Coordination
Coordination improves when the ball stays part of the drill.Feet and touch together.
For youth players and coaches building coordination through football-specific touches.

Soccer Coordination Drills
Coordination in soccer is not only quick feet. Players coordinate steps, touches, body angle, balance, and the next decision. STRK connects those pieces through target-based ball work.
Train body balance and touch direction in the same movement.
Use both feet and different surfaces to build coordination.
Keep the drill slow enough for clean mechanics before adding reaction.
Coordination is a football action
A coordinated player can move the ball, adjust steps, and stay balanced for the next action. That is why the ball should stay in the drill.
Use simple paths first
Young players need repeatable patterns before random cues. Simple target paths help them feel where the body and ball should go.
Add variety carefully
Change the foot, surface, angle, or cue timing one at a time so the drill stays readable.
Session ideas
Make the next touch measurable.
Inside-foot coordination
Move between two close targets using small inside touches and balanced recovery steps.
Sole-roll balance
Roll the ball across the body, stop, then reset stance before the next target.
Mixed-foot path
Repeat the same target path with strong foot, weak foot, then both feet.
Common questions.
What are soccer coordination drills?
They train how a player combines movement, balance, body shape, and ball control.
Can coordination be trained at home?
Yes. Compact target-based drills can help players build coordination in a safe home space.
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Training guides
Clubs, academies, and distribution partners can contact [email protected].