Coaches Information

» Field Conditions
courtesy of Los Alamos County

» Training Oppertunities

» Coaching Links

Modified Age Group Rules
None scheduled

» Activities and Articles

U6
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U16/U18
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» Upcoming Tournaments
Tournament Date :
May 8-10
Application Deadline :
April 1
Tournament Date :
May 9-10
Application Deadline :
April 13
Tournament Date :
May 16-17
Application Deadline :
April 15
Tournament Date :
May 23-25
Application Deadline :
April 22
» Welcome and Thank You

We are very pleased to have each of you as a volunteer coach or assistant coach. Without such volunteers, and many others in other League jobs, LAYSL would not be able to function. Almost all of the board is a coach or has coached, and we understand the time commitment it takes. Thank you.

To the left, under “Coaching Links” you will find many resources to make your job easier. First, you will find forms to get reimbursed for purchases and evaluate kids. There is also coaching resources broken down by age group. This includes practice plans, philosophies, and parent tips. We will also have a “Coaches Corner” were we will have articles about coaching from some of the leading coaches in the world.

If there is something you wish would be located here, please do not hesitate to drop the league a note. We will be adding to this section on a regular basis.

» Fields

Everyone wants to have their field, when they want it. So this leads to many difficulties in scheduling. To compound the issue, our coaches are all asking for full fields to play on, often 3 times a week. The field coordinator does their best to accommodate all of our coaches requests, but let me state that our policy is for coaches to have half a field, with goals, or a full area without goals. Here are some of the contributing factors we as a league goes through when scheduling fields.

In fact, LAYSL has done such a great job of scheduling, we are now the field scheduler for all programs in Los Alamos that wish to use fields. This is a great honor and responsibility. Below are some of the other programs that have just as much right to fields as we do (in no particular order):

  • Dog Training
  • Northern Soccer League
  • YMCA Kinderkick Program
  • Los Alamos Rugby
  • YAFL Football
  • Special Programs, like the Kite Festival
To compound our field issues, the county is constantly doing work to maintain the quality of the pitches. I hear a lot of complaints, and to be honest, I might have been one of the complainers. But lets consider that we are the only town, probably in New Mexico, and definitely in Northern New Mexico that has great pitches to play on.

Please remember that we are working to do our best. If a field is not available ask the coordinator for alternatives and do your best to be flexible.

» Latest Article

Thursday, August 27, 2009
Keys To Creating Savvy Players

By Sam Snow
Transition is the most important moment in soccer; the moment in the match when individual players switch their player role in the game from defense to attack or attack to defense. Transition is acquired first by an individual player, then a group of players, and then the team.

This moment of transition occurs first as mental recognition of the situation and then a decision that initiates physical action. The faster the recognition-decision-action connection is made the more impactful will be a player's performance. Only once individual players are quickly making the transition from one phase of play to the next, will it be possible for a team to execute quick and skillful transition from defense to attack or vice versa.

If transition does not happen fast enough for a player or team then they are always a step or two behind the action. The speed of a player's transition is based on his or her tactical awareness.

Tactical awareness is being mindful of where you are on the field, as well as the location of the ball, your teammates and opponents. It's the ability to read the game - to anticipate what will happen next and not merely reacting to what just happened. In some soccer circles this tactical awareness is called insight.

In American soccer, we refer to this level of mental focus and tactical awareness as being soccer savvy.

Your players have no chance of becoming soccer savvy players if they are simply cogs in the team wheel. Players who are over-coached in matches become robotic in their performance and cannot make tactical decisions fast enough.

Slow decision-making leads to reaction players instead of anticipation players. The over-coaching comes from not only coaches, but spectators too. They constantly yell out to the players what to do and when to do it. This further hinders a player's decision-making, as spectators are typically a step behind the action - the pace of the game is quicker than their words conveyed.

This environment of coaches and parents making soccer decisions for the players during a match has led to an American soccer weakness in transition. Too many of our players are not tactically aware, thereby being slow in transition. To become an anticipation player who is quick in transition requires a healthy soccer environment in which to grow. That environment requires less coaching during matches and better coaching during training sessions.

That training environment should lead to self-reliant players who think and communicate for themselves during a match.

The foundation to a good soccer environment in your club is a well-planned and consistently executed player development curriculum. From this foundation, you can build a club with a positive soccer culture.

(Sam Snow is the Director of Coaching Education of US Youth Soccer. This article is an excerpt from US Youth Soccer's soon-to-be-released "Player Development Model." It first appeared in U.S. Youth Soccer Blogs)