Possession Drills and Rondos
Rondos are useful because they compress football problems into a small space. The aim is not keep-ball for its own sake, but cleaner decisions under pressure.
Set the rondo objective before the shape
A 4v2, 5v2, or 6v3 rondo can teach very different details depending on the objective you set.
- Use small groups for first touch and support angles.
- Use directional rondos when you want players to break lines.
- Use larger overloads to rehearse team spacing and circulation.
Make possession point somewhere
Possession drills transfer better when players know what the team is trying to access next.
- Add target players or gates to reward forward play.
- Create a score for switching the point of attack.
- Let defenders counter after regains so possession has consequence.
Coach the rhythm of support
The best possession teams create new passing lanes before the passer needs them.
- Cue players to move as the ball travels.
- Freeze when two players stand on the same passing line.
- Reward one-touch play only when body shape makes it possible.
Put the guide into practice
Use FC Tactix when you want to turn the idea into a board, a plan, a drill collection, or a player-development workflow.
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