Youth guides
Youth training should build clean habits.Short and repeatable.
This hub collects STRK guides for young players and parents. The focus is practical development: short sessions, clean touches, weaker-foot confidence, and simple ways for parents to judge progress.

Keep the focus narrow
Young players benefit from one clear technical goal per session: first touch, weak foot, close control, or reaction after control is stable.
Parents can track simple outcomes
Useful signs are visible: the ball stops in the zone, the player stays balanced, and both feet get honest repetitions.
Do not replace play
Structured training should support team practice, free play, rest, and match experience.
Topic cluster
Youth Soccer Training Guides
Common questions.
What should kids train at home for soccer?
First touch, ball control, weak foot, footwork, and short reaction tasks can all be trained at home in safe spaces.
How long should youth soccer sessions be?
Short focused blocks of five to ten minutes can work well, especially when technique is the priority.
Start here
Clubs, academies, and distribution partners can contact [email protected].










