Kick It 3v3 Soccer Podcast

Kick It 3v3 Soccer - The Amanda Pierson Episode

1 h 48 min · 13 dec 2025
aflevering Kick It 3v3 Soccer - The Amanda Pierson Episode artwork

Beschrijving

Today we are so excited we got to sit down with Amanda Pearson, the co-head coach of the Texas Spurs Women's team in the UPSL. Kick It 3v3 Soccer Podcast Transcripts [https://www.kickitsoccer.com/blogs-podcasts/https://www.kickitsoccer.com/blogs-podcasts/] She's a longtime youth club coach at the a and at the club's academy level. She used to coach for the Spurs. Now she still coaches the semi-pro team and she's also coaching for Dallas Surf. And we're they hosted a tournament for us this last summer. And the Spurs, or rather the surface hosting another tournament with us in a couple weeks coming up in December. But she has an amazing background, zko, and man, what a bottle of energy. Huh? Yeah, I've known Amanda, I'm gonna say for 15 years 15 years-ish. And, you just introduced her and she's got a title. The truth of the matter is she's way beyond the title really because as you guys will see today, the words that I use to describe her and you're gonna see it is eclectic and always growing. Always growing. She's one of these people who say, Hey, I'm better at 30 than I was at 20, and I'm better at 35 than I was at 30. And better being the, knowledge and everything. So what I also like is that she's a young version of you and I, because she's talking about all this experience and so much of it is, it fell into her lap. She had to step up and do it or nobody else would. And it's really neat. You get a lady who's so good for. Women's sports women's soccer and girls soccer. And she's coached guys and she's played with guys. Yes, ball of energy. Have your ears on and turn that off. Full speed because there's a lot said really quickly and Amanda brings the energy and she's a great friend.

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11 afleveringen

aflevering World Cup Episode 5 Round of 16 Preview - Kick It 3v3 Podcast artwork

World Cup Episode 5 Round of 16 Preview - Kick It 3v3 Podcast

World Cup Episode 6 of the Kick It 3v3 Podcast delivers a wide-ranging breakdown of the knockout-stage drama, beginning with the United States’ difficult loss to Belgium. Danny and Zico examine the controversy surrounding Folarin Balogun’s suspension being overturned, the added pressure it may have placed on the U.S. team, and how Belgium used the situation as motivation. They also discuss the sharp contrast between the confident U.S. performances in group play and a knockout match in which passing, decision-making, first touches, and defensive execution all broke down at once. Despite the result, Danny remains optimistic about the future of American soccer. The hosts consider whether the national-team coach can establish a recognizable style of play, influence youth development, and encourage a more technical approach throughout the country over the next four years. The conversation then turns to Belgium’s evolution. After a dramatic comeback in the previous round, Belgium leaned more heavily on younger players while using veterans such as Kevin De Bruyne and Romelu Lukaku in different roles. Danny and Zico explore whether this represents a successful passing of the guard and why Belgium’s combination of youth, experience, speed, and motivation could make its matchup with Spain especially dangerous. They contrast Belgium’s momentum with Spain’s steady, controlled, increasingly direct approach. Next, they analyze England’s win over Mexico. Mexico had long stretches of possession and pressure, but England limited penetration, forced predictable crosses, and relied on its size and defensive organization. The hosts discuss the costly mistakes that changed the match, Harry Kane’s all-around influence, and why “dominating” the ball does not always mean controlling the game. Norway’s victory over Brazil leads to a detailed conversation about Erling Haaland. Danny highlights Haaland’s remarkable efficiency and ability to score with very few touches, while Zico explains why a true number nine can influence an entire defense without constantly receiving the ball. They also critique Brazil’s conservative approach, game management, inability to impose tempo, and recurring failure to turn chances into goals. The episode also covers France’s victory over Morocco and previews Norway vs. England and Argentina vs. Switzerland. The discussion focuses on tactical matchups, team age, coaching continuity, defensive structure, weather, physical advantages, and the pressure of trying to win multiple knockout games in a short period. Finally, Danny and Zico take on one of the tournament’s biggest topics: VAR. They debate whether video review is correcting clear errors or removing the referee’s feel for context, consistency, advantage, physical contact, and the natural flow of the game. From delayed foul reviews and dangerous-play situations to millimeter offside decisions, they ask whether more information is always making soccer fairer—or simply making decisions more complicated. The episode closes with a reminder that soccer’s low-scoring nature does not make it less dramatic, an officiating story about knowing the Laws of the Game, and an update on a major Kick It 3v3 event in Highlands Ranch, Colorado, featuring approximately 130 teams. Follow the Kick It 3v3 Podcast for more World Cup reactions, tactical analysis, coaching insight, and honest soccer conversation. https://www.kickitsoccer.com/3v3-soccer-podcast-world-cup-ep-6-7-10-26/

Gisteren1 h 27 min
aflevering World Cup Episode 5 Round of 16 Preview - Kick It 3v3 Podcast artwork

World Cup Episode 5 Round of 16 Preview - Kick It 3v3 Podcast

Dan and Zico are back for Episode 5 of the Dan & Zico World Cup Podcast, shifting the format to keep pace with the knockout rounds and the nonstop World Cup schedule. In this episode, they recap the last two days of games and then preview the full Round of 16. The show opens with Spain’s win over Austria, where Spain’s directness and ability to penetrate stood out more than simple possession. From there, Dan and Zico move into Switzerland’s win over Algeria and discuss how national teams are changing through immigration, diversity, and the global movement of players. Portugal-Croatia becomes one of the major conversations of the episode. With the broadcast framing the match as a possible final World Cup game for either Luka Modric or Cristiano Ronaldo, Dan and Zico talk through the emotion of the moment, the role of VAR, and how technology has changed the way fans experience goals, offside calls, and celebrations. They also dig into Ronaldo’s personality, his work ethic, his influence on young players, and the challenge of managing a superstar who still wants every minute. The episode also covers Egypt’s penalty-kick win over Australia, including penalty psychology, goalkeeper gamesmanship, and why Australia may have missed a real opportunity. Colombia’s win over Ghana leads to a conversation about Colombia’s return as a dangerous World Cup team and the legacy of Colombian teams from the 1990s. The most intense recap comes from Argentina against Cape Verde, a match Dan and Zico describe as one of the most incredible World Cup games in recent memory. Cape Verde pushed Argentina physically and emotionally, while Argentina’s age, fatigue, and reliance on moments of brilliance became real talking points. Messi’s timing, late runs, and ability to conserve energy all come into focus, along with the question of whether Argentina may be vulnerable in the next rounds. Then the show moves into a full Round of 16 preview. Canada versus Morocco brings discussion of Canada’s aggressive style, Morocco’s speed, and the danger of getting exposed on counterattacks. Paraguay versus France is framed as a possible underdog story, but France’s athleticism and depth make them a clear favorite. Mexico versus England becomes a fascinating matchup because of Mexico City’s altitude, Mexico’s intensity, and whether England can physically handle the conditions. Brazil versus Norway brings real anxiety for Zico. Norway has size, organization, Haaland, Ødegaard, and a strange historical record against Brazil. Zico still favors Brazil, but he does not feel comfortable about the matchup. Portugal versus Spain is previewed as a true Iberian derby, with Spain’s collective passing style facing Portugal’s individual talent, emotion, and Ronaldo’s looming presence. Argentina versus Egypt, Switzerland versus Colombia, and USA versus Belgium round out the discussion. The episode closes with a detailed look at USA-Belgium. Dan and Zico compare Belgium’s aging stars, including Kevin De Bruyne and Romelu Lukaku, with the young, energetic, fearless U.S. team. They discuss Christian Pulisic, Tim Ream, U.S. depth, the controversial red card, and why this may be the perfect time for the United States to face Belgium. With Brazil and the USA both facing huge knockout tests, Dan and Zico know the next episode could be a celebration, a therapy session, or both. https://www.kickitsoccer.com/world-cup-ep-5-3v3-podcast-7-4-26/

4 jul 20261 h 47 min
aflevering World Cup Soccer Ep 4 Kick It 3v3 Soccer Podcast artwork

World Cup Soccer Ep 4 Kick It 3v3 Soccer Podcast

Dan Stratford and Brent “Zico” Ward are back with another World Cup knockout-stage breakdown on the Kick It 3v3 Soccer Podcast, covering the July 2nd action after several dramatic Round of 32 matches. This episode mixes tactical soccer analysis, player evaluation, coaching philosophy, World Cup history, cultural reflection, and the natural Dan-and-Zico storytelling that makes the conversation feel like two lifelong soccer guys talking through the game in real time. The episode starts with Zico sharing thoughts from a family visit to Mount Rushmore while vacationing in South Dakota. Dan and Zico discuss the monument’s history, the immigrant story behind its design, the complicated history involving Native people, and the way the site draws visitors from all over the world. Zico connects that to bigger themes of identity, national pride, and representation before the conversation shifts into the World Cup. The first major soccer topic is England’s narrow win over Congo. Zico praises Congo’s performance, pointing out how organized, athletic, and technically sound they looked against one of the traditional powers of world soccer. He argues that the expanded World Cup is showing there is more depth in the global game than many expected. Dan agrees, noting that Congo played England straight up and never looked overwhelmed. The conversation then turns to Harry Kane, with Zico making a strong case that Kane is the best all-around number nine in the world because of his finishing, hold-up play, movement, simplicity, and soccer intelligence. Belgium’s comeback against Senegal is next. Zico talks through Belgium falling behind, Rudi Garcia’s decision to take off Kevin De Bruyne and Jeremy Doku, and the surprise of Belgium still finding a way to win 3-2. The guys discuss Youri Tielemans’ leadership, his calm penalty, and the recurring theme of underdog teams taking leads but struggling to finish games against countries with deeper World Cup experience. The USA’s win over Bosnia becomes one of the biggest parts of the episode. Dan compares the game to the 1994 World Cup match between the United States and Brazil, when Leonardo elbowed Tab Ramos and Ramos suffered a frightening head injury. Dan uses that moment as a contrast: in 1994, the U.S. went a man up but lost control after losing one of its best players. In this match, the modern U.S. team went down a man after a red card to its leading scorer but showed maturity, composure, defensive organization, and confidence on the ball. Dan praises the way the U.S. stayed compact, kept possession under pressure, defended set pieces, and still created danger on the counterattack. The conversation also highlights one of the best goals of the tournament: Senegal’s long-ball goal, where a player controlled a 50-yard pass over his shoulder with his chest while running at full speed. Dan calls it a perfect example of why soccer is called “the beautiful game,” comparing it to an elite NFL catch — except without hands. The final section previews Spain vs. Austria, Portugal vs. Croatia, and Switzerland vs. Algeria. Zico breaks down Spain’s tendency to overpass and explains why possession without penetration can allow an opponent to settle into a low block. He and Dan discuss the difference between passing for style and attacking with purpose. They also preview Portugal vs. Croatia, focusing on Luka Modrić’s timeless soccer brain, Croatia’s counterattacking danger, Portugal’s inconsistency, and Cristiano Ronaldo’s evolving role. The episode closes with Switzerland vs. Algeria, where Zico sees Switzerland as the favorite but believes Algeria will view the matchup as a real opportunity. https://www.kickitsoccer.com/3v3-podcast-world-cup-ep-4-7-2-26/

2 jul 20261 h 6 min
aflevering World Cup Soccer Episode 3: The Dark Arts of Soccer, Mbappé’s Magic, and a USA Knockout Preview artwork

World Cup Soccer Episode 3: The Dark Arts of Soccer, Mbappé’s Magic, and a USA Knockout Preview

Episode 3: The Dark Arts of Soccer, Mbappé’s Magic, and a USA Knockout https://www.kickitsoccer.com/podcast-world-cup-3v3-ep-3-7-1-26/ Preview Welcome back to the Dan and Zico World Cup Podcast! In Episode 3, Danny and Zico dive into the latest World Cup action, breaking down tactical shifts, cultural clashes, and on-field drama. Whether you’re here for the analytical deep dives or the unfiltered opinions on modern football, we’ve got you covered. * Norway vs. Côte d'Ivoire: This match proved to be surprisingly even. Zico shares a hilarious story about accidentally sleeping through the game. He ultimately had the result spoiled by a text from a Norwegian friend. Zico also provides a history lesson on why final group stage games are played simultaneously. This dates back to the controversial West Germany vs. Austria match in 1982. * France vs. Sweden: France ultimately outclassed a shell-shocked Swedish side. Danny marvels at Kylian Mbappé's ruthless mentality to stop messing around and just put the ball in the goal when it matters. Zico sparks a candid conversation about national team demographics. He notes how many of France's top players have African roots and are coached in a French system. * Mexico vs. Ecuador: This was an ugly, physical game that ended with Mexico dominating. Shockingly, Ecuador's coach resigned immediately after the match. This sparks a deep dive into the "dark arts" (malicia/furbo) of Latin American soccer. The hosts discuss the evolution of diving and why everyone from European players to LeBron James seems to be flopping these days. * England vs. DR Congo: Can a disciplined Congolese side frustrate an inconsistent England team?. We'll see how the match plays out under the closed roof and air conditioning in Atlanta. * Belgium vs. Senegal: Zico predicts a potential upset. He points out that Belgium is past their "golden generation" prime and getting older. Meanwhile, Senegal boasts strong leadership from Sadio Mané. * USA vs. Bosnia & Herzegovina: The hosts look ahead to a crucial matchup for the United States. Danny praises Mauricio Pochettino's pragmatic, professional coaching style. He hopes the US can maintain consistency and continue to rely on workhorses like Weston McKennie, who is the only player to have played every minute of the tournament so far for the USA. Grab your favorite snack, make sure you don't fall asleep on the couch, and enjoy the beautiful game! DOCX+ 2⚽ Yesterday's Matches: Recaps & Hot Takes🔮 Today's Previews: Who Advances?

1 jul 20261 h 23 min
aflevering World Cup Ep 2 Kick It 3v3 Soccer Podcast 6-30-26 artwork

World Cup Ep 2 Kick It 3v3 Soccer Podcast 6-30-26

Dan Stratford and Brent “Zico” Ward are back with Episode 2 of their World Cup Round of 32 breakdown, diving into one of the most exciting and tactical days of the tournament. The conversation starts with a bigger-picture World Cup topic: how we talk about countries, names, cultures, and identities during international soccer. Dan and Zico touch on Türkiye, Côte d’Ivoire, Czechia, Cyprus, Brazil/Brasil, and how the World Cup helps fans learn more about the people behind each national team. From there, they move into the connection between Morocco and the Netherlands, one of the major storylines of the knockout round. With so many Moroccan players tied to Dutch soccer development, the match carried extra emotion, intensity, and history. Dan and Zico discuss how that relationship shaped the game, the physical matchup, the late drama, and the pressure of a penalty shootout when an entire country is watching. A major focus of the episode is Brazil vs. Japan. Dan points out that Japan continues to earn respect on the world stage because of how bravely they play. Instead of sitting back and trying to survive against Brazil, Japan played with confidence and energy against one of the game’s biggest powers. Zico adds a tactical breakdown of how Japan’s shape, transitions, and pressure created real problems for Brazil. One key coaching point is the danger of the square pass. Zico explains why giving the ball away on a sideways pass in midfield can be so damaging. When a player loses the ball going east-west, both the passer and intended receiver can be taken out of the play, opening up a dangerous counterattack. Dan connects that to coaching lessons he learned years ago about why angled passes are safer and more effective, especially in the back and midfield. The episode also looks at Carlo Ancelotti’s calm leadership for Brazil. Dan and Zico contrast Ancelotti’s composed sideline presence with the emotional style of past Brazilian teams. Brazil may not have been perfect, but Ancelotti’s calm helped the team avoid panic and find a way through a difficult match. Dan and Zico then expand the discussion to how underdog teams can frustrate elite teams by sitting deep, staying compact, and counterattacking. Paraguay’s approach against Germany becomes a major example. Zico explains why “speed needs space,” and how a low block can take away the open field that faster, more talented attacking teams need. That leads into one of the strongest development conversations of the episode: the value of 3v3 soccer. Dan explains that in 11v11 soccer, teams can sometimes hide weaknesses by packing it in defensively, clearing the ball, or relying on physical advantages. In 3v3, there is nowhere to hide. Without a goalkeeper and with constant transition, players are forced to make quicker decisions, pass with purpose, move off the ball, defend immediately, and stay composed under pressure. Dan argues that 3v3 exposes technical and tactical weaknesses in the best possible way. It helps players learn how to break down tight spaces, attack quickly, defend quickly, and solve problems without relying on long balls or defensive bunkering. As Dan puts it, a team can win 11v11 games without being great at 3v3, but it cannot play brilliant 11v11 soccer without the skills that 3v3 develops. The episode closes with previews of Côte d’Ivoire vs. Norway, France vs. Sweden, and Mexico vs. Ecuador. Zico breaks down how Erling Haaland could impact Norway’s chances, why Côte d’Ivoire could grow stronger as the game goes on, how France’s speed could trouble Sweden, and why Mexico vs. Ecuador could become a physical battle shaped by altitude, pressure, and athleticism. This episode blends World Cup analysis, coaching education, player development, tactical breakdowns, cultural context, and knockout soccer emotion. Read more and watch/listen here: https://www.kickitsoccer.com/3v3-podcast-world-cup-ep-2-6-30-26/ [https://www.kickitsoccer.com/3v3-podcast-world-cup-ep-2-6-30-26/]

30 jun 20261 h 1 min