Objective
Groove clean, safe goalkeeper handling at every height: a strong set position, the correct W-shape or scoop, catching to the chest and securing the ball before distributing.
Setup
Area
A goalmouth or a 6x6m working square with a marked goal line
Players
Keeper and one or two servers, working in short rotations
Equipment
A supply of balls at each server, Cones marking the working area and set line, A goal or two markers, Gloves for the keeper
Duration
12–15 minutes
How it works
- 1
Find the set position
The keeper starts every repetition in a balanced set position: feet just wider than the shoulders, weight on the balls of the feet, hands out of the pockets and ready in front of the body. The server checks the keeper is still and set before releasing the ball.
- 2
W-shape for the high ball
The server throws or volleys chest-high and above. The keeper takes the ball in the W-shape — thumbs behind it almost touching, fingers spread — and catches out in front of the face where they can see hands and ball, then pulls it into the chest to secure.
- 3
Scoop the low ball
The server rolls firm ground balls to either side of the keeper. The keeper gets their body behind the line of the ball, drops one knee toward the ground as a long barrier and scoops it up with fingers pointing down, so a spill still hits the body rather than trickling through.
- 4
Catch the waist-height ball
For balls arriving at the midriff, the keeper cradles the ball into the stomach with hands underneath and forearms wrapping over the top, collapsing the body slightly around it. This is the awkward height that punishes lazy hands, so it gets its own focused reps.
- 5
Handle, secure and distribute
Add a decision to every catch: after securing the ball the keeper immediately rolls or throws it out to a marked target, then resets to the set position. This links clean handling to the start of the counter-attack rather than treating the catch as the end of the action.
Coaching points
Always start set: feet balanced, weight forward on the balls of the feet, hands ready — a keeper caught flat-footed will fumble a routine ball.
Form the W-shape for high catches, thumbs behind the ball almost touching, and take it in front of the face where you can see hands and ball together.
Get the whole body behind the line of the ball, especially on low shots — the hands catch, but the body is the safety net.
Catch to the chest and secure the ball before doing anything else; earn the catch first, then think about distribution.
Watch the ball all the way into the hands and give with the catch, cushioning it rather than letting it bounce off stiff palms.
Variations
Reaction handling
The server stands close and fires balls in quick succession at varied heights and sides with little warning. The keeper must reset to the set position and reselect the correct hand shape each time, sharpening reactions and decision-making under a faster tempo.
Handling under a challenge
Add a passive attacker who applies light contact as the keeper catches, so they learn to hold the ball securely and protect it through a challenge — the reality of claiming a high ball in a crowded box rather than in clean space.
Build it in Coach Board
In Coach Board, place the keeper in the goalmouth and animate serves arriving at three heights — high, waist and low to a corner — with a labelled marker on each for W-shape, cradle and scoop. Then animate the catch turning straight into a throw out to a full-back breaking wide, so the loop shows handling as the launchpad for the counter rather than an isolated catch.
Open Coach Board