Football Coaching Comes to Horkesley

JBFC Football Skills Coaching is kicking off soon in Great Horkesley.

Girls and boys from five to ten years old can enjoy learning about football in fun and friendly sessions with FA Level 2 Licensed coach Jamie Bradbury.JBFC-web-image

Whatever your child’s ability, JBFC sessions are about playing with a smile and enjoying the simple things in our beautiful game.

Sessions will take place on Saturday mornings at the Jubilee Field, Tile House Lane.

Each session, players will be shown new techniques and skills, and then have the chance to try them out in a game situation.

For children who sign-up for their first ten-session block, they’ll also receive a skills football to bring with them for each session and use at home to practise in the garden.

If you’re keen for your child to play football in a pressure-free environment, then contact Jamie [here] to find out more or to declare your interest.

Places will be limited, so hurry to avoid disappointment, CONTACT JAMIE TO REGISTER YOUR INTEREST NOW

Click here to download the JBFC flyer

PRICES

Single Sessions = £4
First Session is FREE*

(You will only be required to register a child using this form once, but can turn up on the day of a session. Single session price of £4 will be payable)

Ten Sessions = £40 (child will also get a free football to use in sessions** and practise at home)
First Session is FREE*
After the first session, the child will then have a ten session ‘credit’ that must be used across consecutive weeks, unless a session is postponed due to ‘acts of god’ or by JBFC, as per Terms & Conditions. JBFC will provide a schedule of your child’s sessions.

* free first session only applies when a child first attends a JBFC session and not for subsequent registrations.
** free football offer only applies when registering for a child’s first ten session block. Subsequent block bookings will be charged at the advertised rate but will not receive the free football

DOWNLOAD THE JBFC REGISTRATION FORM

The Finishing Line

Having embarked on the Level Two Certificate in Coaching Football with FA Learning and Suffolk FA, throughout my time on the course I’ve shared my experiences to hopefully encourage others to take their next steps into coaching…

The Final Assessment

They say there is no substitute for experience, and when it comes to coaching it becomes clear that every session brings you something new.

Looking back to when I started this Level 2 course just before Easter, our tutor asked for one of us to take the first warm-up of the week.

Hands weren’t swift in going up, as everyone looked around at one another sheepishly. Taking a session, even the warm-up, was a little scary for some, especially with everyone being strangers. But coaching and communicating to groups is essentially why we were there.

But on my way to Ipswich for my final assessment six months later I was excited about delivering my topic ‘Finishing’. The confidence and understanding the course, as well as the hours and hours I’ve put in with my club, has given me has been amazing.

Rather than just putting on a drill, letting the players get on with it, then move on to the next thing, I’m now very happy about carrying out the coaching cycle to help improve the players; observe, see fault, coach and correct, recreate, play.

My only worry as I drove up the A12 for day one of two was ‘am I prepared enough?’. Preparation is a big factor in coaching. Turning up late to a session, not having anything planned, and not making things appropriate for the group are cardinal sins.

Many coaches will say that the preparation, as well as the evaluation, of a session is as important as the session itself to ensure the players get the best out of the time available.

I felt prepared and ready, but when I put my name on the running order, I was 12th of 16, which meant that my opportunity would come on day two. I knew I had another evening to go through the technical points and make sure I was happy with my final session.

With the sun beating down on the Greshams Sports Ground, we were ready for an early start so our tutor/assessor Rob ‘Scouse’ Munro could run the rule over ten sessions on day one.

With only 16 candidates, and all of the sessions requiring 12 players, it didn’t allow too many people to rest during the day. Of the ten 35-minute sessions, I took part in nine, so it was a tough day and as it wore on, the tempo of the practises slowed somewhat!

George, a teacher, delivered probably the day’s best session, though it was clear that everyone had improved and gained a lot of confidence. George was not able to attend day two, so found out his fate before he left. Unsurprisingly, he’d passed and set the bar for those of us following on day two.

After another look through some of the coaching books I’ve accumulated in recent months at home that night, I was ready. I knew I was up second in the morning, so as soon as I arrived back in Ipswich I began to set up.

I made it as simple as possible for my close-range finishing practices. Using the five a side pitch, I’d need two goalkeepers, four servers in wide areas and three forwards at each end. Oh, and a decent supply of balls!

For the ‘technique’ part, I asked the servers, on my call, to deliver the ball into one of the three forwards. Their objective was simple: hit the target. If they could take it first time, great, if they needed a touch, no problem, and if the shot was tricky, then they could move the ball to someone in a better position.

Once the shot had gone in, the other two forwards, and the shooter if possible, should be following up for any rebound.

Needless to say, there were a couple of chances to coach; first touch, look up to spot keepers position, pass/place ball into part of goal where the keeper isn’t. Sounds simple, but so is the game. Get the basics right, if you can elaborate and be more flamboyant, then great.

The progression to the ‘skill’ was simple, too, with one forward at each end becoming a defender to provide opposition and encourage a decision to be made by those in possession.

I have to thank Kev at this point, as he kept missing the target and gave me a good chance to get in there and coach. And he finally nailed it, but I’m not sure I can take too much credit for his ‘shank’ into the top corner.

In my first mock session back in April, our tutor for that week, Keith, suggested I do more demos to get my points across. So in the final section, the ‘game-related’, I stepped in a few times to show the players what was required, dispatching each shot with aplomb. Things were going well.

So when I wrapped it up, I felt good. The feedback from the rest of the group was positive; I just had to wait until the end of the day to find out how I did.

“I’m only marking you on Task 16 today,” said Scouse as we gathered back in the classroom for our verdicts a couple of hours later. “If you’re packs are up to date, and you get a pass on Task 16, then you’ve passed the course.”

As he handed me the observation checklist of my session, my eyes were instantly on the look-out for any APs, Action Points, which wouldn’t be good. Page one, all ticks. Great.

I flipped the page over and I was clear there, too. Ticks across the board. Yes, I had passed. I was now a Level 2 coach.

With a buzz around the room among the others who had passed, I reviewed my Action Plan and Feedback form.

I’m keen to progress with my coaching, and have already booked up for October’s FA Youth Module 1 course with Essex FA in Colchester, so was happy with a positive assessment from Rob: “Well-organised individual has potential to pass Level 3. Well done.”

Just what I wanted to see. But while I’ll look at the UEFA B at some point in the future, the important thing for me is to get out even more on the training pitch and, hopefully, help some keen young footballers enjoy their own experiences in this most beautiful of games…

Finishing Touches

Having recently embarked on the Level Two Certificate in Coaching Football with FA Learning and Suffolk FA,  throughout my time on the course I have been sharing my experiences and hopefully encourage others to take their next steps into coaching…

Day Eight – the second continuation day

Finally, with the new season just around the corner, I’ve been able to put into practice some of what I have learned on the Level Two course as I start to prepare my team for their 2012-13 Essex & Suffolk Border League campaign.

Tutor Rob Munro goes through some drillsI, along with 17 others, started the course in Ipswich in the week leading up to Easter, so with fixture pile-up at the end of last season, I hadn’t had an opportunity to coach at my club until we resumed for pre-season training last week.

And so, after three sessions which have been pretty much all with the ball – instead of the running around in all other pre-seasons sessions I’ve done in the last 20-odd years – I met back up with my course colleagues on Thursday for our final continuation day before our assessments in September.

Having ticked off a trio of sessions from my required 12, which forms a large part of the course syllabus, I arrived at Gresham’s Sports Club much more confident than previously. I’d planned a few other sessions, too – some are still to be delivered on the training ground – and also prepared my session planner for my final assessment on ‘Finishing’.

It gave me a chance to show our tutor, Rob ‘Scouse’ Munro, and see what he thought. Now I can go away and have a run through at my club, in the knowledge that I’m on the right lines.

Having had regular chats about coaching with my friend at The FA, Pete Glynn, who is making the move from Wembley to St. George’s Park with his FA Learning colleagues next week, has enabled me to think about some of the important factors about coaching and how to pass this course.

One of the main areas that I think is vital, particularly for me, is to nail the key technical aspects of the topic I am coaching. So, for example, when it comes to one of the main attacking principles of creating space, as a coach you need to ensure that in the Technique, Skill and Game-Related parts of your session, the players understand the need to stretch the pitch long and wide, make angles, provide options for the man on the ball and maintain the space they’ve created.

So Thursday was the chance for me to talk to Scouse and the other candidates and make sure that I’m thinking about things in the right way and know what is required of me come September. Nailing those key points is vital.

We also went through our Coach Learner Packs to get them tidy and up to date – or even signed off if the 12 sessions were done, as in Lee’s case. But he is in the Army, so bound to be well organised.

After that, we had a couple of hours out on the training pitch, looking at the set-up for some of the sessions that will be delivered in September, and ironed out any creases that we might have had.

It was another worthwhile day in Ipswich, and as we left the room a few of us stopped for a chat in the car park, and it was clear they were all like me, so keen and committed to pass this course and gain that certificate. I can’t think of the last time I actually wanted to pass an exam this much, and was as keen as this to study for it.

So much so, that when I returned home, I got to work preparing a few more sessions using the session planner I’d made up on ‘Word’ and the excellent drill designer app on my iPad. It’s not essential that these are produced on the computer, but I think it’ll look much neater that way, and also allow me to save them for future reference to help me along my journey.

Now, it’s down to me to be prepared and ready for September when we all meet up again. I’ll certainly be able to get plenty of practice in over the next few weeks, and I’m really enjoy the chance to get out on the pitch with the players at my club. My only regret from this whole process is not doing it all much earlier. I suggest anyone even half thinking of taking the course, just get online to your local County FA and get booked up. What have you got to lose?

Level Two Diary
Day One
Day Two
Day Three
Day Four
Day Five
Day Six
Day Seven – first continuation day
Day Eight – second continuation day

If you are keen to get into coaching, whether that’s at Level Two, or any other of the courses on offer, click here to find out about local courses or here for the national course information. There is also a host of online courses available via The FA Learing website.

The coaching continues

I have recently embarked on the Level Two Certificate in Coaching Football with FA Learning and Suffolk FA, and throughout his time on the course will be sharing my experiences and hopefully encourage others to take their next steps into coaching…

Day Seven – the first continuation day

Two months have passed since our group were last together. The day before Easter Sunday we all had our chance to deliver the game-related element of a specific topic – mine was ‘Pressing’, and as I came away from Ipswich that afternoon, I was anxious to get some coaching hours under my belt.

Unfortunately, the fixture calendar at my club meant that any training sessions became matches as we caught up to finish off the season, so I was not able to coach my team at all in the previous eight weeks.

It was nice, therefore, to join the other candidates in Ipswich, this time at the Greshams Sports Club, for the first of two continuation days.

Although I’d kept in contact with some of the lads on Facebook and Twitter, the way we all tend to manage our social relationships these days, I was pleased to be able to spend the day with them all again in person and get back into ‘the zone’ with people as passionate and as keen on their development as I am.

Not only had the venue changed – we were at Suffolk One college for the first six days – but also our tutor had following Keith Webb’s move to Canada to take up a position as Head Coach of Winnipeg Phoenix. Welcoming us all today was Rob Munro, or ‘Scouse’ as everyone knows him on account of him coming from, er, Liverpool.

A different character completely to Keith, Scouse is a former member of the armed forces and was quick to lay down one of his main ground rules – time-keeping. He says he lives by his watch and told us that we must be on time when we coach and when we do our assessments, which is quite right. Players and parents will be relying on us to keep time when we running sessions. 

Chi-Chi, our friend from Norway who was notoriously late for everything in April, arrived just after Scouse’s address. Hopefully he’ll get his watch fixed to BST before we have our assessment in September.

The point of this continuation day, and the next one we have in July, was to go through our Coaching Learner Pack to ensure we were up to date with the tasks inside and get them signed off. We were also given our final assessment topics for September, which will allow us to prepare and give us the best chance of passing the course.

My topic is ‘Finishing’, which is quite good for me as I have played as a forward since I joined my first team as a seven-year-old. Whether it’s a benefit or not, who knows, but it’s certainly a topic I’m interested in.

I can now make sure that when I put on one of my 12 planned sessions, which are mandatory for the qualification, back at my club I can have a run through of the Finishing session I will deliver in September.

As much as today was a chance to go through some of the theory side of the course, it also acted as a forum for us all to swap ideas and help eachother with problems or issues we might be having. It gave people confidence too, if they were behind on their coaching hours, seeing that they weren’t the only ones.

And although it was a perfect day to spend indoors, with the rain and high winds that had forced the nearby Suffolk Show to be cancelled, we did go outside for a couple of hours to go through some practical sessions. These were delivered by the candidates in groups of three; one taking the ‘Technique’, one the ‘Skill’ and one the ‘Game-Related’ aspect of the given topic.

There were due to be five different topics covered, and my trio had the second choice, ‘Switching Play’, after I answered correctly Scouse’s question: “Who was the first player to score a Premier League goal live on TV?” (if you know the answer, tweet me @jamiebradbury and I’ll send the first three each a copy of the 2012 FA Cup Final match programme).

The weather beat us, too, though as we only managed to get in the sessions on ‘Turning’, ‘Defending When Organised’ and ‘Long Passing’ before we were swept by the wind and the rain back into the safety of the Greshams club.

But we were then able to consider some of the points that came out of the sessions that were delivered. My main observation was that, although the Technique aspect may be considered the easiest part when delivering a session, it is actually vitally important for the coach to get out the main coaching points which will be worked on through the Skill and Game-Related sections.

So, for example, when coaching Turning, make the drill as simple as you like and coach three different turns, such as back-foot turn, no-touch turn and turning with the outside of the foot. Then give all the players a chance to practice each before moving onto the next. When you feel that the players have all grasped what you are trying to coach, you then move on to the Skill.

It makes it so much easier when you know what you are meant to be coaching and the players know what they are supposed to be doing.

Before the day was wrapped up, we had another chat about things that were troubling us, whether that’s the coaching side or the more administrative tasks. There was still time for me to arrange a couple of pre-season friendlies for my club with teams coached by fellow learners Jamie and Geoff, and also get another tip off Kev, the ex-Jockey, who provided me with a winner last time.

Sadly, this one didn’t even place at Newmarket, but that doesn’t matter – the only success I’m looking for from this experience is my Level Two Certificate. And I now know what I’ve got to do to get it…

Level Two Diary
Day One
Day Two
Day Three
Day Four
Day Five
Day Six

If you are keen to get into coaching, whether that’s at Level Two, or any other of the courses on offer, click here to find out about local courses or here for the national course information. There is also a host of online courses available via The FA Learing website.

Pressing matters

I have embarked on the Level Two Certificate in Coaching Football with FA Learning and Suffolk FA this week, and throughout his time on the course will be sharing his experiences and hopefully encourage others to take their next steps into coaching…

Day Six – 7 April 2012

The last day of the main body of the course was our opportunity to practice the game-related section of the final assessment. Though we won’t be covering the same topics when we come under the scrutiny of the assessor in September, Saturday gave us the chance to understand the structure and experience delivering the game-related aspect.

Essentially, the final assessment is made up of three portions; the technique – coaching the topic unopposed, the skill – introducing an opponent and decision-making element, and the game-related section – coaching one team in a 4v4 game, correcting faults when the elements focused on in the topic aren’t being achieved.

My topic was ‘Pressing’ and I was the sixth man up, so was lucky not to get the players in a too weary state (though six days of virtually non-stop training was taking its toll on even the most youthful of legs). During the 15 minutes, after giving the two teams a chance to have a play without being stopped, the majority of my focus was on ensuring my chosen team (we must only coach one) was following the basic defensive principles; denying, restricting and predicting space.

I looked at the front two players first, as I wanted them to work across to stop the player on the ball from knocking a forward pass, so I asked the man nearest the ball to close, or press, to prevent it being passed down the line. Then the second front man would drop into the middle, just behind the first man to block the path into the other opposing forward.

It would mean that the only option is back across to the other defender. If the forwards are on their toes, they can then switch responsibilities; the cover man closing down with the other forward dropping around. If, as is inevitable, the ball did eventually find its way to the opposing attackers, my focus was then on them.

The defender nearest the ball gets in touch-tight, stopping the forward from turning, as the second defender pulls around as cover, with one eye – and body shape – on the other front man. I could go on, but that might have been my problem. After the 15 minutes were up, I went to one side with Keith, our tutor who is soon to be taking a job in Canada, and he ran through his evaluation points. I wasn’t marked as positively as I was for the last session on Thursday, with one of the big action points being that I talk too much! I’ve heard that before.

But while it wasn’t as good as I hoped, it has given me some things to think about over the next few months ahead of the final assessment. I’d rather be marked harshly now to ensure that I pick up on any weak areas and get it right. We’ve got our follow on days in June and July to nail any areas we’re worried about, and we also have the task of putting on 12 fully-planned sessions at our own clubs, which will give us chance to hone our skills.

Some of the sessions from the others were really good. Everyone was enthusiastic, but two or three of them really stood out for me and it was pleasing to see them do that well. The camaraderie has grown among the group throughout the week and we were all willing each other on. So, after turning up to Suffolk One on Monday where I joined a group of 18 strangers, we left today exchanging numbers, email addresses and twitter names to ensure that we stay in touch before we meet up again in June.

And that’s the thing, we may all have varying talents on and off the pitch, but we all want to become Level Two Coaches and we each want one another to succeed in our final assessment. I’ve certainly made some new friends this week and after six days together it will be strange not meeting up with them tomorrow. What to do, what to do???

Level Two Diary
Day One
Day Two
Day Three
Day Four
Day Five

If you are keen to get into coaching, whether that’s at Level Two, or any other of the courses on offer, click here to find out about local courses or here for the national course information. There is also a host of online courses available via The FA Learing website.

Heading in the right direction

I have embarked on the Level Two Certificate in Coaching Football with FA Learning and Suffolk FA this week, and throughout his time on the course will be sharing his experiences and hopefully encourage others to take their next steps into coaching…

Day Five – 6 April 2012

A discussion about the Respect programme, task ten in our learner packs, kicked off Good Friday at Suffolk One. Along with the many sessions out on the pitch this week, we’ve also had to follow a number of theory tasks, not just about coaching but also on other aspects that could be part of a coach’s role within a club.

With many of the group regularly coaching kids, Respect is quite a key issue. Now, while many talk about the affects at the professional game, everyone in football has a responsibility to behave and think of others. One of the big concerns raised by many of the coaches was the influence of parents on the sideline, who may want the team to win at all costs and put pressure on the young footballers.

So we discussed codes of conducts for all participants – The FA offers its own with regards players, team officials and match officials – but also for the coach of the team to set his or her own philosophy of what they want to achieve. They’ll no doubt all want success, but we all have a different idea of success. Is it winning every game? Is it ensuring every child at the club has a fair share of minutes on the pitch? Or perhaps the notion of improving players to become capable of playing a certain style, regardless of results? Whatever it is, there’s no right or wrong necessarily, but all involved in the club (players, parents, officials) need to be aware of this philosophy and respect it.

It was probably one of our longer debates this week as everyone had a view on what they think needs to happen to ensure that Respect is not just a campaign, but a natural part of our game.

It meant that we were a little later going out onto the pitch for our first session of the day: Finishing. As is the norm, when there’s a chance to get the balls out for some shooting practice, everyone steps forward. Keith needed just 12 of the 18 of us, and I wasn’t quick enough to get a bib, so ended up watching the session from the side.

It was probably for the best, I’d seen the shooting that some of them were doing while Keith was setting up, and I think some of them needed the practice. Besides, I didn’t fancy getting scratched when – not if – my shots went over the fence into the bushes. The drill itself used the five-a-side goals, and was more about the technique of shooting; body shape, contact with the ball, types of shots and being creative to add a clever finish, that just larruping balls at the goal.

While watching from the side, I had a chat with one of the other lads, Kevin, who is coaching at Newmarket Town (Eastern Counties League). Without being rude, Kev is certainly no Peter Crouch, and it came as no surprise when he told me that he used to be a jockey. The connection with the home of horse racing was easy to see now.

Kev, who works at one of the major stables in the town, also revealed that he is friends with Mark Venus, the former Ipswich Town defender who is now assistant manager to Tony Mowbray up at Middlesbrough. Thanks to Venus, Kev had spent a few days recently up at Rockliffe – the club’s impressive training ground where I too stayed recently with the Under-21s – and had been allowed to observe some of the youth and senior training sessions there.

But, similar to Venus, I was more interested in talking to Kev about horse racing as I like to get to Newmarket for the Guineas Festival every May. Unfortunately, this year falls on FA Cup Final weekend so I’ll be at Wembley, if not supporting my team, I’ll be on duty for TheFA.com. Kev has offered to show me around behind the scenes next time I’m in Newmarket, though, which was very kind of him. I’ll have to see what he’s up to Sunday!

After lunch, it was another couple of theory tasks. One was on nutrition and the other on fitness for football. I often talk to Boydy, the Under-21s Fitness Coach, about things like this, and we also have the same diet as the team when we go away, so I felt quite clued up about the types of foods you should, or shouldn’t eat, and when in the matchday schedule food should be eaten.

The final set of practical demonstrations from the course syllabus that Keith had to show us was out on the pitch this afternoon. They were two similar sessions, both on heading, but one was focused on defensive heading, the other on the attacking variety.

Basic points addressed were, when defending, adjusting to the flight of the ball, sending it back from where it came and our contact with the ball to ensure height in the clearance. When attacking, we looked at the back-post header, rising to direct back across the keeper towards the far corner of the goal, movement towards the near post and how we should generate power. I didn’t score when doing the drill, but did force Chichi into a creative save with his, er, midriff.

That wrapped up the practical learning part of the week as we’d seen all topics that are covered, so in theory we should be able to perform our final assessment. But we’ve got until September to prepare for that.

Tomorrow we must all put on a 15 minute game-related session on the topics handed out by Keith, so will be on the pitch all day, starting at 9am, My topic is a defending drill – ‘Pressing’. It isn’t just about defenders, though, but how the whole team should put pressure on the the players with the ball as they carry out the basic principles of defending; deny space, restrict space, predict space.

I’ve now just got to draw up the session plan…

Level Two Diary
Day One
Day Two
Day Three
Day Four

If you are keen to get into coaching, whether that’s at Level Two, or any other of the courses on offer, click here to find out about local courses or here for the national course information. There is also a host of online courses available via The FA Learing website.

Time and space

I have embarked on the Level Two Certificate in Coaching Football with FA Learning and Suffolk FA this week, and throughout his time on the course will be sharing his experiences and hopefully encourage others to take their next steps into coaching…

Day Four – 5 April 2012

Now it’s fair to say that the Level Two course in physically, as well as mentally, demanding, and Thursday was probably the most tiring of all so far.

We’d touched on a couple of early points in the classroom at Suffolk One, but were quickly out on the pitch to begin a long day of sessions as each of the 18 candidates had their first chance to actually coach. Keith (tutor) looked on to assess the organisation, communication and understanding of the technical aspects of the relevant topics, which he gave us all yesterday.

Mine was ‘Create Space as a Unit’, so having knocked up the session plan – admittedly with a bit of help from the excellent FA Learning resource ‘The Future Game’ (grassroots edition) – I was ready to step up to the plate. Fortunately I wasn’t up first, no one wants that slot – but someone had to do it, so Patrick (who, coincidentally, I have played against for my club) did well with his opener.

Level Two Coaching at Suffolk One We managed to get through half of the group in the morning, then the remaining nine in the afternoon. I was up fourth after lunch, as people were starting to tire. The requirement in this assessment is to cover the first two of three parts of the final practical assessment - the technique and the skill - in 15 minutes (Saturday we do the third aspect – a game-related drill).

So what is the difference? Well, the technique is about how to do the drill, so in a passing drill, for example, you might talk about head position, standing foot, striking foot and connection with the ball.

After setting up a 20×20 box with four goals, or gates, for my session I brought in 12 players, four in orange bibs, four red and four blue. I wanted them to pass the ball around the area in their team, looking to pass the ball through the gates to score a goal. My first focus was on getting the players to make the area as big as possible and employ the basic attacking principles by spreading themselves long and wide, a diamond formation.

Occasionally one of the players would drop into the middle to pick up a pass from a corner, and although it isn’t wrong to want the ball, the point of the session was to create space, so it gave me the chance to step in and coach. Coming out of the middle and going ‘long’ would not only allow a long pass into space, it would potentially encourage the player on the ball to run with it into the space, keeping possession of the ball. Consequently, positions would then open in the wide areas. So from only one tight pass available for the man with the ball, a slightly different position taken up by the player who was in the middle enabled four options to present themselves.

The progression was into the skill part of the drill, which Keith describes as the ‘when and where’ as opposition is introduced and forces players to decide when to employ the technique. I kept the same set-up, but made one of the three teams defenders. Among other things, I was looking at the way players received the ball, with their first touch taking them away from a defender and into the space. But they also needed the support runs with other players ensuring there was no defender between themselves and the man with the ball.

Paul, a likeable soul who is the group’s 19th-man – he started the course with Lancashire FA but was unable to see out the initial six-days, so is catching up in Suffolk following a recent move south – made the very error I was looking out for. So I was able to stop the drill, go in and follow the coaching principles taught at Level Two: Observe, see fault, coach and correct, recreate and play.

It felt good, it felt enjoyable and I felt comfortable in that situation. But time was running out, 15 minutes means 15 minutes, so I wrapped up, debriefing the group, and checked my stopwatch – 15:46.

Then it was my judgement from Keith. He pulled me to one side to go through my evaluation and on the 21 outcomes from the session, he’d marked me with 20 ticks. “I’m going to be finicky with you,” he said, however. “How did the progression go?” While I thought it was OK, it did seem a bit crowded at times, which I told him. “So how could you make it less busy in the session?” he asked. I suggested either making the pitch bigger, or the favoured option of taking a ball out and going 8v4. On that aspect he gave me an AP – Action Point – and then also mentioned my time-keeping during the session (I perhaps over-ran with the technique part) - which definitely won’t surprise the rest of The FA’s Communications Department – but overall I was delighted with such a positive evaluation.

As I walked over to join in with the other Jamie’s session, Keith said: “Let’s see how you can build on Saturday.” That’s when we do the game-related drill, which progresses the skill drill into a 4v4 game scenario. We’re not doing the same topic, but Keith was “feeling in a charitable mood” before we departed Ipswich at the end of the afternoon and told us what we’ll each be focusing on this Saturday.

“Jamie Bradbury – Pressing,” he called out. What is definitely pressing, though, is a bit of sleep. Tomorrow we’ve got heading (defending and attacking) and finishing. That’s what I call a good Friday…

Level Two Diary
Day One
Day Two
Day Three

If you are keen to get into coaching, whether that’s at Level Two, or any other of the courses on offer, click here to find out about local courses or here for the national course information. There is also a host of online courses available via The FA Learing website.

Deny space

I have embarked on the Level Two Certificate in Coaching Football with FA Learning and Suffolk FA this week, and throughout his time on the course will be sharing his experiences and hopefully encourage others to take their next steps into coaching…

Day Three – 4 April 2012

Wednesday started and ended in a similar way for me – writing a session plan.

With our first day of ‘mock’ assessments coming up tomorrow, Keith (tutor), gave us the opportunity to have a look at how to draw up a plan for a coaching session, something that is an essential part of the Level Two course that helps you as a coach and also provides evidence for the assessors that you actually understand what you are trying to deliver.

It covers the preparation basics; number of players, venue, medical information, equipment, health and safety. It then goes on to ask about the aims of the session, warm-ups and cool-downs, key technical aspects and also provides space to draw up any diagrams to illustrate what the session will look like. The second page looks at Long Term Player Development (LTPD) and how the session will affect the four-corners – psychological, physical, technical and social, ideas to develop the session and then finally the self-evaluation after you’ve finished the practical.

That’s how I wrapped up my evening, completing a session plan on my topic for Thursday – ‘Create Space as a Unit’ – while half-watching Chelsea beat Benfica and at the same time observing  the movement of the attacking team and how they used the ‘principles’ to make the pitch bigger and exploit their opponent.

I needed an early night, though. We’ve only reached the half-way mark of the week and we’ve probably spent over 12 hours in total on the training pitch at Suffolk One. Today was the longest day, and the chilliest, and after focusing on the final few required areas of attacking principles – forward runs without the ball, 1-2s, overlapping and third-man running – we moved onto the defence side of the game.

We had a brief look at goalkeeping, and as I watched Keith explain the basics, I chatted to Josh, the youngest lad on the course, who I assumed lived locally. But no, he’d travelled with his dad from his home in Munich to take the course with Suffolk FA. Another example of the esteem coach education in this country is held.

This afternoon I didn’t want to stand around getting cold and wet, so got myself involved in the defending-focused session, which aims to highlight the principles of denying space, restricting space and predicting space. We worked as a 1 v 1 to begin with, before progressing into a 4 v 4 where defending as a team was the focus. I felt like Franco Baresi as I snuffed out a few attacks that came our way.

But when I burst forward on one occasion and lost control of the ball, the counter from our opponents allowed the group to look at recovery defending, slowing down the attack to allow the man out of position (me) to get back to cover between the ball and the goal. Needless to say, the running and heavy breathing prevented me from getting cold.

So from denying space today, I’ll be looking to create it tomorrow…

Level Two Diary
Day One
Day Two

If you are keen to get into coaching, whether that’s at Level Two, or any other of the courses on offer, click here to find out about local courses or here for the national course information. There is also a host of online courses available via The FA Learing website.

Running with the ball

I have embarked on the Level Two Certificate in Coaching Football with FA Learning and Suffolk FA this week, and throughout his time on the course will be sharing his experiences and hopefully encourage others to take their next steps into coaching…

Day Two – 3 April 2012

The first message we received on arrival in the classroom at Suffolk One on Tuesday was that our first assessed sessions, which are to cover the technique and skill factors of one of the topics from the course, are to be put back a day to Thursday to give us time to see all of the practical demonstrations.

I think for many there was a little sigh of relief that we had longer to soak up the course after a rammed-packed day one, but essentially this is why we are here, to learn about the drills to complete a full assessment later this year so we can do them well back at our clubs, so there’s no avoiding them. 

As Keith Webb, our course tutor, reassuringly put it - we’re all in the same boat and that there’s no pressure. Even he, a man of 29 years of coaching experience occasionally has a below-par session, he says, so we shouldn’t expect to be perfect first time we coach a group of players to the Level Two standard. Ultimately, though, as candidates on the course, our aim is to learn and take on board enough information to earn the certificate. They aren’t given out just for attendance, and nor should they be. One of The FA’s goals is to produce more and better coaches, not just more coaches.

And looking around at the 18 faces on my course, you realise that football education in this country is highly respected around the world, so the courses need to stretch those involved. One of the group is from Ipswich originally, but now lives in Chicago and coaches five to eleven-year-old co-eds. He came back from the States this week specifically for this course and will return for the follow-on days. Another, ‘Chichi’, is from Norway, putting my 15-mile journey from Essex to shame.

Our first discussion for the day was Long-Term Player Development, LTPD, as we looked at the four corners – technical, psychological, physical and social – of players’ development in certain situations. We considered specifically at how the four corners of players of different ages may be affected during sessions, something that coaches, particularly of youth players, should understand.

Our other classroom topic was looking at what we as coaches should do if any players get injured, fall ill, or even go missing during a session, and what the emergency procedures would be. So we’re looking at more than just teaching people how to play football.

Out on the pitch is where the action happens, though, and after a warm-up (I volunteered to run this today), we looked at running with the ball and dribbling, followed by support play in the afternoon. I sat out of the dribbling session, just so I could observe the whole thing – and it’s pretty tiring taking part in all sessions too. But I was heavily involved in the running with the ball and support play sections.

Keith pulled me up during the running with the ball skill drill when I passed to one of my team mates who had made an angle in space on the right sideline of the training area. I instantly knew why. In a normal game of football, the pass would have been fine, but this was ‘running with the ball’ and in front of me was space to advance with the ball. So if you are coaching a certain topic, even if a player does something that would be acceptable in another situation, step in and try to correct the technique you are coaching at that time.

As a player (just), let alone a coach (hopefully soon), I’m thinking about the techniques I’m using and when to recognise the good things and the bad things of what I’m doing. Even after two days of fairly intense sessions, I try to remember back to when I’ve benefitted from being coached in this way. In 25 years of playing I’ve not had many opportunities like this so it’s exciting for me to think that if I can be successful on this course, hopefully it’ll give more players the chance to experience this kind of coaching.

Level Two Diary
Day One

If you are keen to get into coaching, whether that’s at Level Two, or any other of the courses on offer, click here to find out about local courses or here for the national course information. There is also a host of online courses available via The FA Learing website.

Level Two, Day One

I’ve embarked on the Level Two Certificate in Coaching Football with FA Learning and Suffolk FA this week, and throughout his time on the course will be sharing his experiences and hopefully encourage others to take their next steps into coaching…

Day One – 2 April 2012

For a while now I’ve been planning to take the Level Two Certificate in Coaching Football, but when I think back to when I took the Level One, I can’t really believe nearly ten years has passed. For two days in July 2002 I spent the weekend in Regents Park, London, with a group of FA Colleagues to take my first steps in coaching. But work, family, and my own attempts to play the game has meant that finding the opportunity to progress has been tricky.

But having taken over as player-manager at my local team, Boxted Lodgers in the Essex & Suffolk Border League, just before Christmas and my ‘career’ after playing coming more and more into focus, I cleared my diary and enrolled through the Suffolk FA.

And as it is not compulsory to have earned the Level One certificate to start the Level Two, my lengthy learning hiatus didn’t matter. Originally, the first six days of the ten day course were due to take place in the February half-term holiday, but the heavy snow put paid to that. Now, this week, with the college students of our course venue Suffolk One starting their Easter break, I finally arrived in Ipswich for the opening day of the course.

Sitting down in the classroom, I was surprised by the age spread across of the 18 candidates. The youngest is around 18 years old, the oldest is perhaps 60. Our course tutor is Keith Webb, previously a player and coach at Norwich City and manager of King’s Lynn, who has been involved in player development for the best part of 30 years.

After his introduction to the Level Two course, which included the principles of play for attacking and defending, styles of coaching, and the distribution of the hefty candidate pack, we headed out onto the college’s artificial pitch to start our first of many practical sessions this week aimed at preparing us for a 35-minute assessment in September.

I’m approaching my 34th birthday and have played competitive football at various levels since I joined my youth team, Reed Hall Sentinals, when I was nine. From Sunday League to the Isthmian and Essex Senior Leagues, there aren’t too many weekends in the last 25 years that I’ve not been at football, so have quite a lot of experience of playing the game. But despite this, Monday’s first few sessions showed me a lot.

Not about the techniques involved necessarily, but how to incorporate them into coaching drills to teach to others. We learned about passing short and long, creating space, the different ways to encourage players to receive the ball - and when - and drills on turning with the ball. Each was shown first as the technique – how to do it – with the players working unopposed during the drill.

We then looked at the skill side of things, when opposition was introduced forcing players to decide when the right time was to employ the technique. Finally, the sessions would progress into a game-related scenario.

Keith, as coach, would follow the coaching cycle – observe, see fault, coach and correct, recreate, play – stepping in to work on improving the players in each session.

So, though we spent around five hours training in the sun, it’s not about improving us as players, but teaching us how to coach and improve players ourselves. On Wednesday we have our first chance of running a short session, but tomorrow I expect more of the same, maybe minus the sun. So for now, with tired eyes and weary legs after Day One, it’s time for some rest.

If you are keen to get into coaching, whether that’s at Level Two, or any other of the courses on offer, click here to find out about local courses or here for the national course information. There is also a host of online courses available via The FA Learing website.