0:15 Why stack the same position your teammate (third) is already in? Then afterwards you immediately go to an example to where your teammate is still rotating back, when that's not what happened in the clip. You've done this in multiple videos. Not every situation is black and white, rotations need to remain fluid.
The positions were the exact same. The only difference was the student pushed out, and I explained the drawbacks of doing that, then showed a pro example to a script i wrote in an old proguides video about why he can't push out, and how your teammate needs to be rotating to cover the midfield pass
TLDR- Watch Squishy's road to SSL series from start to wherever he is now, and rewatch videos of whatever rank you're at that Squishy is playing in the video. Then watch Golden's videos to learn better positioning and situation awareness. What people are failing to comprehend is they want to do pro things, but they are not going to do pro things. The sooner I realized this, the sooner I started playing better. RL is just as fast paced as hockey for situational awareness, and understanding what you're capable of accomplishing offensively/defensively from a soccer mindset. That is why pro soccer players know when they can walk and piddle around, vs when they know they need to run and charge. AND PLAYERS HAVE TO LEARN TO SURVEY THE FIELD AND NOT FOCUS ON THE 1-2 PLAYERS NEAR THE BALL! RL is essentially stop clock chess and the timer is set at like 45sec per side. Of course I still try to do pro things, cause it's fun, and then I usually get beat or completely ruin a scoring opportunity.
The title is obviously clickbait layering occurs naturally, avoiding it would be inviting the opponent in. I wrote a wall of text but deleted it except for the first line ^
Oh you get plenty of that (and i also give extra time usually because i rant and also because we sit in between matches... q'ing or so... waiting for replays... all the small stuff in between)
0:15 Why stack the same position your teammate (third) is already in? Then afterwards you immediately go to an example to where your teammate is still rotating back, when that's not what happened in the clip. You've done this in multiple videos. Not every situation is black and white, rotations need to remain fluid.
The positions were the exact same. The only difference was the student pushed out, and I explained the drawbacks of doing that, then showed a pro example to a script i wrote in an old proguides video about why he can't push out, and how your teammate needs to be rotating to cover the midfield pass
TLDR- Watch Squishy's road to SSL series from start to wherever he is now, and rewatch videos of whatever rank you're at that Squishy is playing in the video. Then watch Golden's videos to learn better positioning and situation awareness.
What people are failing to comprehend is they want to do pro things, but they are not going to do pro things. The sooner I realized this, the sooner I started playing better. RL is just as fast paced as hockey for situational awareness, and understanding what you're capable of accomplishing offensively/defensively from a soccer mindset. That is why pro soccer players know when they can walk and piddle around, vs when they know they need to run and charge. AND PLAYERS HAVE TO LEARN TO SURVEY THE FIELD AND NOT FOCUS ON THE 1-2 PLAYERS NEAR THE BALL! RL is essentially stop clock chess and the timer is set at like 45sec per side. Of course I still try to do pro things, cause it's fun, and then I usually get beat or completely ruin a scoring opportunity.
The title is obviously clickbait layering occurs naturally, avoiding it would be inviting the opponent in.
I wrote a wall of text but deleted it except for the first line ^
I would be beyond annoyed if I paid for coaching by the hour and the dude starts ranting about his personal life. Just shutup and impart wisdom.
Oh you get plenty of that (and i also give extra time usually because i rant and also because we sit in between matches... q'ing or so... waiting for replays... all the small stuff in between)
This video went from informative to absolutely stupid ngl. Had to turn it off
Sucks for you