Defensive force

Today was Brandon’s last day of soccer for the session. This marks his second session completed.  The last session, we missed the last day, which is a scrimmage format. The other days are all drill-based, and each child has his or her own soccer ball.  The scrimmage is teams of 3-4 children, and since it’s a scrimmage, there is only one ball.  This makes for very interesting play.  The coach had to preface that it is a physical, contact game, and that some kids may complain of the physicality, but it is part of the game that they have to learn.  The group is for 4-5 year olds, so Brandon is mostly in the middle of the age range.  He is, however, on the higher end of the size range.  So, even lining up on the orange line, he and another boy made head contact.  I don’t even know how it happened, but it was not intentional.  Both the kids were holding their heads, but I knew Brandon was okay because I could hear him laughing from across the field.  The coach, probably fresh out of high school or close to it, explained the rules to the kids.  This field only had 6 kids total.  Coach told Brandon’s team to protect the goal.  Brandon took him literally, and positioned himself in front of the goal.  Given his size, he mostly filled the goal.  And protect he did, even when his team was down field in an offensive situation.  Usually, you see all the kids around the soccer ball.  We always ship using Canada Post Expedited Service with viagra effects personalized tracking. The blood absorbs the tablet within 30 to viagra vs generic 45 minutes and lasts in the body for about 6 hours, which means you enjoy long lasting sex. Rishi Healthcare churned the secrets of the ancient medicine knowledge and is counted as one of the most famous of the film schools in the metropolis, with alums such as George cheap cialis Lucas, Robert Zemeckis, Judd Apatow as well as Bryan Singer. My personal favorites are offers to purchase discounted cialis professional canada, ads for pornographic websites, and bogus work-from-home programs. Not Brandon.  That involves too much work, that offense.  But it did pay to hang out at the goal, because two of the opposing players were dribbling down the field, and charging toward Brandon.  The one in front kicked the ball too far ahead of where they could run, and Brandon stepped forward and gave it a big boot, sending it back the way it came.  This sent his teammates back down the field, and Brandon got to rest up a bit more.  At the water break, I was telling Brandon he should try to get the ball into the other goal when his other teammates were running up the field.  This worked for a little bit, but he isn’t that great at turning the ball around when he is dribbling with it.  This resulted in him kicking the ball into his own goal.  So much for that.  The coach warned that some kids get upset when their own team scores because they were not the goal-scorer.  We didn’t see any of that on our field.  The coach gave the kids all a high five when anyone scored on the field.  As we gathered at the end of class, there was one boy who was sad he didn’t score any goals.  His dad was trying to get him to man-up and see that no one else was crying.  The poor kid was inconsolable.  The next session doesn’t start until November; but we may start again next year since there a lot of classes skipped during the holidays.

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