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W**N
Very detailed, yet flexible..the most current and valuable soccer coaching treatise of our time
I have coached youth soccer at the recreational level for 7+ years. I have been self trained and have only attended one formal certificate course through the National Soccer Coaches Association. That course just happened to have been taught by Ashu Saxena. I could immediately see his approach to soccer training and teaching went well beyond the surface view I was afforded in this weekend course. I called him afterward as I really wanted to learn more from him. Now, anyone can order his first book and gain invaluable insights. I have not finished the book yet. But, if you want to understand how to organize a winning soccer program, develop that program and develop soccer players to achieve maximum potential, you have found the right resource. It is very detailed down to what to do nearly every day for a full year to implement a winning sustainable program that will self perpetuate. I bought the book for many reasons. But, most pointedly, I bought it because I am coaching a Middle School girls team this Spring for the first time at a small private school. The school has never had any form of consistency in their soccer program and is only in their third season of a Girls only Soccer team. They have a new AD, new coaches, and they are essentially starting from scratch. I can already see that Ashu's book will be our foundation. It literally provides a step by step guide of how to run a year round soccer program. For example, Chapter 7 is entitled Developing a year-round program.In addition to being a very accomplished Soccer Coach and NSCAA Master Coach Trainer, Ashu is a degreed teacher in Calculus. In reading his book you can see the teacher coming out in him. I see two other reviews by tenured coaches of 20+ years experience and they seem to like the book. Well, compared to them I am a novice having only coached recreational youth soccer for 7 years. But, despite my lack of experience by comparison, I am finding the book easy for me follow and understand. And, the material is presented in a teaching format. At the end of each Chapter he offers a section that recaps the chapter and actually takes the reader through a mental pop quiz of sorts. He calls these short highlighted sections Reflections. These Reflections make it easy to see how to immediately put the material from that chapter to use both mentally, physically or logistically. Some teaching points are mental: how do I approach the training, how do I approach game strategy, etc. Some of the teaching points are physical: what drills/games do I run my players and team through to get them into shape or to execute certain schemes. And, logistically: how do I implement my plans, how do I make put new strategies into my existing plan? Saxena does it all in this one manual which is why I call it a modern treatise on coaching soccer.If you don't like this book, or you can't find dozens if not hundreds of fresh ideas, then your name must be Anson Dorrance. All kidding aside, I cannot imagine any soccer coach not finding this book to be the best resource available today on how to coach soccer, train soccer players and implement/develop a soccer program. And, believe me, as a self taught soccer coach for the past 7+ years, I have scoured the internet for the best I could find. I have bought hundred of dollars worth of books, newsletters and DVDS on soccer. I have read numerous coaching blogs and even subscribe to more than one website on soccer. I have found several valuable resources over the years. However, If the only resource I had was Ashu's book alone, I could have accomplished all of what I have and more.......I am a successful Rec Coach boasting a winning record of 69%, and a Wins plus Ties record of 88%. I really thought I knew what I was doing. Saxena puts a whole new light on my approach to the game, coaching and even my team culture.So, stop reading reviews. Just buy the book. You won't regret it.
W**Y
A Master Course From A Master Coach
Much evidence has been offered in recent years that mastery of a craft requires, among other things, a "critical minimum" of 10,000 hours of practice. Coaches could easily, and profitably, devote 100 hours of that process to this book.That is both praise and a caveat. Soccer: Strategies for Sustained Coaching Success is not an easy book. Ideas come frequently and go deep, often in sentences the length of paragraphs, paragraphs that might be sub-chapters elsewhere. It's not a good read on Kindle. You'll need a highlighter (a Kindle feature, but it's not so easy to find what you've highlighted among 7300+ Kindle pages) and to dog-ear key pages. I'd also recommend reading it all twice. My choice was to read it through once, then go back and reread it chunk by chunk - highlighter in hand - which I will do when the hard copy arrives.Author Ashu Saxena is a protégé of University of North Carolina coach Anson Dorrance. In fact, Dorrance has been known to deflect questions about youth soccer toward Saxena. The book reflects much that is notable in the UNC program: total attention to detail, the tracking of individual training results, a relentless style of play, a fundamental philosophy that "if you chase perfection doggedly enough you'll catch a healthy dose of excellence in the process."*When speaking to coaches, Dorrance recounts his early attempts to seek out the Holy Grail, the perfect drill or training exercise that would turn the tide on match day. He says that over the years he has moved away from that quest and now focuses more on the process of developing individuals, teams and team cultures. Saxena is clearly of the persuasion. The first 40% of the book is devoted to topics such as mission statements, team cultures, leadership, team management and issues related to common (and often counterproductive) player development practices. From these examinations emerges a philosophy of player and personal development which gives equal weight to the importance of each side in the process of building a team.Positive Coaching Alliance founder Jim Thompson posits that the primary goal of youth sports is to produce "stronger, more responsible and confident persons who will be successful in life." That is a stated objective in most youth sports programs, but one infrequently accompanied by any specific plan for its attainment. Saxena appears to embrace and realize this goal, and the book's numerous testimonials from players and their parents attest to how effectively he does it. His teams also play some very good soccer. All coaches need to understand the tremendous impact of the former on the latter.Much of the book's "soccer side" is in the form of 50 very detailed lesson plans. (The detail goes so far as to outline the "beginning words" and "ending words" which give daily attention to the program's "personal side".) One could look on these as a season's worth of training sessions for a skillful U15 or U16 team. Alternately, and more productively, it's a 4-5 year curriculum outline for a U13 or U14 team that has a strong foundation in The Game's fundamental skills. The sessions are designed to develop an "active, attractive, attacking style of soccer that involves possession with a purpose on attack and defending with a high energy, intense pursuit of the ball." Even the most experienced coaches will find great ideas in this portion of the book.Other reviews have noted how parents and even players can learn from this book. But in the end Soccer: Strategies for Sustained Coaching Success is a study for coaches of a Master Coach and what his 10,000 hours have produced.So, coaches, grab your highlighter and get to it.*Hopefully neither will take offense that this quote was used to describe a certain basketball coach at UNC's arch-rival in Durham.
A**M
a parent's perspective
Everything I've learned about soccer has been from standing at the sidelines of many...many...many of my daughter's games. I picked up this book for her high School and club coaches. I figured that there was very little chance that I would understand half of what is in it, but I started reading it anyway.Soccer-Strategies For Sustained Coaching Success was a pleasant surprise - I could follow quite a bit of it and so can my daughter 14 year old daughter. I can't stress enough how I appreciated Ashu's clear dedication to developing players not just physically, but mentally as well. The chapters on building a team could be applied to many life situations, not just sports. I thought the college process was very informative and helped me think about how to help my daughter prepare to tackle that phase when the time comes (it's early, but feeling prepared is a great stress reliever :)). My daughter sometimes comes home and leafs through the books muttering about how her coach taught them a cool new drill and she thinks she got it from this book. She's found tips on things she can do on her own time to improve her skills. It's a great resource and anyone (even a sideline soccer mom like me) can get something out of it.
C**N
Coach Jason
This book is a must have for any soccer coaching library. The holistic approach to developing players is one that equates to success on and off the field. Coaches working toward creating environments of excellence will gain insightful guidance through Ashu's experiences and advice. Having coached for 16 years, from youth to high school and college - I guarantee this book will benefit yourself and your team!
M**E
walks you step-by-step through a whole season and situations
it is different from the other coaching books that i've come across, in that it goes into such detail and covers so many scenarios. i love it's aproach, and that it is more of a manual than the sort of thing you read, retain something, and move on
Trustpilot
2 weeks ago
2 months ago