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Attacking Midfielder Soccer Highlight Video Guide for College Recruiting

The attacking midfielder is a two-way job, and that is the first thing a college soccer coach checks on film: what do you give the team on offense, and what do you give it on defense? Players who show only one side of the position get passed over, because rosters are built around athletes who influence the game in more than one phase. Your video should prove you are one of them, with clips that move between both sides instead of leaning on a single strength.

Also known as Number 10, Playmaker, the attacking midfielder (CAM) is a midfield position that requires a unique combination of skills that coaches can evaluate through well-structured game footage with clear player identification.

What College Coaches Evaluate in Attacking Midfielders

When college soccer coaches watch a attacking midfielder highlight video, they are assessing these specific skills and attributes. Your video should demonstrate as many of these as possible through competitive game footage.

1

Creativity and vision

Include at least two or three clips that show this against competitive opponents.

2

Final ball/assist ability

Pull a few examples from different games so a coach sees this more than once.

3

Dribbling in tight spaces

One clip proves nothing here — stack two or three so it reads as a pattern, not a fluke.

4

Shooting ability

Include at least two or three clips that show this against competitive opponents.

5

Set piece delivery

Pull a few examples from different games so a coach sees this more than once.

6

Link-up play with forwards

One clip proves nothing here — stack two or three so it reads as a pattern, not a fluke.

Recommended Clips for Attacking Midfielders

Your attacking midfielder highlight video should include these types of clips. Aim for 15-25 clips from competitive games, 5-15 seconds each.

Assists/key passes
Goals
Dribbling past defenders
Free kicks/corners
Creative through balls
Combination play in final third

Circle Placement Tips for Attacking Midfielders

Circle yourself before making runs and during playmaking. For a two-way attacking midfielder, the tracking circle matters most in the moments you are not the focus of the play — drifting into space, tracking back, rotating over to help. Those reps separate you, and they are invisible in team footage unless a coach can find you, so start the circle early and let your movement between phases stay easy to follow.

Keep it on through the shifts between offense and defense, because that switch is where coaches judge your motor and your feel for the game. Adding the circle in CircleOn.me at the start of each clip, with a short freeze-frame, lets a coach see your starting position on both sides of the play and evaluate the full contribution rather than a single touch.

Common Mistakes in Attacking Midfielder Highlight Videos

Avoid these common pitfalls when creating your attacking midfielder recruiting video.

Warm-ups or practice footage (unless exceptional)
Clips where you can't be identified
Blowout games where competition level is questionable
Old footage (stick to last 12-18 months)
Music too loud/distracting
Slow motion overuse
Clips too long
Not including enough position-specific clips that demonstrate creativity and vision
Leaving out clips that show final ball/assist ability — coaches expect it from this position and notice when it is missing
Skipping assists/key passes, which is one of the first things a coach looks for on this film
Failing to identify yourself with a tracking circle, making it hard for coaches to follow your movement

Frequently Asked Questions

Create Your Attacking Midfielder Highlight Video

Add tracking circles to your soccer game footage and stand out to college coaches.

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