BenchWe’ve nearly survived the snow and ice, now how about the Icebreaker?

The tournament, I mean. Can you believe spring soccer is just around the bend? This year the weather has prevented most teams from doing a lot of preseason preparation. What will this mean when the team takes the field in March?

Is there anything we can do to help them be better prepared for the season-opening tourneys just around the corner? What should be in your Icebreaker tool box?

Weather Alert

This never used to be an issue, but in our great wisdom we created turf. Turf allows us to play in all weather conditions. So…the games that used to be canceled for puddles, driving rain, sleet or snow are now being played. We only cancel for lightning and thunder, right? Things that can kill, we respect. Things that only injure, bring ‘em on.

What can you do? 

 

Fitness Gauge

Expect your team’s “fitness meter” to read low, maybe in the red. Yes, even teams who invested in a bit of indoor field space to do preseason tuning have been hard-pressed to get there and get to it. While time off to rest and recover is a very good thing, too much time at home leaves a bit of lethargy in its wake. Online entertainment and sleeping in does not do much for fitness. Jumping right in to full field, full minutes, full speed ahead is a recipe for fatigue, at best, and injury, at worst.

What can you do?

Check the Fuel Tank

Athletes need to eat well to prepare for competition and that means healthy carbs mixed with some low fat protein for fuel on game day. If early-morning games present a challenge, fill up the night before and hydrate well before game time. Tournament games do take their toll on the energy stores. Refilling the tank is crucial: Studies show that the first 30 minutes post-game is key, and protein ingested before sleep improves muscle recovery and force production by up to 22 percent.

What can you do?

Rest and Recovery

Kids are high-energy, especially when they’re excited. Power them up to play their best in their opening tournament, toss them out there with a bunch of their friends, fill them up with snacks and dinner and you may have some whirling dervishes on your hands.

Now what? Ha. I don’t have a good answer for this one, but here are some possibilities:

Game Plan

As coach, it’s essential to establish clear objectives for the preseason tournament and communicate these to the players and team parents. Expectations are much easier to meet and more difficult to challenge when you state them clearly for everyone. The season opener is your title page and preface. Write it down. What are your pre-season objectives?

The “showcase” phenomenon presents an interesting challenge for today’s high school players. We’re asking them to “show well” at a time when they are hardly ready to show up. It may be that these college coaches are looking for kids who can persevere through the tough conditions and lead their teams in spite of them. The ones who do more than survive will stand out.

Stay safe everyone and play well. See you out there on the pitch. I’m the one bundled in four or five extra layers. See me at halftime. I’ll have the heat on and extra blankets in the back.