Does having a strong left foot provide a real advantage to a player in terms of recruiting? Is this something that coaches look for or do they assume they can develop most kids to kick well with both feet?
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Left Foot Advantage?
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UnregisteredTags: None
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Unregistered
Originally posted by Unregistered View PostDoes having a strong left foot provide a real advantage to a player in terms of recruiting? Is this something that coaches look for or do they assume they can develop most kids to kick well with both feet?
Being able to take set plays with either foot is also a strong point.
Each college coach we spoke too emphasized these points.
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Unregistered
Originally posted by Unregistered View PostDoes having a strong left foot provide a real advantage to a player in terms of recruiting? Is this something that coaches look for or do they assume they can develop most kids to kick well with both feet?
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Unregistered
Originally posted by Unregistered View PostThe feedback I've gotten regarding the ability to have a strong left foot is that they like it when a player can play either foot without having to think about it and move effortlessly in either direction.
Being able to take set plays with either foot is also a strong point.
Each college coach we spoke too emphasized these points.
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Unregistered
Originally posted by Unregistered View PostThe feedback I've gotten regarding the ability to have a strong left foot is that they like it when a player can play either foot without having to think about it and move effortlessly in either direction.
Being able to take set plays with either foot is also a strong point.
Each college coach we spoke too emphasized these points.
Why would one need to use a weaker foot on a set play?? Fast footwork is when you need both feet to be strong, not set plays!! Imagine David Beckham taking a free kick or corner with his weaker foot OR even worse- imagine if Beckham's coaches told him this when he was younger!! - he probably would not be the multi-million dollar player he is today because he wouldn't have put enough time into working on his strong foot on set plays and his pin-point accuracy would not be where it is today- making him an AVERAGE player.
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Unregistered
There is definitely an advantage for a left back if your are a left foot dominate player to potentially receive more playing time. All the pressure in play would be from the right side so being able to keep balls in and make accurate long passes on the ground and over the top would favor the left footed player without a doubt.
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Unregistered
Originally posted by Unregistered View PostDoes having a strong left foot provide a real advantage to a player in terms of recruiting? Is this something that coaches look for or do they assume they can develop most kids to kick well with both feet?
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Unregistered
Definitely a big plus to be left footed if one is a left back -- every coach wants a left foot left back if they can get a decent one. Also somewhat of a plus at left mid (eg for dribbling up the line and crossing), but useful to have a decent right foot also (for coming inside and shooting). 3d position it is useful at is right wing (say in a 4-3-3) so can come inside and shoot - a la Robben at Bayern Munich.
All players should strive to learn to shoot and cross well with both feet (but risky for a college coach to assume the player will learn that if they can't do it already), but there are very, very few true two-footed players. I remember seeing a technical study of World Cup plays. Almost all players - the best in the world - take 90% of their touches with their dominant foot.
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