Water breaks interrupt practice, but they’re also built-in teaching moments. Use them to reinforce what you’re working on and build team connection.
Equipment needed: Water bottles or a cooler.
How to run it:
- Call water break at a natural stopping point (after a drill, not in the middle of reps).
- All kids go to the same water spot. No splitting off to isolated corners.
- While kids are drinking (30 seconds), you highlight something from the last drill: “That last set, I saw three players calling out plays. That’s what communication looks like.”
- Ask one question that kids answer while drinking: “What did you notice in that drill?” or “Who saw someone do it right?”
- Back to work in 2 minutes max.
What to look for:
If water breaks turn into chat sessions where you lose the group’s attention, you’ve lost control of practice. If kids are isolated and plopped in front of a cooler, you’ve missed a teaching moment. The goal is hydration plus connection to what you’re building.
Variation: For very young kids (5-7), make water breaks playful. “Last one to the water is a banana” or some silly thing. For older kids (13-14), use them as brief strategy talks: “Next drill, watch how we want you to position here.”