The Ajax
T.I.P.S. Framework
The same development system used by Ajax Amsterdam for over 50 years. Applied individually, in Hanford, CA.
Ajax Amsterdam has produced more world-class players per capita than any club in history. Cruyff, Bergkamp, Van der Sar, Seedorf, Zlatan — all products of the same foundational development system. The TIPS framework isn't a marketing name for a set of drills. It is a complete player development philosophy built around four pillars that work together to create complete footballers.
The reason it transfers so effectively to American youth players is that the TIPS framework prioritizes athleticism and decision-making over trick execution. American youth soccer has historically focused on physical dominance and basic skill repetition. TIPS fills the gaps: game intelligence, technical precision under pressure, and the mental resilience to perform when it counts.
At the U8–U12 age group — the foundation phase — the brain is wired for exactly this kind of motor learning. Patterns developed now become permanent. The players who receive structured TIPS-based training at this age carry those foundations through to competitive play at every level above. Valley Roots was built to bring this system to Kings County.
The Four Pillars
Each letter represents a complete area of player development. Sessions are built around all four — not just technical skill.
Ball mastery with both feet. Proper first touch under pressure. Striking technique for accuracy and power. The goal of technical training isn't drill completion — it is automaticity. Technical execution needs to become so ingrained that the brain can operate on it without conscious thought, freeing attention for reading the game. That only happens through structured, high-volume, progressively difficult repetition.
- Structured touch sequences with progressive difficulty
- Both feet trained equally in every session
- Pressure scenarios that simulate game-speed demands
Game intelligence isn't knowledge of tactics written on a whiteboard. It is the automatic habit of scanning the field 2–3 times before receiving the ball. It is understanding where pressure is coming from before the pass arrives. It is making the decision before the ball gets to your feet so execution is instant. This cannot be developed in group sessions — it requires individual scenarios designed specifically to train perception.
- Pre-scan habits built into every receiving sequence
- Decision gates that require reads before touches
- 1v1 reading scenarios with pressure variation
A technically gifted player without personality will freeze in big moments. Personality is confidence under pressure. It is the willingness to take risks and fail without shutting down. It is communication — calling for the ball, directing teammates, leading without hesitation. The Ajax philosophy treats personality as a trainable quality, not a fixed trait. We build it through environments where failure is safe and pressure is progressive.
- Pressure rondos with safe failure environments
- Failure-friendly repetition that rewards risk-taking
- Communication triggers built into drill sequences
Speed of thought comes before speed of foot. Ajax training increases time pressure progressively — players make decisions faster not because they sprint faster, but because they process information faster. Physical speed matters. But the players who seem to have more time on the ball are actually processing quicker. We train both simultaneously, starting with decision speed and layering in physical execution as the cognitive load decreases.
- Time-limited touch sequences with decreasing windows
- Reactive decision scenarios with instant execution
- Game-speed pressure drills that force rapid processing
How a Session
Is Built
Every session follows a deliberate structure — five phases that build on each other, from athletic activation through technical focus to intelligence work. Nothing is filler.
Not jogging. Athletic activation — dynamic movement patterns that prepare the body for change of direction, explosive touch, and balance challenges. The foundation for everything in the session that follows.
Touch sequences with both feet. Progressive difficulty — starting at a comfortable pace and increasing pressure as automaticity develops. This phase builds the raw technical foundation that the rest of the session sits on top of.
Each session has a specific technical theme — first touch, finishing, 1v1 dribbling, passing under pressure, or another targeted area. Twenty minutes of focused, progressive repetition with immediate correction on every touch.
Decision-making under pressure. Scanning drills. 1v1 reading scenarios. This is where the TIPS Insight component is trained directly — habits of perception built through repeated, deliberate practice.
Technical corrections are reinforced verbally. Session themes are connected to game context — so the player understands not just what they practiced, but why it matters when the real game starts.
How Players Progress
Each player gets a customized progression plan. We track what they're working on, what they've mastered, and what's next. This isn't a one-size-fits-all curriculum — it's a living plan that evolves with the player.
- Athletic base — balance, agility, core activation
- Both feet trained from session one
- Basic ball mastery patterns at comfortable pace
- Fundamental touch and receiving mechanics
- Introduction to scanning habits
- Speed and time pressure added to all sequences
- Game-realistic scenarios introduced
- First touch under pressure — moving ball
- Decision-making drills with multiple options
- Personality development through pressure rondos
- Game-speed technical execution in all drills
- Full TIPS intelligence scenarios
- Independent problem-solving under pressure
- Complex movement sequences with ball
- Pre-season preparation for competitive play
See T.I.P.S. In
Action
Book a free 30-minute evaluation. We'll show you exactly how the TIPS framework applies to your player's specific development needs.
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