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the free soccer player evaluation template coaches actually use

A complete 30-attribute framework across technical, tactical, physical and psychological — plus a simple scale and how to share it so parents actually read it.

Soccer player evaluation template

At my club, written player evaluations are required at the end of every season. For years I wrote them in a spreadsheet, emailed PDFs, and watched parents read them once and lose them. The content was fine — the structure was what made it sustainable. Here's the framework I settled on, free for you to use.

the 1–5 rating scale

Keep scoring simple and consistent. For each attribute:

  • 1 — Developing: a clear area to work on.
  • 2 — Emerging: shows it sometimes, not yet reliable.
  • 3 — Solid: consistent for this age and level.
  • 4 — Strong: a genuine strength.
  • 5 — Excellent: a standout, plays above level here.

Always rate relative to the player's age and level — a "3" for a U10 means something different than for a U16.

the four categories (30 attributes)

technical

  • First touch & ball control
  • Passing (short)
  • Passing (long / switching play)
  • Receiving under pressure
  • Dribbling & 1v1 ability
  • Finishing / shooting
  • Heading
  • Weak-foot competence

tactical

  • Decision-making & game awareness
  • Positioning (in & out of possession)
  • Off-the-ball movement
  • Defending & pressing
  • Transition (attack ↔ defense)
  • Understanding of role & system
  • Communication on the field

physical

  • Speed & acceleration
  • Agility & balance
  • Stamina / work rate
  • Strength & physical duels
  • Coordination

psychological

  • Coachability & attitude
  • Effort & intensity
  • Composure under pressure
  • Confidence
  • Resilience / response to mistakes
  • Leadership
  • Focus & concentration
  • Teamwork
  • Discipline & punctuality
  • Competitiveness

finish with words, not just numbers

Scores alone feel cold. Add three short written sections that turn ratings into a plan:

  • Strengths: two or three things the player does well — be specific.
  • Areas to improve: two or three priorities, framed as opportunities.
  • Focus for next season: one or two concrete things to work on, ideally tied to at-home training.

The best evaluation isn't a report card. It's a roadmap a player and parent can act on between now and the next season.

how to actually deliver it

A template is only useful if it gets to the family in a form they keep. A spreadsheet emailed once disappears. That's exactly why TEAMS FC builds this framework in: you score all 30 attributes, add your written notes, and publish the evaluation straight to the player and parents, where it stays available season to season as a real development record. No PDFs, no lost emails. (Want the writing tips? See how to write evaluations parents actually read.)

do this template in the app, not a spreadsheet

TEAMS FC has this exact 30-attribute evaluation built in — score, add notes, publish to players and parents in a couple of taps. Free for teams up to 12 players.

try teams fc free

Steven Hunal

Steven has coached boys and girls at WCFC and the girls' side at NYCFC for over a decade. He built TEAMS FC after writing one too many evaluations in a spreadsheet that parents never saw again.

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