Placekicking
- Choose Your Approach
- Warm-ups
- Stretching
- Kicking routine
- Mental routine
- Proper distance and angle from the ball at ball address
- Foot placement at ball address
- Position of arms, shoulders and hips at ball address
- Where to look when waiting for the ball to be snapped
- What to think as the ball is snapped
- Timing with the center, holder and you
- When to start the take-off for the kick
- Steps
- Where to look when approaching the ball
- Proper take-off toward the ball
- Foot speed at the approach
- Position of hips and shoulders at ball approach
- Position of arms at ball approach
- Position of kicking foot prior to the kick
- Positions of kicking thigh and knee at explosion into the ball
- Position of arms at contact
- Foot placement and angle of planting foot at contact
- Position of head at contact.
- Position of shoulders at contact
- Position of hips at contact
- What part of the ball to kick
- What part of the foot kicks the ball
- Position of laces, tilt and angle of the ball on contact
- Ball rotation on contact
- Position of head during follow-through
- Position of shoulders during follow-through
- Position of arms during follow-through
- Position of planting foot during follow-through
- Position of hips during follow-through
- Position of kicking foot during follow-through
- Position of head after follow-through
- Position of kicking foot after follow-through
- Where to land after follow-through
- Speed of ball rotation after the kick
- Holding the ball
- Which hand to hold the ball
- Wind direction and speed
- Temperature
- Seam vs. panel vs. laces
- Accuracy
- Indicator as to why the kick missed
- Increasing traction
- Kick-off
- Normal kick-off
- On-side kick-off
- Practice Drills
- Height
- Maximum Distance
- Quick kick
- Bad holder
- Weekly workout schedule
- Game day schedule
- Miscellaneous
- Adjustments for missed kicks
- Injuries
- Weight training
- Equipmen
- Glossary
Choose Your Approach
You have two decisions to make. Will you be a "two" or "three-step" kicker and will you be a straight-on or soccer-style kicker? The choice between being straight-on and soccer-style kicker is easy, be a soccer-style kicker.
Two or three step approach
Placekicking can be accomplished using either a Two-Step or Three-Step approach.
Many coaches prefer a Two-Step approach to get to the ball faster. Some reasons: the holder is too slow getting the ball down; the center’s snap is too slow; or the offensive line allows penetration.
Advantages to the Two-Step approach:
- There is less distance between the kicker and the ball.
Advantages to the Three-Step approach:
- Provides more power as a result of the forward movement of the body to the ball.
- Provides greater balance at the approach to the ball.
- Compensates for a bad snap. Enables you to start-stop-restart your stride and still maintain balance.
- Most high school, college, and pro kickers use the Three-Step approach.
Straight-on or Soccer-sSyle
Most college kickers and all NFL kickers use the soccer-style approach, yet many high school kickers are straight-on kickers because that is what they learned when they were just starting.
Advantages to Straight-on kicking:
- Easiest to learn.
- Ball gets higher more quickly.
- Requires less contortion of the body, legs, and feet.
Disadvantages to Straight-on kicking:
- Most kids start kicking the ball with the toe, yet approach the ball at an angle, thus combining the straight-on and soccer-style approaches without realizing it, resulting in awkward form and decreased accuracy.
- There are very few soccer-style kicking coaches and fewer straight-on kicking coaches.
- Generally not taught in college and not at all in the pros.
- Not as accurate using today’s soccer shoes. You have to purchase a special straight-on shoe or an attachment for the shoe, both of which are hard to find in local sporting goods stores.
- Attaching the accessory is hard.
- Many kickers also play another position. Changing into a kicking shoe is time-consuming.
- The ball does not travel as far.
- A kicker who uses a soccer shoe to kick straight-on has to make contact with approximately a 1” area of the tip of the shoe, magnifying minor form errors.
- Developing leg strength takes a lot longer.
Advantages to Soccer-style kicking:
- More accurate because the soccer-style kicker can use almost a 6” area of the shoe to make contact.
- Minor form errors are not as likely to result in a miss.
- More power in the leg swing, resulting in greater distance.
Disadvantages to Soccer-style kicking:
- THE MOST DIFFICULT POSITION TO MASTER SUCCESSFULLY
- Once learned, there are no disadvantages
Kicking barefoot.
Kicking barefoot is not recommended, as it poses a severe danger to the toes and skin. Frequently, you will kick the tee and the ground, and it is painful enough to hit either while wearing a shoe, let alone not wearing one.
Previous | Next
