The email arrived the day before training. The u8’s coach had cancelled the scheduled training session that was to be held the next day. So my youngest son would not be playing. Fair enough it seemed, as the freezing conditions rendered the soccer pitches unplayable. But that was today. The day before the soccer training session. Who knows what the soccer pitches would be like the next day? OK, the weather forecast had stated that similar conditions should prevail the next day….but how many times had the weather forecast been wrong. In my experience, more times than I care to remember.
I was scheduled to coach my soccer team on the same pitches, at the same time also the very next day, and my plan was to go out early and do a pitch inspection before making a decision on whether soccer training would take place, and inform the parents of the soccer players whether soccer coaching was on. You never know what can happen overnight.
And so it came to be – bright and early the next morning I tentatively walked out on my garden lawn to get an idea of the ground was like, and the ominous crunch-crunching sound of my boots on the semi-frozen ground rang in my ears. Not a good sign. But I decided to head out to our soccer pitches and check the state of those as well.
A swathe of icy-whiteness greeted me as I walked across our soccer grounds towards the training area where most of the soccer coaching took place. If anything, the conditions seemed even worse. The hardness of the ground was evident as my boots hardly made an impression on the knurled, unevenly frozen surface.
But as I approached the end of the training area, I began to feel the ground beneath me give way somewhat as this part of the soccer training area seemed to have softened out. I was not sure why this corner of the grounds was different, perhaps the large nearby trees with the large overhanging branches had something to do with it, but there was an area roughly 30×40 in size that was playable. Perhaps not completely safe for a match, but certainly good for some light training.
So the training session went ahead. Just some dribbling skills, ball retention activities and even a short game afterwards. And it was a welcome relief to all, including the parents who had got the children out the house for a long-overdue run-around. (For more soccer coaching techniques click here)
Did all the soccer players attend? No, some had stayed away, their parents not bringing them due to the weather conditions. I even got a call from one of them.
“I assume training is off today George” one mother quoted.
“Err no, we’re training alright” I responded.
“But my husband is adamant that it’s too unsafe to play football in these conditions” she quipped.
“Well….if it was unsafe then I wouldn’t be training” I retorted rather obviously.
Perhaps I could have been somewhat more diplomatic…but the fact that they had made assumptions as to what the conditions were at a place they had not been to I felt did not warrant it.
In any case, I am just as guilty of making hasty assumptions as the next person, but this proves that it pays to check things out first. Soccer training can take place in seemingly impossible conditions. But always of course, with the safety being the top priority.
