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Scottish Football Association CPD Event 27/11/13 Sean Kimberly Aston Villa Football Club Encouraging Positive Play Notes by Max Rogers

Scottish FA CPD Event Notes Sean Kimberly Aston Villa

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Page 1: Scottish FA CPD Event Notes Sean Kimberly Aston Villa

Scottish Football Association CPD Event

27/11/13

Sean Kimberly

Aston Villa Football Club

Encouraging Positive Play

Notes by Max Rogers

Page 2: Scottish FA CPD Event Notes Sean Kimberly Aston Villa

Sean Kimberly – Profile He started career as a part-time coach at Blackburn Rovers under Kenny Dalgleish, DID NOT HAVE A PLAYING BACKGROUND. Stayed at the club for 12 years before moving onto Aston Villa. Has been at Villa for 8 years at academy level, however is now involved in the recruitment side of things. Stated that his coaching practices have been ‘stolen’ from other coaches over the years and he remains an ‘old school’ coach.

Key Phrase – Coaching is Communication Uses a personal categorization method to identify the characteristics of different players –

Ball carrier – Full back for example bringing the ball forward. Not beating a defender 1v1. Dribbler – Takes on defenders and loves to be in possession of the ball. Passers – Rarely dribble, always look to pass the ball. Destroyers – Not much of a dribbler or passer, prefer doing the defensive work. Under pressure they

perform better as they don’t have time to think (make decisions). In England, he mentioned, there are a lot of passers and not enough dribblers. He then showed video clips and asked us to identify what players in the clip fall into which categories. The best dribblers were of course foreign.

Coaching Session The theme of the session was to encourage players to receive the ball on the half turn and to play positive. Without giving direct demands such as ‘I want you to do…’ or ‘When you have the ball you should…’ he attempted to affect the players’ attitude through communication and emphasising that he wanted them to play positively at all times. Coaching style in England is very autocratic! He kept mentioning that in England the current trend is for players to maintain possession of the ball without taking the risk to penetrate the opponent’s defence. Instead of playing a vertical pass into a striker or taking on a defender 1v1 the player in possession will decide to pass the ball sideways. Players are manufactured and rely on a coach telling them to do something rather than having the intuition to do it themselves.

1. Small Sided Game

2. Technical Warm-Up

3. Small Sided Game

4. Attack v Defence Phase of Play

Page 3: Scottish FA CPD Event Notes Sean Kimberly Aston Villa

Small Sided Game The session started with a small sided game, an unconventional method. Sean mentioned that he wanted to do this in order to find out about the players and how they could be classified into the four playing roles. His only instruction to the group was to play positive. To begin with the games were stopped quite often as he attempted to influence the behaviour of the players. In all the stoppages he didn’t tell the players what to do, instead repeated his phrase of playing positive and also asked open ended questions. These questions were along the lines of ‘What can you do here?’ or ‘What could you do differently this time?’ After quite a number on interjections to reinforce his desire to see positive play, the game started to settle down and the players, through their own decisions, started to play more positively.

What is Positive Play? The picture on the left shows a scenario which might appear during a game. I’ll use it to help provide an example of positive play. The ST is in possession of the ball just outside the opponent’s 18 yard box. Four options have been highlighted that the ST can pick from in this moment. A – take on the defender 1v1, B – Switch the ball to the LW, C – Play a square pass to the RW or D – pass the ball inside to the CM. In your opinion, what is the most positive option the striker can take? (Hopefully it’s obvious!). A is the correct option. The defender has no cover and the striker can create a scoring opportunity. The other options are less positive. Players should be encouraged to attack a defender 1v1 and shoot on goal rather than pass.

Page 4: Scottish FA CPD Event Notes Sean Kimberly Aston Villa

Technical Exercise

The focus on the technical practice to begin with was to encourage the central player, X2, to receive the ball on the back foot. This enables them to play the ball forward quicker, and therefore become more positive. Sean didn’t provide any demonstrations to begin with, which resulted in the players performing below par and quite sloppy. In his first stoppage, Sean picked up on the lack of movement from all three players. X1 and X3 should be constantly moving to the left and right, whilst X2 should be moving between the two central cones before exploding deep into the space to receive the ball. As part of his positive play theme, he encouraged the players to do their own things and to use their imagination, such as;

Don’t always use the same control and pass when receiving on the half turn. Try using just one foot – instep to control, outside to pass.

End players vary their feed, not every pass in a game is going to be perfect so get used to dealing with aerial passes etc.

End players, X1 & X3, when they receive the ball dribble towards X2 creating a 1v1, try and beat them.

Communicate! He progressed the exercise by placing poles in the grid to act as defenders and to also encourage more movement.

Page 5: Scottish FA CPD Event Notes Sean Kimberly Aston Villa

Small Sided Game The session then returned to the small sided game in an attempt to see whether or not the technical practice had any effect. Sean mentioned that the game had no conditions because the game on a Saturday doesn’t have any conditions.

Phase of Play

Attacking Team – 8+1 feeder. Defending Team – 7 Again, the message of playing positively was repeated at the beginning of the phase of play. During all the stoppages he never really told the players exactly what to do, only gave them small ideas which they then built on. I thought this was a very interesting coaching style and it certainly had an effect as the attacking team started to play some positive football. In one stoppage he emphasised that a player doesn’t need to have the ball to be positive. In the example he showed that if the winger moves infield and central midfield drops deeper, only small changes, these movements force the opposition to react and make decisions as to where they should be positioned.