Sunday, September 14, 2008

Soccer Shooting Drills

The objectives are salt and pepper football and they can not be marked by the shooting, or heading the ball. Heading the ball is a process of nature, kicking while the ball is quite natural one "need" that humans were responsible. How many times have you walked on the street and kicked instinctively a sheet, or some small rock, just for the hell of it?

Now, how many times have you walked on the street and began beating his head against solid objects? I hope not a lot. So, the position is much more difficult to train, because we have to fight against our own fear of falling on our head against an object. That is why football firing exercises are so diverse and far more frequent training sessions. Let's look at different types of exercises shooting.

Soccer-fire exercises - static positions

Position static football firing exercises refer to the position of the player, not the ball (although in the case of free kicks, both the ball and the player are static). Free kicks are very useful for your players in training their shot accuracy and, in general, they are used only for that, instead of being a way to get your photo power trained. You can try all your players execute free kicks, or simply select a handful noticed that you are better at this role and form that specialists in free kicks.

The other way you can practice football firing exercises in a static position is to have a player at the centre, receiving passes on the sides and shooting, without moving toward the ball. This game simulates a scenario that happens quite often, with an attacker or midfielder having to take the ball with one touch of a static position, because it has no space to move, or no time to do so.

Soccer-fire exercises - dynamic positions

There is a wider range of football for firing exercises which can be practiced dynamics positions, as static. One of the most popular is the run-and-shoot: your players have placed in a line to center field and send a goalkeeper in goal. Now, each player sprint with the ball at his feet to a certain point you decide (a cone as a visual marker), then a cannon shot to the goal away.

If you want to put into practice long-term plans, you'll obviously, firing from afar, whereas if you want more precision finishing, you will need to draw your players on the edge of the box, or even to inside.

A slight variation of the race and get the football drilling east of the wall and shooting. Basically, you will have the same configuration, with the players at half court and a goalkeeper keeps the net proceeds of any objective, but you will also have a player somewhere near the surface, which will act as a passing on your wall players. Thus, a player sprint with the ball when it is close to passing the wall, it initiates a one-two and shoot the ball on the full sprint, as soon as it receives new.

After a while, football mentioned above for firing exercises tend to repeat themselves, so you may want to dig a little more, or simply create variations thereof. You can work around the dynamic position exercises and create new ones of your choice.

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