If your child plays on an academy or travel team in Columbus, you’re already investing serious time and money into their soccer development. The coaching is often excellent — structured sessions, competitive games, and a team environment that builds character. But there’s a gap most parents don’t see until it’s too late, and understanding what soccer technical training actually is can help you spot it early.
Key Points
| The gap | Academy coaches manage 16-22 players — your child gets 2-4 minutes of individual attention per session |
| What’s missing | Individual technical development: first touch, weak foot, 1v1 skills, close control under pressure |
| Why it’s not the coach’s fault | Team training is designed for team play — individual skill work requires a different format |
| The fix | Supplemental 1-on-1 technical training with a qualified coach, once per week |
| Timeline to results | Noticeable improvement in 4-6 weeks with consistent weekly sessions |
The Gap Parents Don’t See
Academy coaches have 16 to 22 players on the field and 60 to 90 minutes per session. Do the math: your child gets roughly 2 to 4 minutes of individual attention per practice. The rest of the time they’re waiting in line, standing in a grid, or playing small-sided games where the ball finds them maybe 30 times.
That’s not a coaching failure — it’s a structural limitation. Team training is designed to develop team play: positioning, shape, pressing triggers, combination play. And it does that well. But individual technical development? That requires something different entirely.
What Academy Training Actually Focuses On
Here’s what a typical academy session covers, and it’s all important stuff:
- Tactical shape and positioning — where to be and when to move
- Team pressing and defensive structure — how to win the ball as a unit
- Set pieces and game scenarios — corners, free kicks, restarts
- Small-sided games — decision-making under pressure
- Fitness and conditioning — built into drills rather than isolated
All of this is essential for coaching sports at a competitive level. Your kid needs it. But notice what’s missing from that list.
What Gets Missed: Individual Technical Development
So what is soccer technical training? It’s the focused, repetitive work on the skills your child uses every time the ball arrives at their feet: first touch, receiving on the half-turn, striking technique, weak-foot development, close control under pressure, and the ability to beat a defender 1v1.
These skills don’t develop in a group setting. They develop through hundreds of deliberate repetitions with immediate feedback — something that’s nearly impossible when a coach is managing a full squad.
Think about it this way: a pianist doesn’t learn to play by only performing in an orchestra. They spend hours at the keyboard alone, working through scales and passages with a teacher watching their hands. Soccer technique works the same way.
Why This Isn’t the Coach’s Fault
This is important to understand, because too many parents blame the academy coach when their child’s technical skills plateau. Your kid’s coach likely sees the same gaps you’re noticing — the heavy first touch, the reluctance to use the left foot, the panic when pressed. But they simply don’t have the session time to fix it individually.
Academy coaches are hired to develop a competitive team. They’re evaluated on results, player retention, and progression to the next age group. Individual skill remediation isn’t their job description, even if they wish it were.
Apps and Solo Training vs. Real Coaching
You might be thinking, “Can’t my kid just do extra work on their own?” And yes, solo practice matters. Apps like Techne Futbol give players structured ball-mastery routines they can follow in the backyard, and that’s genuinely useful for building comfort on the ball.
But here’s what an app can’t do: it can’t watch your child’s body shape when they receive a pass and tell them their hips are closed. It can’t see that they’re planting their standing foot too far from the ball on their shot. It can’t adjust a drill in real time because the player has mastered one variation and needs to be challenged with the next.
Technology is a supplement, not a substitute. The real accelerator is a trained eye watching your child move and making corrections that stick.
How Supplemental Training Fills the Gap
This is where targeted 1-on-1 or small-group technical training changes the trajectory. In a single 60-minute session focused on your child alone, they’ll get more individual touches and corrections than they’d receive in two weeks of team practice.
A good supplemental trainer will:
- Assess your child’s current technical baseline honestly
- Build a progression plan that addresses their specific weaknesses
- Create game-realistic scenarios — not just cone drills — so skills transfer to matches
- Communicate with you about what they’re seeing and what to work on between sessions
The parent soccer community in Columbus is increasingly recognizing this. Families whose kids play for Crew SC Academy, Ohio Premier, Ohio Elite, or COSL travel teams are adding supplemental technical work — not because team coaching is bad, but because it’s incomplete by design.
What to Look for in a Technical Trainer
Not all private coaches are created equal. When you’re evaluating someone to work with your child, look for:
- Playing background at a competitive level — they need to have lived the skills they’re teaching
- Ability to explain, not just demonstrate — great players aren’t automatically great teachers
- Session structure that’s progressive — each session should build on the last, not repeat the same warm-up routine
- Game-realistic training — if every drill is static and predictable, skills won’t transfer to Saturday mornings
- Clear communication with parents — you should know what your child is working on and why
Frequently Asked Questions
At what age should kids start supplemental technical training?
Most kids benefit from individual attention starting around age 8 or 9, when they’re developmentally ready for focused skill repetition. Before that, free play and fun are more important than structured drilling.
Will extra training conflict with my child’s academy schedule?
It shouldn’t. A good technical trainer works around your team schedule and focuses on complementing what the academy does — not competing with it. One session per week is usually enough to see real progress.
How quickly will I see improvement?
Parents typically notice changes within 4 to 6 weeks: a cleaner first touch, more confidence in 1v1 situations, willingness to use the weaker foot. The biggest gains come from consistency over months, not intensity over days.
Is this just for elite-track players?
Not at all. Recreational and travel-level players often see the most dramatic improvement because there’s more low-hanging fruit to address. You don’t need to be chasing a scholarship to benefit from better technique.
What’s the difference between a personal trainer and a technical coach?
A personal trainer in the soccer context might focus on fitness, speed, and agility. A technical coach focuses specifically on ball skills, decision-making, and soccer IQ. For most youth players, the technical side is where the biggest gaps exist.
Ready to Fill the Technical Gap?
Soccercademy offers 1-on-1 technical training sessions in Columbus designed to complement your child’s academy program. Every session is built around what your player specifically needs to improve.