Receiving a throw-in is different from receiving a pass. The ball comes down from above, and the receiver has to be ready to move immediately.

Equipment needed: 2-3 soccer balls, cones to mark a sideline, 6-8 kids.

Setup: Mark a 15-yard section of sideline with cones. Two kids are on the line (throw-in position), two kids are receiving 5 yards away, and two kids are backup receivers 10 yards away.

How to run it:

  1. Thrower performs a proper throw-in to the nearest receiver.
  2. Receiver takes the ball and immediately passes back to a different thrower or dribbles forward.
  3. Rotate: after each throw, players move one position (thrower becomes receiver, receiver becomes backup, backup becomes thrower).
  4. Do 10 throw-ins per group.

What to look for: Reception quality and movement immediately after. Good receivers turn and pass or dribble in one motion.

Variation: For younger kids (8-9), throw from 3 yards away so the pass is easier. For older kids (10), add defenders so the receiver has to turn away from pressure.