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Expectations for a BISA Coach

The coach of a team sets the attitude of everyone around them.  This includes the players, parents and spectators.  As the coach – the leader of the team – your responsibility is to provide a positive environment in which the children can learn and develop.  The lessons that they learn extend beyond the child’s soccer skills.  They include how to deal with conflict and how to demonstrate good sportsmanship before, during and after the game.  BISA expects the coach to lead by example and do their very best to provide a positive soccer experience for their team.  Please keep this in mind when interacting with players, parents, referees and the opposing team.

Addressing the Referees During the Game - Not

Please do not address the refs during the game (see the September 20, 2005 Coach Memo regarding misconduct and dissent). If you have a problem, concern, or are upset with a call – discuss it with a board member or referee director – not with the referee. They are human and are going to flub a few just like each of our teams will flub a few during the course of a game. Talk to a board member about it and the ref can be educated in the proper manner (or the rules will be explained to us, which is quite often the case).

Coach Mantras

  1. Primary focus on "development", not "winning" - subtle difference but very important.  Winning is desirable of course, but making it your primary focus, especially your primary short-term focus, will most likely lead to bad decisions in your training program and game execution (see "don't teach anything you have to undo later" below).

  2. Maximum touches on the ball during training sessions - make sure your practice plan leads to as many touches on the ball as possible.  This can be accomplished by separating the players into smaller groups during drills or by designing your practice to include drills and games that force many touches on the ball.  This is the primary reason NTX has moved to the small-sided game format.

  3. Don't teach anything you have to undo later - for instance, many coaches of the younger players put their players in a defensive "wall" on the opponents kickoff - an alignment that will never be formed when they grow older (maybe in futsal).  Instead, teach them to spread out on the kickoff and cover the critical defensive areas.  Otherwise, at some point down the line you'll have to teach them to cover the space, hence undoing what you taught them earlier.  Another example would be a coach of the younger players putting a single player in front of the opponents goal with instructions to "wait for the ball" - and leaving the player in that position during the entire game.  On down the line you'll have to undo this practice and teach that player how to stay "onside" and how to "make runs to the goal", hence undoing what you previously instructed.

  CoachesResources
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Education:
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Rules Chart (doc)
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FIFA Rules in Brief
 
Forms:
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Metroplex Game Sheet
BISA Game Sheet
Coaching Agreement
Metroplex Fact Sheet
Guest Player
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Articles:
Sportsmanship - In Sun and Shadow
Planning for the Season
Parents: Make your child a winner
 
Offsite Resources:
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North Texas Soccer
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