Sliding Tackle Drill Game to Practice Them Safely

Sliding tackle drill game with 3 stations to practise recovery defending and safe tackling

This sliding tackle drill is a competitive defending circuit that trains recovery defending, emergency blocks, and safer sliding technique under pressure. Use it when you want realistic last-ditch defending without turning practice into reckless challenges.

Setup

This drill is designed for 4 players, making it ideal for low-player training sessions, small group training, or short defensive blocks within a larger team session.

You do not need a full football pitch — just enough space to place three attacking stations and two small goals. Extra players can rotate in or act as servers if needed.

Set up three stations in a line or shallow arc. Station 1 (central) includes the mannequin/screen for the headed clearance. Stations 2 and 3 each face a small goal, with a cone line that controls when the attacker is allowed to shoot.

Equipment Needed

Rules & Instructions

Run the circuit at a sharp pace, but keep every challenge controlled. Keep the sequence moving so the defender has to recover quickly between stations.

  • Start Play:
    • Start with the defender at Station 1.
    • Play a throw-in to the defender so they can head it back over the mannequin/screen.
  • Attackers:
    • At Station 1, serve the ball to start play.
    • At Station 2, shoot only once the defender’s foot crosses the cone line.
    • At Station 3, apply the same shooting rule as Station 2.
    • Receive a penalty point if you shoot before the defender’s foot crosses the cone line (Stations 2 and 3).
  • Defender:
    • At Station 1, head the ball back over the mannequin/screen.
    • Concede a point if you fail to clear the ball cleanly at Station 1.
    • Sprint to Station 2 immediately after the header.
    • Block, tackle, or intercept the shot at Station 2.
    • Recover again to Station 3 and defend the next shot.
  • Restart:
    • After each shot/save/out-of-play at Stations 2 and 3, play a new ball immediately.
    • Keep 9 balls ready to complete 3 rounds without interruption.
    • Collect balls before switching to the next defender.
  • Rotation:
    • Defender works Station 1 → Station 2 → Station 3 in sequence.
    • After completing Station 3, the defender returns to Station 1 and repeats the circuit.
    • Complete 3 rounds with the same defender.
    • After 3 rounds, switch the defender with the Station 1 attacker.
    • After the next 3 rounds, switch the defender with the Station 2 attacker.
    • After the next 3 rounds, switch the defender with the Station 3 attacker.
    • Continue until all players have defended.
    • Record 1 point for each goal conceded, plus any penalty points.
    • Declare the winner as the player with the lowest total points conceded once all players have defended.

Coaching Tips

  • Recover on a curved line to reduce the shooting angle and arrive side-on.
  • Stay on your feet first and use the slide as a last option.
  • Keep your body shape open (side-on) and avoid frontal lunges.
  • When sliding, go side-on, take ball-first contact, and commit fully with clean technique.
  • As the attacker, hold the ball and time the finish around the cone-line trigger.
  • Choose a safe surface and stop play immediately if technique breaks down.

Why It Works for Adult Amateur Teams

Adult amateur matches are full of imperfect moments: an attacker beats your line and you’re recovering, a poor clearance drops to an opponent, or you’re sprinting back toward your own box with seconds to defend. This drill recreates those last-ditch situations and forces defenders to recover with the right angle, delay the finish, and make a controlled decision on whether to stay up or slide.

Because the defender hits a third action while fatigued, the drill also reinforces calm technique under pressure — the exact moment where rushed tackling becomes dangerous and ineffective.

Key Outcomes

  • Outcome: Better recovery defending angles and emergency defending habits.
  • Outcome: Improved timing for blocks, tackles, and interceptions close to goal.
  • Outcome: Safer sliding tackle technique used as a controlled last option.
  • Outcome: More patient finishing and cleaner shot timing from attackers.

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