Volleyball Training

Teaching fundamentals to youngsters – Coaching Volleyball

Inside Minnesota volleyball, with shin guards

This question came up in a coaching group.

I have been asked to build a program for an elementary school that hasn’t had a team in 12 years. I am going to really concentrate on fundamentals for a while and I’m curious if anyone has ideas on showing or teaching the kids about how important a strong foundation is before moving on. I’m afraid they won’t understand and get bored with practice.

To my mind the last sentence is the key to answering the question.

If boredom is something you think is a real risk, you definitely need to take a different approach. If you’re afraid the kids won’t understand, again, a change of mentality seems to be in order.

I can just about guarantee this coach is thinking of “fundamentals” with respect to skills. I contend that skills are not the real fundamental in this situation – and arguably not as fundamental as many people think they are broadly. As one coach noted with respect to the true fundamentals:

It’s the interactions of the players as a team, and the flow of the game.

And going beyond that – especially for such a young age group – a major fundamental is FUN. A coach’s first objective has to be “keep them coming back”. If you can’t do that, nothing else matters. You can do that by structuring things the right way.

More importantly, though, find ways for them to do what you want them doing while having fun. You’re at the first step of the LTAD progression. Keep the “teaching” limited. Get them doing a lot, and in different ways to keep things fresh and engaging.

A way to do that

Let me offer an example using the introduction of passing.

Start off by showing them how to do a forearm pass. Very simple. Very basic. Then send them out in pairs. Have one toss and the other simply bump the ball up high enough that they can catch it themselves. Tell them something like, “Let’s see which pair can bump and catch the most is 2 minutes”. Then switch it up to where they have to pass so their partner can catch it.

From there you can put them in groups of three and have them pass the ball to the partner who didn’t toss to them. Then you can move to having the toss come from over the net with a target on their side.

After that it’s really easy to progress to simple little games. The simplest would be a 2-touch exercise where it’s pass to your partner, who passes it over the net. Then you can add in a third touch.

All through this…

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