
Activity
Dribbling with the feet and stealing the ball with the feet.
Children select a partner who has similar skills. Each pair decides its own boundaries; a smaller area requires more practice. Partner 1 begins to travel and dribble the ball within the dened area; Partner 2 attempts to steal the ball by using their feet to trap the ball or tap it away. If Partner 2 gains possession of the ball, they become the attacker and Partner 1 becomes the defender. Rules include no body contact; gain possession of the ball; dont kick it away. Repeat the activity, and include a goal. The object of the game is for the attacking player to score a goal, while the defender tries to keep the attacker from scoring using the rules above. If the defender gains possession of the ball before the attacker scores a goal, the defender dribbles the ball to a designated spot on the boundary and then becomes the attacker. If a goal is scored, the attacker and defender switch roles.
Can you see ?
You could ask
When you are the attacker, what can you do to keep the ball away from your partner? When you are defending, what can you do to gain possession of the ball?
Create your own game: Work with your partner to design a game using the skills of soccer. Consider the rules, how you will score, what the boundaries will be, and a name for your game. Play two-on-two: Partners play the game they have designed against another pair.
Large balls, markers, and cones.
In a dened hard surface or grass area, children work in pairs, with one ball per pair.
| Relevance Activity with sports | Relevance Activity with subject | Quality of Activity | Creativity | Expert Comment | Name | Action |
|---|