3 Rules for Denmarks Passing Exercises - Handballtraining Siglev Skjern | Handball inspires

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  • เผยแพร่เมื่อ 30 มิ.ย. 2024
  • Playing passes like Mikkel Hansen has to be learned. In Denmark, players are specifically trained to meet the high challenges. There are 3 rules in the foreground, which Magnus Siglev and the U19 of Skjern Handball brings us closer. Different passing exercises for different positions, but also a warm-up game for the goalkeepers will be shown.
    00:00 - 3 Rules for Denmarks Passing Exercises - Handballtraining
    00:49 - Passing Exercise in Pairs
    03:39 - Passing Exercise in the Group
    07:45 - Passing Exercise in Team
    08:50 - Goalkeeper Warm Up Game
    09:13 - Lineplayer / Pivot Coordinative Passing Exercise
    09:44 - Goalkeeper Warm Up with Passing Exercise
    #handballtraining #handball #handballexercise
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ความคิดเห็น • 12

  • @user-co2kh6xu2u
    @user-co2kh6xu2u 9 หลายเดือนก่อน +1

    When I become a professional coach I will always mention this coaching channel. Some seriously insightful content.

  • @chest8216
    @chest8216 2 ปีที่แล้ว +2

    Really good video

  • @kasunimekhala3850
    @kasunimekhala3850 2 ปีที่แล้ว

    hellow sir i am from srilanka. i am going to start hand ball for my school but i have not ball. can you help me take a ball.

  • @ralogicful
    @ralogicful 2 ปีที่แล้ว

    First, he is teaching wrong technique: players don't move their feet in the direction of the pass, which makes passes imprecise. Second, players are not aggressive, just standing passively, and such passes are easy to read and intercept. Third, you don't pass the ball in a jump, the decision must be made at the last step; if you jump, you shoot. It is unbelievable how rich with players Denmark is, if despite of such lack of knowledge their national team is still on the top.

    • @handballinspires
      @handballinspires  2 ปีที่แล้ว +3

      Hej Ralogic, thank you for your thoughts. But I don't agree with you! I hope that it worked for you, but especially in my philosophy all your points I wouldn't teach. But the good think is you can do what you want! All the best!
      Martin

    • @ralogicful
      @ralogicful 2 ปีที่แล้ว

      @@handballinspires Dear Martin, but isn't it objective? If you make a step in one direction and play the ball in the other one, then a) the pass is imprecise, and b) it is easy to read and intercept because you are not dangerous. As to the jump pass, it is also the basics: the probability of steps and interception is much higher; why getting yourself into such a dangerous situation? They taught us all this in school.
      Then what's the point of static non-aggressive passing of the ball, standing on the straight legs.

    • @ralogicful
      @ralogicful 2 ปีที่แล้ว

      @@handballinspires he just doesn't explain the technique. The majority is using neither hips nor legs, passing with just arm, the ball constantly goes down.

    • @Flex873
      @Flex873 2 ปีที่แล้ว +2

      @@ralogicful In ideal scenarios you would be right: Pass in direction of feet. That's what you learn early on/at young age. But when getting older, attackers have to increasingly react to the decision of the defence, e.g. Similarly it is with jumps: throwing should be the first option, but if a block seems to strong, passing to e.g. the pivot can be a strong option.
      Ofc it is more difficult and the players in the video have not yet perfected these skills, but they get increasingly variably by training these variations. That's at least my view on it

    • @ralogicful
      @ralogicful 2 ปีที่แล้ว

      @@Flex873 sorry but I will respectfully disagree again. I played for 20 years at a reasonable level, and if anything, my career only confirmed the rules that I cited above. If you ran in one direction and played the ball in another one, you ran wrong. If you played the ball in a jump, you've made a judgement mistake. Anyway, teaching children wrong technique intentionally is wrong IMHO.