Video analysis has given this coaching staff brand new ways to see the game, and it’s translating well on the pitch.
Before interactive reports became so readily available for soccer clubs, coaches had to be industrious with how they charted their statistics on the pitch. For brothers Jono and Darren Callaghan at Nebraska-based Gretna Soccer Club, that meant charting every connected pass with pen and paper and using a complicated phone app to measure passing percentages.
Enter Hudl Assist. The significant improvements in pass strings and possessions nurtured more salient conversations about ways to improve the finer details.
In fact, the Gretna coaches found a direct correlation between Assist and coach engagement. For the Callaghan brothers, who coach together on Gretna’s 04 boys and girls squads, the whole process has been more streamlined.
“We couldn’t go back and do the work alone,” Darren said. “It’s like adding another coach to your staff.”
With a more fluid workflow that’s both more compartmentalized and nuanced, they were able to think up some new ideas on how to improve—and bring them to life on the pitch.
Possession metrics lead to good tweaks
The new reports illuminated a brewing problem: possession in the final third was terrible. They were completing as little as three percent of their passes at times. Once they saw that, the Callaghans set new goals, such as a 30 percent completion rate. This knowledge also stoked their imagination for how they could get there.
A season ago, Darren and Jono’s teams were using a 3-5-2 formation, with the wingers playing up almost the entire game. That left them too exposed at times, with the back three outnumbered or not getting back in time to track down the ball.
You can’t get any worse than what happened in the boys’ first game of the season, taking a 7-0 loss. Game two saw them come out in a 4-5-1, after a heavy emphasis in practice on building up the attacking forwards, before adding a second striker to the final third.
“By putting in a second striker, seeing what was working on that field, it was night and day,” Jono said. “We came off the field and parents were like, ‘Wow, this is a brand new team’.”
They’re going to continue the season with a more straightforward 4-4-2 look that evens the strength out. With the types of players they have, it’s sure to maximize their offensive ability.
“Seeing what was working on that field, it was night and day,” Jono said. “We came off the field and parents were like, ‘Wow, this is a brand new team’.”