08 Gridiron gear 8 box case break
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Duration : 0:26:29
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Duration : 0:26:29
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Remove odor and dry out damp, smelling soccer shoes, hockey gear, and any sports equipment overnight with SportzGemz.
Duration : 0:1:0
?The PowerKick STS is an innovative new device that will help develop superior strength training and improve foot speed through repetition. Each soccer exercise includes safe and effective training drills for kids that were developed by soccer star Hector Marinaro.
Duration : 0:2:10
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Duration : 0:27:5
ok im about 5’7 120 pounds with equipment and 112 without it and i can run a 6 flat in 50 yard(I think this is slow for me)……. what tips do u have about going into freshman football for the first time because i never realy played an organized sport besides soccer…. and also why do people say be prepared to puke wen playing real football for the first time.
Congrats on playing football, it is unlike anyother sport. You will not puke if you condition properly. Do loads of windsprints and weightlifting. You will notice a decreased 40yd time after a little while of weightlifting and sprints. Mentally preapare yourself for camp, soccer cannot even prepare. You have kids that are trying to hurt you. The practices are grueling, physically and mentally. It will be a shock, soccer is a a placid game, in football we try to really hit the other guy so hard he doesn’t want to stand back up, coaches will tell you to do that as well. Just have a mindset coming in that you will not quit and you will make it through, I play college football and I have had some moments of doubt, it is totally normal. That said, you need to push these things to the back of your mind.
after a few days of learning the components, we put it all together. This is the first day of the whole lifts.
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i’m going to a private high school next year and it is very well known for its athletic department. i’d really like to join something but i don’t know what yet. basically, i do have really good hand-eye coordination, and i’m pretty good with anything as long as it’s not soccer or hockey (or anything where the equipment is down by my feet all the time). i’m really interested in all the ‘ball’ sports, and i like running so anything with a lot of running would be good. any ideas?
Tennis, baseball, maybe basketball.
My son will be a freshman and is very good at soccer. His school is starting a new high school soccer team and his middle school coach assures me that he will make the team. He told me he wanted to play, so I bought him all new equipment. Now that the time has come, he says he doesn’t want to play. I think he is nervous because he doesn’t know the other kids. He says he doesn’t want an "obligation". I told him that if he doesn’t play, then he is obligated to ME. He has to spend the time that he would be in soccer practice with me every night, whether he is helping me with chores or just sitting with me to watch TV for 6 weeks. So he decided he would play. He was fine for a week, and now he’s not wanting to go again. All he wants to do is be with his girlfriend. She goes to all of his soccer games, so I don’t get that either and she is in sports. I don’t want to "make" him play. I just want to "encourage" him. Should I keep "pushing" him or have I already gone too far?
Ask your son. Talk to him and explain that you were supporting his decision and now you have all this equipment. Ask for his suggestion on how you should deal with the equipment and whether he thinks it is fair that you bought all of it and he’s not using it. He might come up with a good idea, plus you are opening communication with him. Let him feel in control of his life, because ultimately, he will be, and by doing this, you are coaching him.
Jabulani, the World Cup ball for South Africa 2010, viewed in slow motion. This video was taken during testing of the ball for http://www.soccercleats101.com I think the most impressive aspect is how the ball bounces out of the air!
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Day 1, as always, takes a little more time to wind up as camp groups need to be organized. 8 groups needed to be divided by age and gender. We ended up having 40 boys and girls ages U7 and U8 with 20 boys and 16 girls, which allowed us to divide up the group pretty evenly. The remaining 6 groups were put together co-gender and split up by age. All 8 groups were split off to be trained by 8 separate lead coaches with a College Player and high school player as assistants to each lead coach. Each group was given a number. This number was to be remembered every day for organizational purposes. Parachutes and speed bands were utilized for one of our speed, agility, and quickness stations. At this station, the lead coach instructed on proper posture, and utilized the equipment to provide enough resistance to assist in teaching proper running technique. Ladders, cones, and hurdles were utilized at the other speed station and the lead coach there instructed the kids on correct lateral movement, change of direction, and first step. The body mechanics stations were implemented with plant foot position in mind and having the kids balance on 1 leg. They were also instructed on proper foot position and strike foot position on ball and follow through. Approximately 30 kids from U5-U6 age group were taken into their own area and the clinic was run from 9-10am.
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