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Realistically you end up with a strong keeper and a weak keeper

May 25 2012 at 12:25 AM
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Anonymous 


Response to This is really hard to manage from both a coaches' position and for the keepers

Strong one gets the playing time, weak one warms the bench, but is happy to be on a team he isn't really good enough for. Then the coaching dilemma is, are you wasting a team spot on this back-up keeper? You rarely get two strong keepers because both want 100% of playing time. Ideal scenario is one strong, reliable keeper and a good outfield player who is okay as a back-up keeper

 
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