Michael Goodheart
| Name: | Michael Goodheart |
|---|---|
| City: | Middlesbrough |
| Country: | United Kingdom |
| Membership: | Adult Member |
| Sport: | Football/Soccer |
Combination Play is an essential attacking and possession topic to run with your players. Combination Play involves the creation of shapes like triangles and diamonds or synchronized movements and positional interchanges in order to attack with greater fluidity and organization. All of the best professional clubs in the world have some clearly defined method of combination play in the final third of the pitch. For Borussia Dortmund, they are heavily reliant on one-two-touch play in and around the 18-yard box, looking for through-ball passes into the area at the right moment or creating overloads to spread the ball wide and deliver crosses into the box. For Liverpool, their front three of Salah, Firmino and Mane orchestrate attacks in the final third as though it’s a choreographed routine, relying heavily on positional interchange and movement off-the-ball to cause chaos for their opposition. Although our youth teams might never be able to achieve the attacking flair of Borussia Dortmund or Liverpool, working hard on the training ground on Combination Play can still be tremendously helpful in the quest for greater attacking prowess.

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6v3 Rondo
Setup: 3 zones, 1 for each team. The total size of each zone should be relatively small to force quick decision making under pressure.
Execution: White team starts in the middle. Red and Blue have a 6v3 majority and must work together to keep the ball away from White. Blue combines in their zone to play forward to Red at the right moment.
White can only have one player in either attacking zone, but can have two in the middle zone. If White wins the ball, they play it over to Red and take the place of Blue . Red transitions to defense immediately.
Variations:
Coaching Points:

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Three passes to score
I am normally not the biggest fan of games that restrict players to a certain number of passes, but this activity emphasizes keeping possession and not rushing it forward, and I find the three-pass restriction to be beneficial to achieving the key learning outcomes of the session.
Setup: 3v3/4v4 in one central grid. 2 neutral players on the outside lines. With extra numbers, you can add another netural player in the middle or on the end line.
Execution: Triangle / diamond passing to combine with 3 passes before the team can advance into the blue zone and shoot. If a team can advance into the zone after three passes, no member from the other team can follow. Goalkeepers and neutrals are available as passing options for the 3 passes.
Progression: If a team advances into the blue zone, the defending team can send one player in to defend.
Coaching Points:

See the guidance at the top of this page to understand why you are not seeing interactive Football/Soccer images.
Positional play
Setup: 5v5 in your team shape ensuring triangles and diamonds to combine. In our example, White is the attacking team and plays 1-2-3 (CB, CM x 2, RW, ST, LW). Black is the defending team and plays 3-1-0 + a goalkeeper. The White team’s shape would be applicable to a 3-2-3 (9v9) or 3-4-3 (11v11). For Black it would be 3-1-3-1 (9v9) or 4-1-4-1 (11v11).
Execution: Ball always begins with the White CB passing to a teammate on any restart. White team combines and scores on the large goal. Black team defends and scores in the two small goals on the outer edges of the field or by dribbling into the orange square.
Variations: Adjust team shape to suit your team’s formation or personnel/numbers available.
Coaching Points:
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Screen 1 (10 mins)
Triangle Passing
Passing circuit as illustrated, with players following their pass from one cone to the next. Passing should be two-three touches to keep players moving. In between the two blue cones, players can perform a dynamic movement, shuffle through cones or work on coordination with a ladder.
Variations: Add in a third ball to keep players moving.
Coaching Points: