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Game-Based vs Drill-Based Youth Coaching

Game-Based vs Drill-Based Youth Coaching

The short answer: For youth development, game-based coaching — learning through small-sided games and realistic scenarios — generally beats isolated drills, because players develop decision-making alongside technique. Drills still have a place for specific repetition, but the game is the best teacher.

Why game-based works

Football is a decision-making sport. Practising in game-like situations teaches players when and why to use a skill, not just how, so it transfers to matches.

When drills help

Short, focused drills can build a specific technique before putting it back into a game. Use them as a means, not the whole session.

Get the balance

  • Lead with game-realistic practice.
  • Use brief drills for targeted repetition.
  • Always return to a game.

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Frequently Asked Questions

Are drills useless for young players?

No, but they should be a small part. Over-relying on isolated drills produces players who look good in practice but struggle to make decisions in real games.

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