
Football Drills
V-pull push
Training kids in the 8–14 age bracket is a bit of a balancing act. You aren’t trying to build a tactical mastermind yet; you’re trying to build a player who feels like the ball is just an extension of their foot.
At this "golden age" of development, it’s all about coordination and confidence. If they can’t control the ball under their own feet, they’ll never be able to look up and make a pass. Here is a breakdown of the most effective, high-impact drills that kids can actually do anywhere—even in a driveway or a small backyard.
This is the golden age where players develop:
First touch
Balance
Agility
Weak foot confidence
Decision-making
If these foundations are strong, everything else becomes easier later. Here are the most effective football drills for this age group: simple, powerful, and doable even at home.
Why It’s Important: Builds rhythm, coordination, and comfort with the ball.
How To Do It
Keep the ball stationary.
Alternate feet tapping the top of the ball.
Stay light on your toes.
Keep knees slightly bent.
Duration: 30 seconds × 3 sets
Pro Tip: Encourage kids to increase speed while maintaining control.
1. The Basics: Toe Taps & Tick Tocks
These are the "bread and butter" of ball mastery. They might look simple, but they build the rhythm and light-footedness needed for everything else.
Toe Taps: This is about dancing on the ball. Alternate feet, tapping the very top of the ball with your toes. Keep it light, keep the knees bent, and try to stay on the balls of your feet.
Tick Tocks (Inside Touches): Knock the ball back and forth between the insides of the feet. The goal is to keep the ball centered under the body while moving the feet as quickly as possible.
Duration: 30–45 seconds × 3 sets
This drill improves reaction speed and builds strong fundamentals.
Cone Dribbling (The Agility Test)
In a real match, players rarely run in a straight line. They need to weave.
How to do it: Set up 5 or 6 markers (cones, water bottles, or even shoes) in a line. Have the player weave through them using only the right foot, then only the left, and finally both.
Encourage small, "baby" touches. The closer the ball stays to the foot, the harder it is for a defender to steal.
Duration: 5–10 minutes practice
V-Pull Push (Ball Control Under Pressure)Why It’s Important?
Improves control while changing direction quickly.
How To Do It
Pull the ball back using sole.
Push it forward using inside of the same foot.
Alternate feet.
Duration: 20 reps per foot × 3 sets
This drill builds confidence in tight spaces.
Wall Passing (First Touch Mastery)Why It’s Important
Improves passing accuracy and first touch control.
How To Do It
Pass the ball against a wall.
Control the rebound.
Pass again in one or two touches.
Duration: 5 minutes continuous practice
This develops awareness and quick reactions.
Why Ages 8–14 Are Crucial: Between these ages, kids develop:
Neural coordination
Muscle memory
Reaction speed
Technical base
Repetition at this stage creates automatic control later. Even 10 minutes of daily practice is more powerful than 2 hours once a week.
Can Kids Practice Without a Ground?
The answer is Yes.
Most of these drills:
Require minimal space
Can be done indoors
Build foundational skills
Consistency matters more than location.
How to Structure a 10-Minute Routine
Here’s a simple daily plan:
Toe Taps – 1 minute
Tick Tocks – 1 minute
V-Pull Push – 2 minutes
Cone Dribbling – 3 minutes
Wall Passing – 3 minutes