central channel and the pair go up against the two defenders, who must try to stop the attackers from getting past them and scoring in the goal, as shown [2a].
After running the activity as a 2v2, we progress it first to 3v3 and then subsequently to a 4v3 attacking overload, as shown [2b], with the attacking channel now increased to the width of the penalty area.
As the session progresses, the importance of communication grows and defenders have important decisions to make about when not to be passive. When the defenders are outnumbered, they have the opportunity to make it a 1v1 or a 2v2 in a wide area by forcing the play into these areas and their body shape and level of aggression should reflect this.
To progress the session further, the area size should increase each time an additional defender is added, although we never actually go to full width as we don’t want the distances to be too large – so it encourages the defenders to be brave and not passive. Another progression can be to add a single deep midfielder to supply the attackers, so the defenders can get caught out by runs in behind and have to react to the threat.
The coach should call obvious offsides and use plenty of praise when defenders get things right. Play each progression in blocks of about six minutes, constantly rotating personnel. After each block review what the players are seeing and learning.
We finish the session with a game. We set up a playing area between the penalty spots of the pitch with a goal and a goalkeeper at each end. We mark two equal-sized end zones either side of a 20-yard central zone.
We’re using 18 outfield players split into two teams of 10 including goalkeepers, with a 2v2 locked in the central zone and four attackers going up against three defenders in each end zone. This creates an attacking overload for each team at the end they are attacking and means the defenders have plenty of opportunities to implement what they have learnt in the session so far.
Play starts and restarts with a ball played from a goalkeeper to the defenders and play should be built up through the midfield, as shown [3].
It is important to encourage the attackers to be bright and fluid in their movement and not just play and move in straight lines. Overlaps from the attackers are desirable in order to give the defenders decisions to make.
Defenders always have to be mindful of their body shape, their distances from one another and from the ball, and their communication with each other. They shouldn’t be passive and should always show they have an awareness of exactly where they are in relation to the goal and where they are on the pitch.
The goalkeepers also have a big part to play in the success of this training session, using clear communication with their defenders.
Typical mistakes that players might make include not recognising those key moments when attackers are vulnerable, whether that is by having a poor first touch, playing the ball on their weaker side, or being left isolated by poor movement made by their team mates.
Let defenders learn from their mistakes and give them time to get things right. As a coach, don’t always step in and correct things too early.
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