1v1 Warm Up Drill by former Man Utd Manager David Moyes. See the full session here: thecoachingman... This is the warm up for a 3 part session which is exclusive to The Coaching Manual. The coaching detail is first class
I hear you man, bunch of keyboard warriors who probably can't get a game for their local Sunday League side trying to take the piss out of a bloke who's been playing and managing professionally for the last 4 decades. Tragic.
I like the content! You can say all you want about Moyes, but you have to say his attention to detail and passion for the game can be seen here in every second.
Moyes is a top coach, things didn't work for him at Man Utd but there are more things that he has achieved than his failure there. Respect where it is due.
wish i was given at least a good level of coaching when i was younger. wonder how much better british players would be if the youth level coaching locally was of a higher standard
Part of that problem is the extortionate prices the fa charge to do the coaching courses past level 1, they want a certain standard of coaching at youth level and everyone to buy into the same ethos but offer no easy way to do it for full time working dad's who may have all the knowledge or transferable skills to coach young lads or lasses to a good standard but not the funding or time to squeeze all the courses in. You then have to self teach to be able to put sessions on that are a good standard,theres plenty of material like this out there.
@@joeharvey8402 the problem is the level 1, it’s pointless, and so are the rest of the FA coaching badges in the uk. It teaches nothing and attempts to force coaches into coaching in a certain way, things are slowly changing, but I don’t understand why the FA has taken so long to change the way they coach. England have brought through very little talent in the last 15 years compared to Germany or Spain and it stems from the way they coach in those countries compared to the FA.
I'd have back at Everton in some fitting capacity in a shot. He is a good man, a decent man in a world where decent men are very rare on the ground. He's the kind of man who goes hand in glove with a club like Everton, which still does hold onto a lot of the traditional values in football (for better or for worse) and character still does count for something. Or at last I like to think.
Lmao i used to manage Portsmouth on fifa took them from league 2 to the premier league signed all youth proteges on free or cheap then sold them for big bucks and went to manage in italy with fiorentina
The amount of hate Moyes is getting is beyond me I’d love to achieve half of what he’s achieved in the game! The Manutd job is so difficult especially with their crap owners! Louis Van Gaal & Jose Mourinho proved that and they’re 2 of the best managers you’ll ever see
I really don't think he's a bad manager. He was not the man for United, and probably hasn't adapted to the new ways of the game, but should do a good job in the championship or in other parts of the british isles.
Is that Moyes’ fault or the players fault? You can’t blame a coach when he/she achieves part of his/her objective for the match (getting the ball into the box from wide areas). The coach can’t be to blame for the fact that the strikers haven’t got on the end of one of those crosses (apart from maybe having not signed a decent striker).
@@TheCoachingManual That United side had just won the league and had one of the best strikers in the world (Van Persie). They also played quick, precise, attacking football not 'get it wide and hoof it in' football.
What amazes me is that many people here think that youth players and ManU senior players should be coached the same way. Its a whole different world with youth players because you want to teach football to them
The Coaching Manual, Great video. What is Moyes doing these days? Would love if you got a small interview from him :) Moyes was treated unfairly. He is a really good guy. Better than big Sam
Abc 123 No.. closing down is getting to the player and ball quickly. Pressing is influencing and moving the player back of away from where they want to go until they lose possession or make a mistake
Pressing is basically a much more strategic approach to closing down. Closing down wasn't done as systematically as the 'tiki taka' teams started doing it.
Steffen Å that’s like asking what the difference is between a marketing manager at apple and a vp of marketing. Knowledge and experience are two of the differences, I’m sure there are many more
Look at the managers who've gone to united after fergie! The quality of the players and their attitude was appalling, Moyes is a good manager, he shouldn'y have taken that job.
I wonder, if this is the warm up, how long it will take to have an injury? No warm up running, no stretching...... a lot of sudden direction changes, and soon crossed ligaments problems and knee problems.
Most likley they was doing that before the drill. This is perfectly fine for a drill that can be used in the warm up phase before more intense exercises.
@@88balloonsonthewall70 , and that's not fine. You know how I started my training session when I was 14? 10 stadium rounds.After that stretching. My first serious injury was this year, at age 32.
@@SineDeus And what do you do after the laps and stretching? More laps or do you start doing some drills. Just because he calls the drill a warm up it dosent mean thats the only warm up they did.
@@88balloonsonthewall70 this is not warm up, this is pressing training. If you call it warm up drill, might wanna change the sport :|. As a long dead junior manager of mine once said to a new guy "You, my boy, take your stuff and try another sport, this is not for you".
Unwound93 I like that. His knowledge is unquestionable. I learned so much from this warm up and I’ve been coaching a long time. His level of standards and his enthusiasm are only two of the things.
I like this session. While it's a "1v1" session, the focus is clearly on the defensive side. I would have liked to see offensive instruction and tips. None of these players seems to have any 1v1 offensive skills, ball skills, technique over the ball, etc. English players are notoriously bad players over the ball, but they should be a lot better than this at this age.
CK One in light of what’s happened since he left you do have to question whether the criticism he received when he left Utd was justified. I think that he was sorely treated by the media and the general football public. Things don’t seem to have improved under the stewardship of two of the games A-List coaches in van gaal and mourinho.
I know it's just a joke, but it irritates me when people take the piss on Moyes. It's never easy taking over Manchester united, you need some big balls to apply for a job like that.
Tbh for me he is the best after saf reign, i mean loser no goal n mou are spent a colossal amount of money for minor trophies and boring football which is not that worthed
I'm not sure he delivers any points that aren't correct. If a kid at 15 doesn't know to keep an attacker going away from goal, rather than let him stand him up, then surely the coach has to go in and tell him/her? Or would it be better to ignore it and hope that the player just learns from making the same mistake over and over again?
A player whom can't take criticism won't go far. Majority appreciate getting a tip or lesson here and there. Guardiola a great example of a coach being unafraid to coach his players. Man City being a perfect example, if you look at the way they played before he came.
how is he over-coaching? its a drill about pressing, he teaches them how to press and corrects mistakes. he didn't try to fix their first touch, or dribbling or shooting or any of that..stuck to the main topic and i believe he improved these youngsters too.
Moyes is amongst the best coach...he just didnt have the right environment i guess. In todays football u have one bad game and ur shit ..until u win something ur great again...kinda fakery
oh my God! "Football is ultimately one v one". What a crass mistake. No wonder this old coaching styles have been surpassed by collective mindset footballing. This is why England needs foreign coaches.
Luis Varela yeah it is about winning 1v1 battles all over the field. If 1 player out of 11 isn’t defending or doing their job the team suffers. Crass mistake on your part
Luis Varela Guardiola says the same thing in the Man City documentary. But, because he says it with a Spanish accent, it’s sage advice rather than old fashioned. Playing football is very simple.
@Luis Varela just shows your football intelligence, or lack of any for that matter! ALL football is 1v1 any and every coach will at some point before sending the team out will utter the words 'youve got to win your individual battles' if even 1 player doesnt bother then its means a teammate will have a 1 v 2 situation when defending!
Any idiot knows when you take over a highly successful team or business as a manager/director you dont impose massive, sweeping changes immediately or try to take a dictatorial, stern attitude. You make subtle tweaks to the current system to improve on whats there and implement your vision. You certainly dont tell a senior staff member to shadow an apprentice for tips on how to get better at their job (Like Moyes did by making Rio study Jageilka) Surely Moyes' masterclass should be on crossing or how to be consistently mediocre?
So building out from the back is so old hat to this fella, that he’s going to train the players to get the ball back, and here’s the trick, but only when they are in their opponents half Reinventing the wheel to the point of arrogance is weirdly American and to discontinue the concept of possession in a game of possession is what, is it stupid or nuts. It maybe even a losing strategy. Hummm let me think? But, but, but.... But um, so if you should accidentally... wait what? Oh do you mean that teams and or players should purposely lose the ball in the opponents half but then... because you know something that no one else knows and you win-the ball back while in the opponents half, well then “you’ll score more goals and have better success.” Really? What if you don’t win the ball back? Who is your winning example of such a program? Which team shows the upward trend for any approach that trains regaining possession in mostly the opponents half vs a recent graph that depicts the failures of Building out from the back? Where’s it at