COVID-19 Updates to SDSC Programming
Helpful Links
Player Tools
SDSC has developed an at-home training program to help players work on and improve their game. This program that can be done a couple days a week to help players improve their technical ability with the ball. The videos follow along with the homework program and give a brief demonstration of the techniques listed in the documents.
Recent News
We spoke with Dr. Kate Machado at the University of San Diego, about how to best fuel for a soccer game. She put together helpful nutritional materials for SDSC players that will be helpful for your child prior to their next match.
It has been an incredible year and all of us at San Diego Soccer Club want to thank our parents, our coaches and most importantly our players for hanging in there with us for this past year. THANK YOU.
We had to make the hard decision to cancel our Spring Rec Season this year. We have developed a solution that we feel will provide a great experience for the kids this fall while ensuring that they receive quality instructions…
SDSC was happy to be one of six SD clubs to contribute data to the White Paper study. The San Diego soccer community is calling upon its clubs and families to continue to support these efforts within the Kids 1st Campaign.
Coach Napier shares Part 5 - the last piece of his multi-part blog, about his professional coaching career, his time in San Diego, and with SDSC.
Coach Napier shares Part 4 of his professional soccer career, about life as a coach and then manager at Bradford City in England.
“Become comfortable being uncomfortable” is something Coach Bolin’s players hear from him often. In the situation all of us are enduring, this message has never been more appropriate. Read more from Coach on this concept and ideas to combine soccer training, fitness and an overall great workout when training to get back on the field.
Coach Napier shares Part 3 of his professional soccer career, starting when he signed his first contract as an apprentice in 1961 and then moving to living life in America in 1979.
It’s funny how life works sometimes, where our prior experiences intertwine with our current situations in unexpected ways. Coach Aaron Jaffe shares how a childhood kitchen lesson prepared him for how to keep soccer going during quarantine.
At age 15 learning to become a professional soccer player is not easy, and it is just not about the playing field. John Napier shares more about his soccer journey in Part 2 of the Coach Napier Coaches blog.