25 Levels of Freestyle Soccer: Easy to Complex
Released on 08/14/2023
My name's Caitlyn Schrepfer.
I've been challenged to do freestyle soccer skills
in 25 levels of increasing complexity.
[upbeat electronic music]
Freestyle soccer is unique in that it really is the art
of movement with the ball.
To me, complexity is increasingly difficult techniques
and fluidity of movement.
There truly are an unlimited amount of tricks,
but this is my personal interpretation of the challenge.
Level one, knee juggles.
We're starting with knee juggles
because they are the simplest thing
for an absolute beginner to learn.
The most common mistake is people actually make contact
with their literal knee, but it's actually
on the thigh where you wanna hit the ball.
You will drop it from your hands.
Bring your leg up to contact the ball
with about the middle of your thigh.
You wanna start with one juggle
at a time right back to your hands,
and then do two and then alternating right, left
before you start doing multiple knee juggles.
Most people tend to bend over just a little bit,
but make sure you're not bringing your chest down
to the ball, but you're bringing your knees up.
Level two, feet juggles.
Feet juggles require a couple
of more techniques than just knee juggles.
It's about the positioning of your foot.
It's locking your ankle.
It's striking the ball right on the knuckle of your big toe,
and you'll know if you make proper contact
because the ball shouldn't have too much back spin on it.
You want 50% or less of your power when you're juggling.
It's not striking the ball like you would in soccer,
but it's also not a hacky sack lift.
It's a light swing as if you were sitting
in your chair just like this.
Level three, foot stalls.
The techniques in order to learn a foot stall
and balance a foot stall really come in helpful
for later levels when you get into things like head stalls
and things like that.
The best way to start is to start with the ball
in your hands and literally place it onto your foot.
Sometimes you wanna pull your toe back
to help cushion the ball
and control it right there between your toes and your shin.
You'll know you have the foot stall down
when you can just kind of stand there more relaxed
and you don't really ever feel out of control.
Now that we've got foot stalls, knees and feet juggles,
let's move on to level four, flick ups.
Flick ups are the techniques that you use to get the ball
from the ground into the air to start freestyle.
For the most basic flick up, you roll the ball back
and you just chip your toe right underneath the ball
to pop it in the air a little bit.
When you wanna get a little bit more interesting,
you go from the inside, from the outside.
You can even flick it up with your heel,
but that becomes a little bit more complicated.
There's a whole spectrum of flick ups.
One of my favorite flick ups is called a slap.
You start with the ball in between your ankles.
You roll your right foot behind your left
and with your right foot,
you roll the ball up your left leg to flick the ball
up in the air and start juggling.
Level five, blocks.
Sidebar, freestyle can be broken down
into 40 different categories, lowers, any sort
of revolutions and tricks you do standing up, uppers,
which are tricks that you do chest and above, sitdowns,
which are any tricks you do when you're sitting
or laying down on the ground.
Blocks are any sorts
of catches with the ball, whether it's your knees, ankles,
that's a block, the knee catch.
Drop the ball with some backspin,
let it bounce, and then catch the ball nice
and gently between your knees.
So with the ankle catch, you want the ball in
between your ankles right on the bone, whereas a foot stall,
the ball is staying right on top of your foot.
The key with blocks is everything is gentle.
You don't wanna squeeze the ball too hard.
So even with these five levels,
you can already start to build your own freestyle combo.
As simple as a flick up into a couple of juggles.
Level six, crossovers.
They are introduction to lowers.
They're what we call a half a revolution trick.
You can do it off of a juggle or even off foot stalls.
After you flick that ball up,
you wanna swing your left foot over the ball,
and then you hop up to make contact with the ball.
You wanna make sure your body weight is centered still,
and you're standing mostly upright,
if not a little bent over.
You wanna hit about the same place
that you do when you're juggling.
So when you juggle,
your foot is about parallel to the ground.
When you do crossovers,
you wanna pull your toe back just a little bit
to keep the ball closer.
Level seven, hop the world.
We're moving from a 0.5 revolution trick
into the hop the world, which is one full revolution.
Hop the world is a little more complicated
because you actually incorporate both feet.
You start with your left foot
and you end with your right foot.
With crossover, the left foot is there,
but it doesn't actually touch the ball at any point.
From here, we can start to build a more interesting combo.
You have a couple of lowers tricks now, and we could build
with what we call the basics of freestyle.
Level eight, around the world.
Around the world is the most famous trick
in freestyle soccer.
You might've seen Ronaldinho do it.
You've seen it from the Joga Bonito ads.
It is a one revolution lowers trick where you start
with say your right foot, one revolution around the ball,
and then you end with a touch with your right foot.
When you're normally juggling with the ball,
you hit just like this,
but when you're doing it around the world, you're slicing,
which gives it a little bit of spin.
A lot of the times, people will kick the ball
and then try to get their foot around.
That presents a couple of issues.
One, the ball tends to go too high, and then two,
in splitting that into two different motions,
the kick and then the revolution, you lose time,
and it's a lot harder to get your foot around in time.
When you do it in one fluid motion,
you get the ball with the right height,
and you have the time to get your foot all the way over.
Level nine, Touzani around the world.
Touzani is actually the name of the creator of this trick,
one of the more notable figures in freestyle.
The Touzani around the world is a 1.5 revolution trick,
which is one full revolution,
and then a half a revolution to finish.
So you strike with the knuckle of your small toe right here,
one full revolution around like an around the world,
and then to finish, it's a crossover motion at the end.
The difficulty with this is striking the ball
with the outside of your foot
is a smaller surface and a lot less room
for error than it is with the inside of your foot.
Level 10, Lemmens around the world.
Lemmens around the world
is the most recognizable two revolution trick.
Imagine your right foot is starting in the air,
and that's the one that's going to be interacting
with the ball.
You're jumping off your left foot
and doing the revolutions with your right.
It's the same striking technique as the around the world.
But the difference with this one
as you make contact with that ball,
you wanna hop up off your other foot
to give you a little more height.
You're making contact here, but at the same time,
you're jumping and you make that first revolution,
complete the second revolution as you come down,
and then you finish the trick.
Level eleven, advanced blocks.
Advanced blocks, you can take the basic blocks
and then you start to spice it up a little bit.
So rather than knee catch straight down to an ankle catch,
you go from a knee catch into a crossed ankle catch.
Or you could do things like a thigh grab
and then pop the ball back up to start juggling.
Advanced blocks could come in
in a routine, say after a basic block like a knee catch.
You go knee to like, X ankle catch, a slap flick up.
It is the spice
of the routine rather than just the building blocks.
Level twelve, clipper.
Clipper is one of the more famous tricks in freestyle.
It is a stall the same way that you do a foot stall,
but with clipper, it's on the inside of your foot
while your right leg is wrapped behind your left leg.
The biggest difficulty when it comes
to clipper is your foot positioning
because you have to flex your ankle so that it sits parallel
to the ground with the inside of your foot face up,
which is actually not a natural position
for anybody's foot to do,
so a lot of people have to stretch their foot
in order to get it to reach that position.
Now that we've started to incorporate a little bit of spice
into our routine, we can get a little more interesting.
Now we're gonna move to the floor,
and we're gonna do level thirteen, sitdowns.
Sitdown crossovers are one
of the simplest tricks that you can learn sitting down.
You wanna be sitting upright, hands on the floor behind you,
cross your left leg over the top,
and make contact with your right foot.
When it comes to sitdowns,
the biggest difference is in the foot positioning.
Lock your ankle still, but rather than parallel
to the floor, it's a little bit more pointed,
and you wanna make contact with the same part of your foot.
But the key with this
is your foot can't be super far from you.
You need to keep your knees bent
and your feet close to your chest.
Whenever I think of sitdown crossovers,
I always remember the show when I had to learn them.
I was front and center on the stage on Broadway,
and I was probably about six, seven months into freestyle.
I had to do sitdown crossovers
never having learned them before.
And so now every time I do them,
I just get a nice little flashback.
Level 14, sole stall.
So with sole stall, you're going to be laying on your back.
Your leg's going to be up in the air almost locked out,
and the ball's going to be balancing on the sole
of your foot while it's right above you.
The easiest way to train this is to just place the ball
on top of your sole and learn to balance it.
It's an awkward thing for most people,
and you really have to learn the technique
of just balancing the ball at first.
You're ready to learn a sole stall
when you have basic sitdowns down,
you need the patience that it takes to learn all
of the previous tricks in order to learn sole stall.
It took me eight months.
Level 15, raised sole stall swipes.
Same technique as a sole stall,
except now you're rolling back,
so you're just balancing on your shoulders.
Your hands are supporting your waist,
and your leg is gonna be a little bit higher up in the air.
You have that ball balanced in a stall.
You're gonna pop the ball up,
and you're gonna swipe your left leg underneath the ball
and then catch it again.
So it's here, pop the ball up, swipe under, and catch.
[upbeat electronic music]
Level 16, thigh pop.
Thigh pop is often used as one
of the most beginner transitions,
but it can be used just as a trick in and of itself.
So with the thigh pop, you'll start sitting down.
You'll catch the ball right behind your leg in a thigh grab,
you wanna roll onto your side,
point the ball up towards the sky,
and you'll straighten your leg to pop the ball up.
Level 17, no touch combo.
No touch combos are combinations of two or more tricks.
Take a crossover and Touzani, but the difference here is
that you're not doing the two tricks individually.
You're taking out all
of the excess touches to make it one fluid combination.
To do a no touch combo,
you take out the extra trick in the middle, crossover,
and you would go straight into a Touzani.
Level 18, head stall.
Now we're moving on to uppers, and head stall
is the most basic uppers building block to learn.
The ball is on your hairline.
You wanna make sure you're looking up
at the ball the whole time,
and you wanna stand a little bit upright
with your head tilted back
and your knees bent just a little bit.
Head stalls coming in at level 18 because in a combo,
you would be kicking the ball up
and then balancing the ball from there.
But you're working with your head here
so you can't really flex your head or things like that,
and it's really about using your entire body
to cushion the ball,
and you shift your whole body weight to balance the ball.
Level 19, around the moon.
On around the moon, your head is moving around the ball
rather than the ball moving around your head this time.
You would start from a neck stall.
You would flick it up to the side,
and your head and your chest rotate
around the ball to catch again on the back of your neck.
The way I explain to everyone is
you kind of have chicken wings.
The ball is sitting on the back of your neck.
From there, rotate off to the side
and flick the ball up at the same time,
almost like tossing it up to the side.
You're really just isolating your upper body.
Your feet should stay planted,
and it's just your chest and head that are moving.
Level 20, lip stall.
Lip stall is a little bit harder than
around the moon because you're working
with a very small surface to balance the ball with,
and it's not flat.
Your lips are in an odd place where there's not a lot
of body behind it.
When you're doing it,
you're tilted back and your lips are right here.
You really have to get the perfect positioning
to stall that ball for more than say a second at a time.
To do a combo incorporating a lip stall,
typically I would do something like neck stall,
around the moon into a head stall, and then the simplest way
to transition into a lip stall would be tilt your head back
and let the ball roll down right onto your lips.
Level 21, Lemmens Mitch around the world.
The Lemmens Mitch name comes from the creators
of two individual tricks with the techniques combined.
So a Lemmens Mitch around the world
is a 2.5 revolution trick.
You jump off your left foot, you make the two revolutions.
That last revolution has to be a little bit quicker
because at the same time,
that left leg will come over the ball,
cross over the top, and then you pop the ball up.
This one is a little bit more complex
because it requires a lot more speed.
It requires a little bit more power
in your jump than say, a Lemmens around the world.
If you're trying to become a complete,
well-rounded freestyler learning all
of the different four categories,
you would want to learn the basics of every category
before you start incorporating the higher difficulty tricks.
Things like anything
above a two revolution trick that require weeks
and months of practice.
Level 22, transitions.
Transition is any trick
that will take you from one category to another,
whether it's lowers to sitdowns, sitdowns to lowers.
So we briefly mentioned transition tricks before,
but we're putting it as level 22
because now you're starting to incorporate fluidly
in the middle of a combo, not just at the end.
For this one, it would be a step
over slap into sitting down.
You would go from a knee catch,
drop it like you're doing a crossed ankle catch,
but right away, you're going to roll the ball up the back
of your left leg, duck under the ball,
and then transition to sitting down.
There's really no set in stone number of transition tricks.
They are how everyone expresses their own personal style.
It is kind of the pinnacle
of personal flare when it comes to freestyle.
These advanced combos become a lot more complex
because you're taking out all
of the unnecessary touches and you're replacing them
with little bits of personal flares.
[upbeat electronic music]
Level 23, acrobatic tricks.
These tricks are anything from like, flips to handstands.
I used to be a gymnast, so I incorporate a lot
of gymnastic movements into my tricks.
Flip tricks are anything like a kip-up.
When you're laying on your back,
the ball is stalled in a sole stall, roll back a little bit,
push off of your hands, kick up into a standing position.
Level 24 is my signature trick, cat flip.
It comes from rhythmic gymnastics.
You start with the ball in a neck stall,
and you will kick up into a handstand.
The ball is still stalled on the back of your neck,
flip your feet over your head into a back bend.
The ball is still caught between the back
of your neck and the lower part of your back.
From there, you'll stand up and drop it into a thigh catch.
[electronic music]
Level 25, the final combo.
The point of the final combo is to fully express yourself.
It's really about taking all
of the small techniques that you can
and incorporating as many as you possibly can.
You wanna do the big tricks,
the Lemmens Mitch around the world, the transitions.
But what really creates the full combo
is the small style points that you add in between.
You don't wanna see a seam.
It's like when you create clothing,
you don't wanna see the seam of the clothing.
It's one fluid, almost dance routine.
[upbeat electronic music]
The beauty of freestyle is that there's no limits to it.
We're constantly inventing new tricks, more revolutions,
more acrobatics, more unique tricks.
This challenge was so interesting to do
because it kind of felt like a very condensed journey
through all of my 10 years of freestyle,
but also, it's making me reexamine freestyle
through the lens of someone just starting it all over again.
Now that I have all of these techniques,
now that I've incorporated my own personal style,
it's making me see how I can share that with you
and see what kind of freestyles we can create.
Take your time, be patient, and you'll get there.
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