You should add this thing, I don't know what it's called. But I've seen Thierry Henry do it, and I've been trying it.
You hit the ball in the air straight above you and then you bring it down like you are going to chest stall, but you receive the ball on one side of your chest near your shoulder and immediately roll it across your chest to the other shoulder so it pops back up again. I hope you know what I'm talking about. I'll try to find a vid to show you. I saw Henry do this like 4 times in a row and it looked really sick.
you should add my new trick, MGatw (mel gibson around the world). it's where you jump up, touch both sides of the ball with both of your feet at once, go around the ball with both legs at the same time, and then touch it back up with both feet at the same time.
there you'll find the ORIGINAL tricks dictionary on air tutorials
it was the first one of it's kind when the MOST anyone's ever done was just post random tricks one after the other in random topics, i decided to work very hard to organize it and make a whole tutorials section. it was first posted on soccerpulse.com/forum and later i made the tripod site based solely on the air tutorials at first.
i'm busy with work right now but later when i have time a lot more will be done to the site to update and improve it.
there you'll find the ORIGINAL tricks dictionary on air tutorials
it was the first one of it's kind when the MOST anyone's ever done was just post random tricks one after the other in random topics, i decided to work very hard to organize it and make a whole tutorials section. it was first posted on soccerpulse.com/forum and later i made the tripod site based solely on the air tutorials at first.
i'm busy with work right now but later when i have time a lot more will be done to the site to update and improve it.
yes edward, yours is the origional, props to you on like... creating the idea.
i tried not to copy you as much as i could and i added a few tricks, but i hope youll forgive slightly copying yours, yours is the origional and your definitions are sound.