Sponsored Content PCA’s vision is to build a world where every child benefits from a positive youth sports experience with a coach who inspires them to become the best version of themselves in the game and in life. PCA trains coaches and partners with youth sports organizations, parents, sports leaders, and communities to make youth sports more positive, equitable, and accessible to all kids regardless of social or economic circumstances. Read Positive Coaching Alliance stories Tricks of the Trade: Strategies for Athlete Engagement by Guest Post Positive Coaching Alliance April 25, 2025 | 2 minutes, 20 seconds read Check out more Positive Coaching Alliance video content on the Positive Coaching Alliance SportsEngine Play Channel Unintended chaos at practice usually occurs during the brief moments between activities. These Tricks of the Trade can help you run practices more smoothly. Identify the strategies you are most comfortable using, introduce them into your practices, and then return to them over and over again throughout the season. We also encourage you to work with your players to come up with your own tricks of the trade! With these strategies, you’ll run practices that flow better while minimizing disruptions and behavior issues.To remember the Tricks of the Trade strategies, all you have to do is play a game of T-A-G (Transitions, Attention Getters, Grouping Strategies.TransitionsThese examples will move a group from one location or activity to the next with minimal chaos.Monica is the head of the dragon, and Justin is the tail. Everyone else is in the body of the dragon. When I yell “Dragon!” form the dragon as quickly as possible … “Dragon!” (with older youth, say “Monica is the front of the line and Justin is the back of the line, everyone else line up between Monica and Justin.”)“Bump your volleyball to your partner two more times, then join me in a circle. You have ten seconds … nine…eight…”As you are moving from one area to another (down the hallway, from a circle to the baseball diamond, etc.) you call, “1+1 is …” and they respond, “2!” You call, “2+2 is …” and they respond, “4!” “4+4 is…”As students are coming together, give them two choices from which they yell out their preference. Keep naming choices until everyone is rounded up. “What do you prefer, summer or winter?” “What team do you prefer, Real Madrid or Barcelona?” “What do you prefer, strawberries or blueberries?”Attention GettersThese are examples to capture players’ attention, begin or endactivities, and transition between activities.“Form a circle in 5 (clap, clap) … 4 (clap, clap) … 3 (clap, clap) … 2 (clap, clap) … 1 (clap, clap).”“If you can hear my voice, clap once. If you can hear my voice, clap twice. If you can hear my voice, clap three times.”“Aaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaand FREEZE!”Call and response rhythm clap: Coach creates a rhythm clap, and players clap the rhythm back“If you hear my voice, touch your head. If you hear my voice, touch your knee. If you hear my voice, touch your shoulders.”“How many fingers do I have up?” (Briefly hold up several fingers.) “How many fingers do I have up?” (Briefly hold up a different number of fingers. Continue until you have their attention.)Coach says “1, 2, 3 Eyes on Me!” Players say “1, 2 Eyes on You!” Read the Full Article at Positive Coaching Alliance tags in this article Coach Issues & Advice Positive Coaching Alliance