Articles Links Research & Papers on player development


Articles Links Research & Papers on player development

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Decentric
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TJ Whalan, I think this is new from earlier this year!

I don't think we did this in the C Licence.

I wonder if Steelinho, Saftaasi, or anyone else on here who has done a recent C lIcence can remember this?

I know this stuff from teaching, but not football coaching courses.
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Decentric wrote:
TJ Whalan, I think this is new from earlier this year!

I don't think we did this in the C Licence.

I wonder if Steelinho, Saftaasi, or anyone else on here who has done a recent C lIcence can remember this?

I know this stuff from teaching, but not football coaching courses.


Its a logical theory, I usually start with an isolated technique drill before moving on to applying that technique into a game like situation. I think the 'Holistic Approach' is arguing that I should start with the game like situation before reverting to the isolated practice only as a last resort.

Of course there is an exception to every rule but I am right in thinking this is how you would apply a holistic approach?


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http://www.blueprintforfootball.com/2013/04/in-search-of-game-intelligence.html

In Search of Game Intelligence
When Johann Cruyff set about rebuilding the whole set up at Barcelona, using the Dutch blueprint he had grown up with at Ajax, inadvertently he was also reshaping the footballing philosophy of the whole nation. The link between the modern all-conquering Spanish tiki-taka and the Dutch total-football is too obvious not to notice.


Less noticeable is the German influence on the Spanish game. That comes through Horst Wein, a German "coach of coaches" whose work has influenced thousands of coaches and whose book "Developing Youth Football Players" is the official textbook of The Spanish Football Federation.


Wein is truly an impressive man. Not simply because of his CV - even though that contains working with some of the world's top clubs and federations as well as authoring 34 sports text books - but also because he talks the language of someone who has thought deeply about his work and come up with a level of insight that few can match.


"Who is the best coach in the world?" he asks before promptly replying "we have no doubt, it is the game of football itself". The message is very clear: coaches are there to facilitate and not act as the main actors.


Not that he doesn't appreciate the value of coaches. “When you do what you have done always, you will never reach any further,” he says, underlining his belief in innovation.


His journey, however, didn't start on a football field but rather in hockey spurred by the questions of his young son.


How did you start formulating your theories?
When he was 7 years old my son (who 15 years later became World Champion) questioned my coaching even though at the time I was one of the leading hockey coaches. So, in order to answer his doubts, I became also interested in youth development.


You're a big proponent of making football fun. How do you achieve that and why is it so important?
Especially for kids initiating their career in football from the ages of 7-9, it is very important that they fall in love with the game. When this happens and football become their healthiest drug then they continue to play the game for a lifetime. Through my webpage www.thebeautifulgame.ie we offer a very unique game format, 3v3 on four goals called FUNino which will lead to play even at 8 or 9 years “The Beautiful Game” as the best teams of the world are demonstrating it. .


Similarly you say that the best coach in the world is the game of football itself: what do you mean by that?
In times gone by, Street Football helped to develop naturally skillful and creative players, simply because the games were simplified, with few players around and what’s important with no interference from any coach. I have studied the way kids play and then have captured the same essence and added some structure in the development of these games without the overuse of drills which is still very prominent in many football academies around the world. Instead of listening the players to the constant instructions, any academy coach should use guided discovery questions to encourage the kids to discover the problems inherent in the game in an interactive way.


What did street football teach children that has been lost today?
Street football was a natural environment for children to explore the game of football the natural way. Children played almost daily for many hours around the corner, they didn’t need any transport nor specific sport equipment, no registration at a federation which today treat all children like adults, who with their too complex competitions limit the natural development of our youth in football.


You were one of the first to argue in favour of small sided games for young children. Is it pleasing to see so many people now agreeing with you? And why is it so important?
Yes, thankfully the idea of small sided games (I prefer my term of simplified games) has become widespread in the last decades. However, I would personally still prefer if the competitions kids are asked to play world-wide were age-appropriate i.e. 3 v 3 for 7-9 years; 5 v 5 for 10 years; 7 v 7 for 11 and 12 years and 8 v 8 for 13 years, before, eventually playing 11 v 11 at 14 years of age. None of the FIFA member countries has yet applied an optimal structure for their youth competitions! So imagine if there would be countries which would implant my optimal, age-appropriate competitions (which as I said above are the best teacher) how much space there would be for improving the playing capacities.


A lot in youth development is still to be discovered by almost all football clubs in the world. Football will soon improve considerably as other ball games like hockey, volleyball and basketball have done. Football is still an undeveloped sport and far behind others, especially in developing young football players.


At what age should competitive leagues start?
Experiences have shown 12 years is about right, as the kids will probably demand that.


Are kids over-coached?
Most definitely, many coaches today still regard young players as “empty vessels” that have to be filled, instead of young people with amazing potential and intelligence to be stimulated and tapped into. Imagine, FIFA is still using the term “instructor” which is a term from the last century which should only be used at Military Services!


What is a coach's role? Is it that of a teacher?
When we say “the game is the teacher,” we mean that quite literally. Coaches should facilitate the stimulation of game intelligence and creativity through the use of simplified games in which children should discover for themselves as often as possible all secrets of the game. The coach’s role is to create an environment where the young players flourish naturally.


What is the most important skill in a young player?
Today most players have good technique and physical preparation so what separates the very best players is their level on game intelligence. It has to be considered the most important ability on the football field. Therefore young players have to be systematically exposed to games like Funino which unlocks and stimulates their creativity and game intelligence from 7/8 years onwards.


Do you, as a coach, give any importance to physical attributes like height or strength in a young player?
The strongest, fastest player without game intelligence will waste most of his potential, but the smallest intelligent player can overcome any opponent.


What is game intelligence? And how do you coach creativity and intelligence, if that is at all possible?
Game Intelligence is that ability to “read the game” and make good decisions as quickly as possible. The game of football is a constant flow of changing game situations and becomes very complex when playing the adult game of 11 v 11. From the earliest ages, players must be exposed to game situations in ever-increasing complexity, but starting with simple games first. In Funino, 3v3 with two goals out wide at each end, there is always options available, as one goal is usually less defended than the other. This facilitates greater perception, understanding and decision-making. In subsequent games in our development model, the game situations become more complex.


Also using the guided discovery coaching method helps to develop greater understanding and retention of game situations and ultimately better decision-making.


Playing games rather than isolated drills is another key factor in developing “game intelligence,”


You've worked in many countries and influenced a lot of people but it takes time for new ideas to be absorbed. How long does it normally take to change mentality of people?
In some countries people are ready for new ideas, especially the “newer” soccer countries where there is no tradition. In others it may take many years. Usually it takes 10 years for changes to take place. Thankfully through the internet, knowledge spreads much nowadays more quickly than in previous decades.


And finally, what is next for you?
My method is more or less used in all Spanish Football clubs since the Spanish Federation published my text books more than 20 years ago. Actually they are all sold out … and probably a new edition is on the way for 2014 with the newest updates.


For more information about Horst Wein and his ideas, visit his website www.thebeautifulgame.ie.


Europe is funding the war not Chelsea football club

Arthur
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http://www.professionalsoccerplayer.co.uk/how-to-be-a-professional-football-player-rayo-vallecano/


Nice Blog on Rayo Vallecano being the first team to have more possesion than Barca since 2009.
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Youth Football Development
A random mixture of postings from coaching sessions and ideas to sharing information on the future of youth football, from The FA perspective, linked to my role in the game.

03 September, 2013
http://youthfootballdevelopment.blogspot.com.au/2013/09/being-perceived-as-talented-is-great.html?spref=tw

Being perceived as talented is great, but it comes with some challenges...

We have a habit of labelling things in modern society and we like to do this; frequently when making comparisons of one against another. They are often subjective by nature, “I think Messi was better than Pele”, and on many occasions, never even something that can be quantified. But this extends from harmless pub chat to labelling in schools and sport – “this young person is talented or gifted” (whatever they mean) and therefore better than others. But what is the impact of being labelled this as a young person? Too often we do not see the impact through their eyes and what it actually may mean to them. Let’s look at this using football as the example but you could replace football with any sport or indeed school subject.

1. From an early age being labelled as talented increases expectations and they come to realise that when playing games the pressure is on them entirely; because they are talented and others aren’t. More becomes expected every game and can build and build.
2. The knock-on effect for their own self-perception can become dangerous if others around them are deemed less talented by themselves or adults, bordering on developing an air of arrogance in many as that comparison kicks in.
3. Parents can have inflated expectations, and whilst that child may be happy just playing football with their friends, the parents habitually expect massive things and game winning performances every week.
4. Internal pressure on their own ability creates added weight with the child feeling that if they don’t produce these performances every week that their parents will stop loving them. This can stem from positive feedback only coming from a positive performance. This is produced from within but is a dangerous feeling to have for a young person and is linked to causes of stress and anxiety.
5. Being talented in one sport leads to frequently being talented in others, using athleticism and game skills as the core underpinning of skill application. However, this may not always be the case, it could be domain specific. Expectations from teachers and peers because of a talent in one sport can lead to increased pressure when playing others.
6. Sibling rivalry can have a major effect in a family dynamic. One sibling that gets praised for being mediocre in a sport (“trying their hardest”) leads to even greater pressure for the talented sibling to perform every week. There are no allowances for anything different.
7. The constant need for approval and basing their own self-worth on what other people think of them is a dangerous place to be. It can lead to greater anxiety, because they never fail at anything, and don’t want to let others down. Managing this carefully is vital.
8. In fact, the opportunity to ‘learn to fail’ is sometimes missed because of this pursuit of excellence. Failing is a huge part of learning and feeling like its ok to shoot for the moon and sometimes miss is essential. However, we need to create an environment that makes it ok for this ‘miss’ to happen.
9. A feeling of jealousy from others towards them is something that is often passed by and helping young people deal with the feelings and comments from peers is something we can help them manage.
10. Constantly managing high expectations is incredibly difficult. There are two options; if they perform great, that is expected, and if they don’t that is a failure. It is either neutral or negative.
11. The journey towards becoming an elite footballer is incredibly difficult and can also give a false sense of security. Being labelled as ‘talented’ from a young age just means they are talented today, not necessarily in five or ten years time. Helping them understand the journey and its challenges is important.
12. Equally, young people are often deemed talented within their peer group, but what if that peer group is below average? Compared to their peers they are talented, but put them in the wider world and they become average. Having had a build up of expectations and self-worth about being talented to then see this come shattering down is difficult and tough to manage and internalise as a child.

The role of a teacher or coach is to help the child; help them understand the nature of the dynamics above and what it may mean to be talented (today) compared to your peers. Emphasising the need for hard work, recognising that it is ok not to be amazing every game and developing a growth mindset (see Dweck, 2006) in young people is essential life skills to help them with ongoing challenges.

The journey towards long-term talent is never easy and dealing with disappointment is inevitable. Helping them understand this may come in different forms is important; this could be getting de-selected from a professional football club, not being selected by the manager to play or dealing with a bad injury. But it is going to happen at some stage – we don’t always win.

As a parent, regardless of their performances, achievements or otherwise, they just want to know you still love them.

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http://8by8mag.com/this-could-get-messy/

This Could Get Messy
Posted by Eight by Eight | October 18, 2013 | Issue 01 | No Comments

Unlike Tom Cruise in Jerry Maguire, Pep Guardiola didn’t have his audience at “Hello.” But he did have them at “Guten Tag, Grüß Gott.” All it took for the 42-year-old—on his first day running FC Bayern Munich—was to address the more than 250 journalists in the Allianz Arena in very passable German, garnished with a Bavarian idiom. The writers marveled at his command of the notoriously difficult language, they laughed at his self-effacing joke (“All the answers for the most important questions are pre-prepared—if I don’t know the questions, I’m kaput!”), and above all, they appreciated the two key messages Guardiola sought to get across. First, he’s an obsessive worker determined to arm himself with the communication tools every successful manager needs. According to his brother Pere, Guardiola studied German “like a madman” since accepting Bayern’s job offer just before Christmas.

Even more important, however, Guardiola’s sometimes slightly ropey German spoke volumes about his humility. No one would have been too upset if “the world’s greatest coach” (according to Bayern executive-board chairman Karl-Heinz Rummenigge) had conducted his first presser in English or Spanish, but doing it in the local language drove home the point that he is determined to adapt to his new surroundings.

His low-key speech that day was in marked contrast to the rock-star fever that had gripped Munich (and a hefty chunk of the rest of Germany) before his unveiling. “Buenos dias, Messias!” wrote local tabloid Abendzeitung, with a mixture of irony and admiration. Never before had so much hype greeted an incoming Bundes-liga manager, and Bayern’s historic, treble-winning season only amplified expectations. Everyone seemed to be wondering if Guardiola, the man who in just four years made Barcelona the world’s best and most aesthetically pleasing team, could usher in an era of European dominance in Munich.
Guardiola was extremely careful to avoid promising that level of success in the press conference and, in the process, made himself seem to be quite a bit smaller than he really is. “It’s a gift to be here, a gift that Bayern even thought I could be here,” he said with a smile, adding that he had taken the job because of Bayern’s “special history” and “high quality of players.” His modesty is genuine, close friends and confidants insist, and they point to his background by way of explanation. Guardiola is the son of a bricklayer from Santpedor, a small town in the Catalan hinterlands. “The stereotypical attitude of Catalans … [is] pessimism,” writes his biographer, Guillem Balagué, in the excellent Pep Guardiola: Another Way of Winning. Maybe that’s a little strong as far as Guardiola is concerned, since he won every conceivable trophy as a novice manager at Barça. But there’s no question that he’s prone to self-doubt of the healthy kind. More than that, “his doubt is methodical,“ wrote Süddeutsche Zeitung’s Spanish correspondent Oliver Meiler, “he was never sure. Not even after many titles. And that’s one of the reasons for his success: the perennial, manic, at times unnerving search for ways to make football, the unpredictable game, plannable.”

Guardiola understands that players like the irrepressible maverick Thomas Müller would be ill-served by a slavish reproduction of tiki-taka.

When he finished his playing career in 2006, at age 35, Guardiola went on holiday in Argentina. He wanted to meet César Luis Menotti and Marcelo Bielsa, two coaches he admired. He hoped to learn from them before becoming a manager. This unpretentious inquisitiveness has remained with him. It’s natural for him to imitate, copy, and absorb everything. His art has been to take all his influences and bring them together in his own superior concept.
Xavier Sala-i-Martín, a professor of economics at Columbia University, has an interesting analogy. He got to know Guardiola’s modus operandi while he was working as FC Barcelona’s treasurer from 2004 to 2010. “Look at Zara and H&M, the two big European clothes chains,” he says. Both have similar business plans: fashionable clothes at affordable prices. But H&M produces their stock as cheaply as possible in great volumes. Half a million yellow pairs of trousers, for example. Zara, a Spanish chain, produces smaller quantities—say, 20,000 pairs of yellow trousers. Production is more expensive, but the stock in the shops changes every week. “If Madonna wears a purple pair of trousers in a concert, there will be purple trousers in the Zara shops the next week,” says Sala-i-Martín, “whereas the H&M trousers are still yellow. Guardiola is Zara. He surprises his opponents by making small changes to his tactics each week. An economist would call it flexibility. Pep stands for continuous innovation.”

Some would scoff at this description and point out that no team in recent history has been as uncompromising in their approach as Pep’s Barcelona, the grandmasters of tiki-taka. It’s a fallacy to think that Barça was always playing the same way, insists Sala-i-Martín, because small, incremental variations of their tactics made them untouchable. Guardiola pushed the envelope until only two defenders were left behind in their own half. “Suicidal!” screamed the traditionalists. These days, most top teams have copied that strategy, including Jügen Klopp’s Borussia Dortmund and Jupp Heynckes’s Bayern, the two German teams that contested the 2013 Champions League final at Wembley. Pushing players forward enabled Guardiola’s team to win the ball in the final third of the opposition half; they defended in attack. Getting to the opponent’s goal was quicker that way. This “high-pressing” has made football faster, more attractive. It wouldn’t be an exaggeration to say that Guardiola has modernized the game.

Many assume Guardiola is out to replicate this winning formula in Bavaria, but he insists he will “adapt 100 percent” to his players and that only “small changes” would be made. Bayern successfully combined elements of Louis van Gaal’s possession game and spells of high-pressing in 2012–13, but at times they were very direct and muscular. Guardiola understands that such players as the irrepressible maverick Thomas Müller, a man who defies categorization, or Arjen Robben, the narcissistic winger, would be ill-served by a slavish reproduction of tiki-taka.
Guardiola was heavily influenced by van Gaal and Johan Cruyff—winning with style and beauty is important for him, but he lacks the two Dutchmen’s dogmatic streak. His most important tactical decision at Barcelona offers a good insight. “Pep Guardiola changed the history of football on May 1, 2009,” says Sala-i-Martín. There was no game that day, but Guardiola was spending hours locked away in his windowless office in the bowels of the Camp Nou stadium, watching videos of Real Madrid, the next evening’s opponent. He stopped the DVD, rewound, played it again. There it was! The best moment in the life of a manager, Guardiola once said, is the moment you find a weakness of your opponent that your team can exploit.

Guardiola called Lionel Messi, his small winger. “Come to the stadium, I have to show you something,” he said. When Guardiola played him the DVD, Messi got it instantly: Whenever Real Madrid attacked the man in possession in midfield, their defenders didn’t push up. There was a gap of 25 meters between defense and midfield.

The next step, in hindsight, seems obvious. Messi started the Clásico against Barça’s archrivals in his customary position on the left but then switched deep inside as a hidden striker, or “false number nine,” as football experts would later call the role. Messi proved unstoppable. Barcelona won 6-2 and celebrated a historic result. Even more important was Messi’s transition into a “secret” striker, which turned a very good Argentine international into the world’s best player. Since that evening, he’s been voted the footballer of the year every season. Guardiola couldn’t have known it would work out like that; he was simply looking for the best strategy for a particular match.

Barcelona’s breathtaking football made Guardiola the most coveted coach in European football, so why did he chose Bayern rather than a club in the English Premier League? Joan Laporta, Barcelona’s former president, thinks that Guardiola mistrusts the setup of nouveau-riche clubs like Chelsea and Manchester City, which are controlled by billionaires. “Bayern is not a club with a rich owner who has made his millions outside football and who might decide from one day to the next to go home again,” says Laporta.
Guardiola is not naive; perhaps he’s not even a romantic. He knows that football is big business these days. But growing up in Barcelona, he was taught that a club should be “mès que un club,” as Barça’s motto has it, greater than the football team it employs. During Franco’s dictatorship, Barça was a stronghold of Catalan resistance. In the stadium, thousands could speak the forbidden Catalan; Real Madrid, the perceived representatives of the state, could be insulted and beaten. “Barça is the Catalan army without weapons,“ wrote Manuel Vázquez Montalbán. To this day, Barcelona aspire to stress the otherness of Catalonia, be that by having many local players for the side or by playing the game in a special way.

The ability to identify with your team remains an important part of being a football fan in the 21st century. While Barcelona’s social relevance has a basis in history, marketing and branding experts are busy creating identities elsewhere. Bayern have had a head start in that respect: They have been actively playing on a heightened sense of Bavarian-ness, on a confidence that verges on arrogance, and have described themselves as “a family” to create a us-and-them dynamic for decades. “We cultivate this polarization,” Rummenigge admits, “partly because it means that we have constant media exposure.”

According to various studies, Bayern have approximately 12 million fans in Germany—a number that is dwarfed only by those who dislike the club with equal passion. And the club would not have it any other way.

There are other similarities. Both Bayern and Barcelona pride themselves on developing young players, and both are run as clubs in the pure sense of the word, according to democratic principles. The members—in other words, the supporters—“own” the club and elect their presidents. Among the top clubs in Europe, only Real Madrid operates along such traditional lines; most of the rest are privately owned.

Despite all their relentless sporting and commercial ambition and their wish to be a truly global player, Bayern still recognizes their responsibility to their loyal supporters. Season ticket prices for the most hardcore fans are subsidized. Every Christmas, the members of the playing staff are dispatched to visit a fan club, and most training sessions are open to the public. Guardiola, according to Uli Hoeness, Bayern’s president, was surprised to hear of that arrangement, but quickly agreed to adhere to the culture of his new club.
It’ll be fascinating to see his progress. “It won’t be easy for him in the Bayern family,” said Guardiola’s mentor, Menotti, who won the 1978 World Cup. “But his ideas are good, and he likes the city. I think he’s more nervous than he should be; he’ll find it easy to communicate. German won’t be difficult for him. He is a very ‘German’ Catalan—organized, serious. He works and trains hard. His personality suits Munich; it’s a good town for him.”

As long as he delivers results, that is. Bayern don’t expect him to defend the Champions League trophy this season—no club, not even his Barcelona, have been able to do that—but he needs to win the league. “The league is the most honest title,” said Rummenigge, implying that luck and form are much smaller factors than in the cup competitions—and that there is no excuse not to win it with Bayern’s stellar squad.

Pep’s much more demanding task will be to keep Bayern at the very top of European football. Privately, the bosses at Säbenerstrasse expect him to lift another Champions League trophy before his three-year contract is up. It’s on that stage that Guardiola will really earn his wages of $13.34 million per season. Or to put it in Jerry Maguire terms, that’s where the money must show.

Additional research by Ronald Reng
A feature article from our debut issue. Order Issue 01 from our Shop.



Edited by Arthur: 24/11/2013 09:16:38 PM
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Saturday November 23 2013

Prandelli: 'Italy must invest'
By Football Italia staff

Italy Coach Cesare Prandelli demands more investment in youth academies. “If you can’t afford to buy champions, you need to create them.”

The Nazionale boss spoke to the Gazzetta dello Sport in the lead-up to the 2014 World Cup in Brazil.

“Italy has great potential, but we’ve got to stick to some rules, objectives and get ourselves back on track. No more waiting, as the time has come to sow the seeds for future success.

“There’s no time for jealousy or focusing on our own little patch of land. We should sow the seeds and remember the harvest will be for the good of everyone.

“If you can’t afford to buy champions, then you need to create them in-house. This is why I constantly urge development of youth academies. That is where we must invest.”

Prandelli admits his job as Italy Coach is made more difficult by the influx of foreign players, as younger Italians aren’t given a chance to shine.

“The problem isn’t mine, but of Italian football. When we arrive in Brazil and our national anthem is played, we mustn’t complain that the Azzurri have little international experience. Every Coach would love to train a national team that brings together players who gained experience at club level and brought that back to the squad.

“In my case, it was the other way round. I had to call more than 60 players because so few get to measure themselves up against the best in Europe. If anything, playing for Italy gave these players more international experience.

“Brazil prepared for and won the Confederations Cup by giving the priority to the Seleçao. Last year they planned the Italian Super Cup in Beijing four days before a FIFA-imposed friendly.”

Prandelli also has complaints about the stadiums and the crushing pressure placed around Serie A sides.

“The context and surroundings help you to play better. Overseas the teams go into games with a completely different spirit and when it’s over, if you’ve given your all, there’s a pat on the back and you’re off. In Italy it is always treated like the match of your life and fans are called up in a way that is frankly a bit much for what is still a game.”

http://www.football-italia.net/42057/prandelli-italy-must-invest

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Hungary's 1953 Wembley tactics revealed in newly found notebook
• Coach masterminded 6-3 win, England's first home defeat
• Claimed England's style of play was '20 years out of date'

Reuters
theguardian.com, Saturday 23 November 2013 09.29 AEST   

http://www.theguardian.com/football/2013/nov/22/hungary-england-wembley-1953

Alf Ramsey was slow and easily tired, Stanley Matthews was "nothing special" and England's style of play was decades out of date by 1953, the coach of Hungary's Magical Magyars wrote in notes discovered recently.

As Hungary prepares for the 60th anniversary of its national team's 6-3 thrashing of England at Wembley, a game credited with revolutionising football, the notebook of their coach, Gusztáv Sebes, was found in a private collection.

"If soccer was fine art, this would be like finding an unknown painting by Leonardo da Vinci," said Gyorgy Szollosi, communications chief for Hungary's Puskas Football Academy.

In the ragged notebook, half-filled with handwritten observations, Sebes was dismissive about some of the great names of English football.

"Alf Ramsey is slow, tires early but strikes the ball well," he wrote. "He is good at free-kicks.

"Stanley Matthews … technically the best English, but nothing special. Likes to dribble outwards. Jackie Sewell is stocky and short."

Sebes noted that England tended to kick long balls and defend only loosely, adding: "The English play against the European teams in much the same way as they did 20 years ago."

His observations allowed Hungary to control the ball easily and they became the first continental team to beat England at home.

"This is a piece of history that no one knew about before," Szollosi said of the notebook, which was found last year.

Looking like a schoolchild's exercise book, it has a checked cover, Sebes's name on the front in capital letters and the handwritten title "The London match tactical plan".

Much of the handwriting inside was almost illegible and a team of people were given the task of deciphering it. "We spent almost a year working on the notes and putting them together," Szollosi said.

As he prepared the notes for publication in November's Hungarian edition of the football magazine FourFourTwo, Szollosi said he realised how well Sebes had orchestrated the Hungarian team and their style.

The coach was helped by the genius of players such as Ferenc Puskás and Nándor Hidegkuti. It was probably the best game in the career of Hidegkuti, who scored a hat-trick, while Puskás grabbed two goals and József Bozsik scored one. Sewell, Stan Mortensen and Ramsey scored for England.

The game, played on 25 November 1953, became known as "the match of the century" in Hungary.

The team, Olympic champions at the time and runners-up in the 1954 World Cup, went into decline in the second half of the century. They have not qualified for the World Cup finals since 1986 and lost all seven of their subsequent matches at Wembley.

Sebes was a powerful sports leader in Hungary, then mired in the deepest years of Stalinism. Besides coaching the national football team, he was a member of the Olympic Committee which functioned as the sports ministry.

The coach took his first notes about the English team a couple of weeks before the big game when England drew 4-4 against a Rest of the World team.

"At first England show no fear and dictate a great pace, playing with a short passing style," Sebes noted. "As a result of the high tempo and passing, the English begin to tire after around half an hour."

With no video recording technology available to him, Sebes instead asked Hungarian top-league footballers to impersonate members of the England squad, so that Puskás and his team-mates – who had no idea what their opponents looked like – could imagine them.

According to reports at the time, Sebes was so confident that his team would defeat England that he promised the feared Hungarian Communist leader Mátyás Rákosi the win and that "Hungary will not disappoint".

He left nothing to chance. Two weeks before the match he ordered English balls, which were heavier than the customary Hungarian footballs, so the players could get used to them.

He employed tactics of aggressive all-pitch pressure and advocated technical, physical play that was little known in England or the rest of Europe.


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http://nessis.org/presentations/vecer.pdf?utm_content=buffera0198&utm_source=buffer&utm_medium=twitter&utm_campaign=Buffer

Crossing in soccer has a strong negative
impact on scoring:
Evidence from the English Premier League and the German
Bundesliga
Jan Vecer, Frankfurt School of Finance and Management
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General Football
The Enigmatic Marcelo Bielsa – El Loco
November 16, 2013

http://thelastlibero.com/2013/11/16/the-enigmatic-marcelo-bielsa-el-loco/

The story goes that one evening when he was in charge of the Chilean national team, Marcelo Bielsa felt a twinge of doubt, a mental block. Any other coach would normally turn to his mentors, delve into the video shelf for old videos looking for anything to help him or in some extreme cases, turn to alcohol (we know who it was). Bielsa went straight to the Santiago Zoo to find his motivation.

That’s just who he is and where the nickname comes from – El Loco, The Mad One. His unique personality shapes every team he manages, his philosophy a blend of passion, obsession, eccentricity and to a certain extent, craziness. He does not give exclusive interviews and prefers to answer those seeking his presence in his press conferences. Even then he refuses to look into the journalists’s eyes, preferring to keep his head lowered and his eyes on the microphone.

Another fascinating tale about El Loco goes that for 12 hours straight over a barbeque session (or asado, as some may prefer), Guardiola and him spoke of nothing but the beautiful game. Guardiola had spent the previous 11 hours travelling just to seek Bielsa’s advice. Salt shakers and ketchup bottles became the center of attention as talk of positional and possession football became intense and ideas flowed freely. Guardiola, being a football man himself, was completely taken by this mad Argentine who had left a mark on him. Pep would, of course, imbed this philosophy of possession football and high pressing on arguably one of the finest club sides the world has ever seen.

He had this to say about Guardiola during his first press conference as the Athletic manager:

“Guardiola has recovered the idea of multifunctional players: right backs to wingers, left backs and midfielders to central defenders, etc. He has taken advantage of his versatile players, something that was not appreciated not long ago. It is crucial that a coach, when he manages great football players, does not interfere with their talent. But, he has improved them. He has made them to do things they probably do not master, but his players still make the sacrifice. They do it for the team.”

Before he took the Athletic Bilbao job, his last spell in Spain ended in typical Bielsa fashion – he left Espanyol after managing them for just 6 games (of which they only won one). 12 days before his first official game, he knew he was going to go. The Argentina national team post was up for grabs and there was no one who could stop him.

Even his arrival at Athletic wasn’t without that element of ‘Bielsista’. Inter’s then President Massimo Moratti approached him about the managerial vacancy there only for him to say no without even blinking an eye. Why, you ask? Because he had already promised ex-Athletic skipper Josu Urrutia that if he was elected as the club president, Bielsa would follow him in. As things turned out, Urrutia won the presidency and Bielsa followed. That sense of loyalty and sticking to his principles is a wonderful sight in today’s money-grabbing football environment.
One of the biggest followers and disciples of Marcelo Bielsa is the current Barcelona manager Gerardo ‘Tata’ Martino. Martino was Bielsa’s leader on the pitch during his early managerial career at Newell’s Old Boys in Argentina. Martino even resembles Bielsa on the touchline – sporting spectacles, always thinking about the next move, pacing around on the touchline with his head down wondering how to outfox the man in the opposition dugout.

When he took over at Chile, the national team were a joke – the fans were used to seeing them finish near the bottom of their Copa América and World Cup campaigns and were resigned to their fate when he arrived. The impact he and his coaching staff had was not immediate – the first six games were the same as in previous times – lethargic, lacking confidence and looking every bit a beaten side. And then the Bielsa effect kicked in. The team (a talented bunch from the outset) started buying into his philosophy and the results started to flow. The high pressing game was embedded into every player and for the first time in a long, long time, the whole nation was riveted and rallying behind their national football team. During his tenure, Chile finished 2nd in World Cup 2010 qualifying, above both Argentina and Brazil.

One of the main beneficiaries of his time with Chile was Alexis Sánchez. Sánchez was always a very gifted and blessed footballer but he lacked that final polish which separates the true greats from the rest. He had a knack of dribbling one too many times and a very frustrating tendency of losing possession at the most inopportune moment. Under Bielsa, he went from a gifted yet erratic footballer to the wonderful player he is today with Barcelona.

Pep Guardiola summed up El Loco’s philosophy when he described his Athletic team before the Copa Del Rey final in 2012:

“They run up, they run down, they run up, they run down, they run up, they run down …”

He may never land a job in Europe again because of the unique culture he brings with him but his mark is indelibly etched in European football and will be remembered fondly by those who’s life’s he touched. The only person coming close in terms of his influence is Zdeněk Zeman (the current Italian crop of youngsters have him to thank). Wonderful manager and an even better man.

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Interview With Jed Davies, Football Coach and Author

By Arnar Steinsson.

Jed Davies is author of ‘Coaching the Tiki Taka Style of Play’. Arnar interviewed Jed for TTT on Youth Development back in August.

Hi Jed welcome back to The Tomkins Times and congratulations on the book being published. I would like to ask you first of all what inspired you to write it?

Great to be back Arnar, you’ve got a really great community on TTT – I can’t remember the last time I saw such a positive comments section than the one under the interview with me from this summer.

The book was never meant to be packaged and sold as it is but I can remember the moment I realised I wanted to find out more, or the moment when I realised I really knew very little about football after years of championing myself as someone who knew a lot anyway!

There’s a great quote from Oscar Wilde that sums up this ‘ignorance’ to the many layers of football that goes along the lines of “I am not young enough to know everything” and this school of thought is only truly understood when you come out of the other side of the ignorance of youth or the short-sighted ‘know-it-all’ culture that exists in football (a culture I was once part of).

“I know nothing except the fact of my ignorance.” Socrates.

You see, more than ever, I know far less about football right now than I have done at any other point in my life. That sounds bizarre given that I have just dedicated the last two years of my life to researching Spanish training methodologies, tactical history and tactical evolution. But don’t be mistaken, I am far from profoundly lost – I’ve just come up with so many more questions that I want to find the answers to. More recently, I am working on a study in conjunction with Watford U15/18 and Level 5 coach, Louis Lancaster, looking at the phases of play before goals are scored and what that might mean in relation to a defensive theory that Louis has come up with from his Bayern Munich (Heynckes) analysis. From this study I can tell you the differences between each of the professional leagues in England and that if we were to take an average from over 600 goals and 200 games so far this season, roughly 30% of all goals are scored from the phase of play directly linked to set pieces. We’ve looked at wide play, central play and everything else in between to see if the statistics support Louis’ theory – which if they do, would be truly revolutionary to the way that we educate our coaches in how to defend in this country.

“The wider the searchlight, the greater the circumference of the unknown” Dick Taylor

Nowadays when I watch a football match, I watch the game in a completely different way to how I would have done four or five years ago. I see football through a sort of analytical framework (both inter-activity and individual activity analysis): (a) building up from the back and through the middle third [formation, attitudes, patterns], (b) goal scoring creation [formation, attitudes, patterns], (c) the two or three different defensive blocks used by a team in a single game [formations, triggers] and how we transition (what we do in between having the ball and not having it). Transitional moments are broken into (d) the attacking transition when the opponents are organised, (e) the attacking transition when the opponents are ‘out of balance’, (f) the defensive transition when you are organised and (g) the defensive transition when you are ‘out of balance’ [note: ‘out of balance’ is the term the FA use to mean out of defensive shape and still in the attacking shape].

Now, that might all come across as over the top and reducing football to a game of strategies and plans but it really isn’t. Essentially I’ll watch one team and try to understand their game plan, trying to link together all those moments after breaking it down – it is only then you can really begin to appreciate how much work goes into football training methodologies and begin to understand tactical changes as a response to a tactical problem.

The moment I realised I in fact knew very little about football was during my first conversation with Chris Davies who is now Liverpool’s Head of Opposition Analysis, as he went through the thinking behind different Premier League and Championship clubs and began to reel off how you could combat each game plan, one by one. I was simply blown away.

I left that conversation with so much disappointment in the education I had received in football beforehand and a new reality that effectively renders games of my youth like Championship Manager and the typical Match Analysis we see on TV today unsatisfactory in the way that the game is portrayed to us.

When I got home that evening, I couldn’t sleep. I wanted to watch every football match I had ever loved again and analyse each and every game individually. I started with Liverpool vs. Milan (2005 – my favourite game of all time, despite not being a Liverpool fan) and stayed up all night until I had a pile of game plans on a desk. Benitez’s Liverpool, Riijkard’s Barcelona, van Gaal’s Ajax, Wenger’s Arsenal, Ferguson’s Manchester United, Lippi’s Juventus, del Bosque’s Real Madrid, Mourinho’s Chelsea – the lot!

The next stage in my mind then was for me to start telling people about what I had learnt and how certain managers will have distinct game plans that they carry around with them – to details that I had never imaged before. However, I quickly realised that nobody particularly cared and people were generally satisfied with how they saw football. This really did bother me at first, how can someone love football and even work in football but not want to understand it?

But then I remember that Einstein had come up with the idea of the light-quantum hypothesis in 1905 and nobody accepted this until 1923. Einstein’s belief in the existence of light as particles was uncared about for 18 years – Einstein! – so who the hell was going to listen to me, a young twenty-something injury-prone failed football player turned-coach about new theories and ideas that exist within a game that they ‘already know everything about’.

After nearly a year of obsessive observations from a number of different teams, I became fascinated by the different schools of thought in football and I moved on from Mourinho, Capello and Sacchi research that I was in the middle of to start to look at the philosophy of football that the media had branded ‘tiki-taka football’.

I wanted to know EVERYTHING. At first it was just the game models and movement patterns, then I wanted to know why certain tactical changes were made and then I started to dig at how the training methodologies directly translate to the tiki-taka game model.

Tiki takaAs I said, it was never originally meant to be a book – it was a self-directed research project that involved me being extremely fortunate and speaking to some fantastic football coaches along the way (80% of them were able to permit quotes and context in my publication). The book itself was suggested to me by quite a few friends who saw the research I had and from there it started to become a book.

The biggest hurdle (and the reason for the nine month delay) has been permitting quotes, training sessions and including tactical methods with an attached coach’s name. Thankfully all of that has been overcome and the relevant media departments helped bring a 200,000 word book(s) down to something closer to 80,000 words. Which in truth, has only pushed me further to use the information but detach it from the original sources or to do my own analysis that have led to the same conclusions – there is always a way around this sort of thing.

Right now I’m in a role with Oxford University as an assistant head coach, working under former Reading skills coach Jon Collins (who has spent a number of years dedicating his life to researching Spanish training methods). Jon was one of the coaches that helped me with parts of the research and is one of the most knowledgeable guys in football in terms of training methodologies – he is an encyclopaedia of training sessions and has a fantastic personality on the training ground too – even his video analysis is first class! When Jon informed me about the opportunity to work under him, I was in the process of considering a full-time position at a football club. Within half an hour of consideration, I told Jon I was ‘in’ and turned down the job offer on the table, knowing that I would probably struggle to pay the rent in Oxford without a full-time salary.

Since moving to Oxford and working with Jon, I’ve learnt more about training methodologies than I could have ever imagined. You’ll know from the contents of this answer that I am someone who strives to learn more at the cost of my own sleep or financial security – you only live once and you’ll be forgotten about one day, so why not? “Ars longa, vita brevis.” [interviewer note - ancient greek aphorism, direct translation: “art is long, life is too short” and this is to be interpreted as either ‘our lives are too short to master the techniques and craft of our chosen field of artistry’ or ‘art lasts forever, but artists die and are forgotten’]

Find a passion in life and just go for it – great things will come of it when the time is right. Right now, I’m not ready yet for a full-time position at an individual club, but in a year or two I’m going to put up one hell of a good argument to why the club I want to work at should not only employ me, but give me an opportunity to be daring, trusted and pass on my insight without following the strict week by week framework I would have had to at the club I turned down. After all, that’s all tactics are: the ability for players to demonstrate their qualities of “daring, trust and insight” (Johan Cruyff).

So what inspired me to write this book? A passion, a way of telling people who are interested in what I’ve learnt from those in the game and the knowledge that this book will hopefully help me connect with others who have been, are currently on or are about to go on a similar journey of what football really is about in the future. Essentially, this way of thinking also helped me set up the idea for inspirefootballevents.com and secure some of the greatest coaching educators, most important figures in coaching and innovative coaches in England today for our first event in December this year.

I think if you mention tiki-taka, people will come up with a wide variety of interpretations. Can you describe the elements of what the style is made up of?

I’ll try to keep this answer short enough to keep your attention, but my own view is that ‘tiki-taka’ is not just about possession, short passing or pressing but about controlling the game through understanding the spaces on a football field and understanding moments that occur in football.

“The intention is not to move the ball, rather to move the opposition” [“La Intencion es a mover la pelota, sino a mover la oposicion”] – Pep Guardiola

Possession football, believe it or not, was an ‘invention’ by the Scottish in the late 1800s to combat the stronger, quicker and better dribblers of England – it was a defensive solution to a tactical problem. Barcelona’s model thinks about defending at the same time as it does attacking, it thinks about warm-ups and training sessions at the same time as it does about losing the ball in the 89th minute. It’s the most complete philosophy in football in my view.

For example, you’ll notice that these ‘rondos’ that Barcelona use are generally in 8×8 metre squares and these 4/5 v 2 rondos start off primarily as warm-up drills before leading onto positional rondos (in Spain anyway!). Why 8×8 metres? Well the Spanish coaches at Barcelona have an answer for this! It turns out that 8×8 metres is also the desired distance that Barcelona coaches want their players positioned when in a defensive block and 8×8 metres is also the typical fast-pace passing phase of a game in a congested midfield or in amongst the defensive team’s block right on the edge of their box.

So Barcelona players, whether they know it or not, are being trained to habitually react to moments they recognise in football. They cut out the 0.3 seconds reaction time of an elite athlete to nearly half – being 0.15 seconds quicker than your opponent in football wins you the ball.

Therefore, when Barcelona players are involved in a 5 vs. 2 rondo in an 8×8 metre square and working on components such as first, second and third line passing, or the defenders working together to tease the third line pass only to both know they’re about to win the ball or that moment of lightning transition, or the famous half-touch of a player who has just received the ball from a player whose pass has been targeted at the third man all along (rather than the player taking the half-touch). The rondo is so much more than ‘piggy in the middle’, there’s a lot of coaching detail we Brits haven’t been told – it’s like the Spanish want to keep it a secret! It took me a while to find out myself through a translator observing a session with me. I remember he turned to me and translated something the coach said and I responded “wait, what?!” – this was just the rondo, how could the coach be talking about the 89th minute of the previous match with his coaching intervention.

It’s ‘a whole’ approach and takes ‘total football’ to the next level of ‘totality’. In my book I explore tiki-taka football in a historical context and go all the way back to the late 1800s right through to today; detailing each major paradigm change in football that has led us to modern day tiki-taka: the overloading of central areas, pressing techniques, possession, formation changes, transitional moments.

Are there any common misconceptions about the style that you have come across?

The biggest misconception is that tiki-taka football is simply all about possession and short passing. Sure that’s the most obvious component of the philosophy but that makes up maybe about 10% of all things considered. You’d also be a fool to think that everything in this style of play is down to moments of genius from individual players on the ball – so much of the play is developed through pattern (or choreographed) play, everything is done in this controlled and thoughtful way that allows for the coach to set up scenarios in training sessions that he knows will occur in the upcoming match.

Think about it for a moment, how often do we see the same player (Busquets or Xavi) in exactly the same space on the field with exactly the same problem facing him ahead of play? Well in a truly chaotic game of football, you’d argue not a lot. But in this controlled philosophy we have ‘repeat scenarios’ that allow for the coaches and players to come up with patterns of play (something similar to that of the play books in American football) that, once again, are performed habitually and gain the players the milliseconds in a football match that are going to enable you to keep possession of the ball. We at Oxford University use the “up back and through” a lot in training sessions of late and it was fantastic to see three or four of these being used in the attacking areas of the field in our most recent match [up, back and through is a three player movement with the ball. The ball is played up to the furthest man, back to the middle man and through to the man making the run into the space behind - up to the top, back to the middle and through the gaps that have occurred]

So it’s not so much a misconception, it’s just that the coach who wants to achieve a similar style of football perhaps doesn’t realise how much habitual control the philosophy looks to have over the game. That’s not say that sometimes it still comes down to a moment of magic, or as Stanley Matthews put it to a journalist – a moment of ‘warm blood’:

“Please, Stanley would you show me your famous body swerve?”, to which Stanley replied “I’m sorry sir, but I can’t do it in the cold blood.”

While reading the book I became aware first of all the amount of history that has shaped this style of football and how many tactical and positional variations there can be within it and as you wrote in the book “I have been mindful of directly imposing any suggestion of a correct formation” And proposed a concept of form follows process instead of form follows function. Can you tell us a bit about that?

My biggest criticism of the modern day understanding of football is that formation is static and relatively simplistic. OK, we’re all aware of the formation changes between Barcelona’s 4-3-3 (or 4-3-2-1) when out of possession to their in-possession 3-4-3, but can this same positional system be achieved in one or more different ways?

On one hand, we have the system whereby the wing-backs push on, the central defenders split and the anchor man fills in to form a 3-4-3 formation. On the other hand, what if we had the changes that are details in the diagrams that follow:


What we have are the regular 4-1-4-1 defensive block coupled with the subsequent 3-4-3 building out from the back formations – two formations that go together really well and are often seen with clubs employing a possession-based formation.

Look again – only this time, study the numbered shirt given to each player and follow his movement. What we have is a different system to the one you’ll have probably anticipated: the right-sided wing-back pushes on, but the left-sided full-back tucks in, much like the full-backs of the Ajax days in the 90s, one of the central defenders becomes a libero (again, like Ajax) and the left-sided central midfielder spreads out wide to become the left midfielder when in possession. This isn’t totally unrealistic right? In my view, Bielsa has achieved a more radical system in reality. However, the exact same positional system has been achieved.

So all of a sudden, formation is a little more complex than we first thought. This is something you fans at Liverpool have witnessed since the arrival of Rodgers – I remember seeing the ‘central midfielder’ Jordan Henderson becoming a left-sided midfielder as the team lost possession of the ball last season – this movement between positions is something that should facilitate your ability to attack – think Arsenal under Wenger back in the early 00s, late 90s; Arsene Wenger played with a 4-4-2 with Henry and Bergkamp up top, Pires and Ljungberg in the wide midfield positions and Vieira and Gilberto in central midfield. Bergkamp would drop off into the number ten role, Henry would spread wide into the left wing position, Ljungberg would get into the centre forward’s position and Pires would float inside – it was a flurry of movement that left defenders not knowing who they were meant to mark and often created space ‘in between’ markers. Wenger took the 4-4-2 and did something genius with it – he made it unpredictable and fluid. Liverpool fans have become accustomed to this complexity of formation.

Therefore, with this concept in mind, I feel it would be foolish of me to detail ONE system and suggest that this system is the only system conducive to tiki-taka football. The system however, does require there to be certain features: overloads in central areas (4 (diamond) vs. 3 or 3 vs. 2), one v ones in wide areas and a comfortable overload in your own half of the field when building possession out from the back. Study the formations I provided again and begin to think about how these elements exist within the more recent 3-4-1-2 formation used by Liverpool – there really isn’t anything new here.

Now, “form follows process” is essentially something I grew to understand from my own academic background in architecture after a seminar and meeting with Zimbabwean architect Mick Pearce and his own design philosophy. The processes in football however, are that of: (a) building out from the back, (b) attacking in the opposition half, (c) defending in high spaces, (d) defending on the half way line and (e) defending in the deep block. These five (or more) moments in football all often require a different formation and attitude from your team.

Perhaps you play with a 4-2-3-1 in high spaces (see following diagram – used by teams like Everton, Southampton etc) and fall back into a 4-4-2 on the half way line to channel the opposition down one of the flanks into your set-up traps and into a 4-1-4-1 formation [all defensive], then when you win the ball back you transition into a 3-4-3 and then something more adventurous in the opposition half. Therefore, ‘form’ (encompassing everything from formation to attitudes on and off the ball) follows the process or moment of the game – it’s a concept that is relatively clear in my own mind these days and isn’t specific to possession football alone but to all of football.

his idea of formation and attitudes changes depending on the moment or process of the game is what leads me to detail the idea of “form follows process” in my book: an idea based on the concept of an eco-system of formations and attitudes within the same game model.

There isn’t any one correct set of formations or even any one correct set of methods in how you can achieve these positional systems (as you saw in the previous diagrams) and that should tell you that it is nearly impossible or rather, inappropriate for anyone to tell you that you must play with a particular formation or system as so many other tactical aspects need to be considered before hand. For these reasons, I am against the idea that all teams must play with a 4-3-3 formation (as detailed in the recent Australian FA curriculum) – 4-3-3? – In which moment of the game? How will this be achieved? What if 3-4-1-2 or a different movement suits my player profiles better? OK it offers a decent platform as a developmental tool given that players will play in positions relative to how they will when they progress to the adult game, but we have to be really careful with being so prescriptive in a top-down heavy curriculum in my opinion.

Surely the more important factor is the understanding of what your formation is trying to achieve in each moment of the game (process) – defensive overloads to allow for a maximisation of interceptions or overloads to allow for a scenario that means it would be better to pass through the opposition and one vs. one in wide areas? These objectives can be achieved through a multitude of solutions.

It is for these reasons that I refrained from instructing that there is one particular system (let alone formation) that is conducive to playing a possession-based game. It is simply not true that any team in the English Premier League will use one formation during all moments of the game – formations are not static and are far from simplistic.

What is your impression of Brendan Rodgers and his staff like Chris Davies for example and what do you think of their work so far?

For me, Rodgers understands football better than 90% of football coaches and managers in the professional game and you should be very lucky to have him. He understands the problem of formations and systems as discussed in the previous question clearly and given that Chris Davies is under Rodgers’ mentorship and I have witnessed just how much detail these guys analyse football, I have the utmost respect for how they both conduct themselves in a footballing environment.

I’ve learnt more from analysing Rodgers’ systems of play than from any other manager in football and know that from my conversations with Davies that each and every change is every bit as purposeful and considered as the last. As in the diagrams shown in the previous question, I found it fascinating how Henderson played two or three positions in a game of football and exactly where the line should be drawn under what formation Rodgers’ in using at any one point of time.

But more than this, I’ve seen how Mike Marsh and others run specific training sessions that relate right through to the game model – a positional rondo that details that players must play through a double pivot for example, a common scenario in a Liverpool match nowadays.

The most interesting aspect of Rodgers’ regime to date is, however, how he decided to take a very pro-active approach to (re)educating fans so openly on his arrival last year. Knowing the man to be as thoughtful and calculated as he is, I can’t help but think that these were moments of genius in itself.

You see, often at a youth football club it is a question of winning the parents over and getting them to buy into what you are trying to achieve. I feel that what Rodgers did was something very similar. Brendan Rodgers understood that his way of playing would take six months or more for the group of players to grasp and needed for fans to begin to emphasise with this rather than jump on the back of players and the coaches alike. Instead, the buzzwords “transition” and “adapt” were repeated in interview after interview to ensure than fans supported the slow transformation that went underway at Liverpool and for the most part, fans bought into the purist way of playing football. You have to remember however, that you’ll never win everyone over. I remember seeing Martinez talking about the Swansea promotion parade after their promotion to the Championship – they had one particular fan chasing the bus shouting “PLAY FOUR FOUR F*CKING TWO” at Martinez – unthinkable right?!

So for me, one of the most interesting aspects of Rodgers’ regime was analysing just how he has managed the fans’ expectations and looked to get fans to buy into his vision of football. I have myself been involved in a similar transformation with the Oxford University team I am assistant head coach for. We, like Rodgers, started with playing out from the back as our first micro-cycle, we then worked on our defensive shape and pressing. We’re now moving onto the final third and constructing play in the opposition half – all of these micro-cycles take time and if done well begin to come together after a few months. This is something I believe the Liverpool fans went through and were well prepared to go through – it really is a ‘different way’ of playing and it isn’t as simple as expecting a group of technically gifted players to understand the principles in only a few training sessions. Recently, I even went through great lengths to give the lads at Oxford a detailed statistical report from their last game showing each individual passing accuracy, the number of passes from each player and things like the overall game possession percentage (all taken from a few viewings of our film footage). The result? Well it turns out our figures were almost identical to Cardiff City’s (v Newcastle) from this season – a team that aren’t thought to “over play” – so there should be no questioning the philosophy that we’re trying to install as something “too tiki-taka”, as I once overheard one player saying impatiently after years of playing with a more “traditional method” used throughout grass roots football in England.

It’s safe to say we’ve won over the players now, even those who’d be better suited to Stoke than Barcelona – we’re on the path to achieving something pretty special at our level. After all, it’s one of the game’s greatest myths that you need a group of technically gifted players to achieve this style of play – you only need to be as technical as your opposition are. It’s a question of automatism and spatial awareness more than anything else.

Chris Davies is someone I will be eternally grateful for, given all that he has done for me during the researching and writing of my book – purely because he shares the same passion as I do and not for any other reason. Davies is on his second or third year into his ten-year plan with Rodgers to go into full-time first team management himself. I really wouldn’t bet against Davies becoming a household name in football over the next decade and as I say, I was simply blown away by his knowledge of every single Premier League team and then his own tactical solutions of how to combat each and every tactical problem that different teams pose. For someone so young, it was really interesting to see every single Liverpool player acknowledge Davies as I sat with him next to the Melwood cafe as players entered the room for lunch – he really is a man respected and considered significant by those at both Swansea and Liverpool as someone who has a great expertise in footballing problems and tactical solutions.

One of the aspects of the book which I really liked was the amount of information covering the historical timeline of this style of football. I think it will surprise many readers that the player who was the first to play as a false 9 did so in the 1930s for example. Out of all the people that you that you researched for that part of the book, who do you think was the most influential – of course if that’s possible as they all had an important part to play? If not, then who’s your favourite person within that timeline?

While figures like Valeriy Lobanovskyi, Viktor Maslov (father of the 4-4-2), Gusztav Sebes and Matthias Sindelar all fascinate me, I really do feel that it was Rinus Michels and Johan Cruyff who began to package all the individual elements together. It was the Dutch who first brought together the pressing, fluency of positional interchanges and the short passing game together – none of that however, was invented by the Dutch as such.

Michels actually didn’t like the term ‘totaal voetbal’ (total football) [just as so many don’t actually like the term ‘tiki-taka’, both of which are media-branded] and referred to his own tactical approach as the ‘pressing approach’ – a rather defensive term for such attacking artistry, but this shows you how the Dutch began to understand that all of football is intertwined and overlapping. That is to say Michels considered the defensive tactical elements to be in a sort of cyclical relationship with the attacking tactical elements of football – everything was now considered, the whole of football.

I thoroughly enjoyed researching the very linear line of history and learnt a lot about why particular things are the way they are today from doing it. “Why things are they way they are?”; analysis in the way that I described in question one of this interview will only ever tell you how elements on the game are played – to understand why, we need to dig a little deeper. It’s a lot like taking apart the components of a car. Do you think that by taking apart the car, you’d be able to tell me why the engine is positioned at the front of the car? A historical study however will inform you that of course, the position of the engine was influenced by the idea of the horse and carriage (with the engine being the horse). I didn’t just want to explore how Barcelona, Spain, Villareal, Swansea and other teams play possession-pressing football – I wanted to understand why certain things are the way they are and get a true understanding of the quote that says “the whole is greater than a sum of its parts” when it comes to football tactics or playing philosophies and in order to achieve this, a historical timeline was necessary.

I stressed in the book however, that like the game, it is extremely difficult to construct any such linearity and that this timeline expresses those who were most influential. Matthias Sindelar, for example, may well have not been the first ‘false 9’ in world football, but he was certainly the first great one and there is absolutely no doubt in my mind that a young Nandor Hidegkuti of Hungary was directly inspired by Sindelar, from just over the border in Austria. There may well have been a player playing his football in a park somewhere in Mexico doing the exact same things a few years before, but given the lack of technological advances in the 1930s, you have to credit Matthias Sindelar for how he brought the idea of overloading midfield areas through his movement away from the defensive line – in particular, against England in 1932, some twenty years before Hidegkuti played his integral part in bringing down England in what was billed as “the game of the century” by the press at the time.

Throughout this historical timeline, the reader is shown the brief stories of twelve men or movements I feel to be most significant to the changes that have led to the modern day understanding of ‘possession-pressing football’ or ‘tiki-taka’. But it’s the smaller details that interest me the most, like the fact that Gusztav Sebes had his Hungary side training with a heavier football in the training sessions during the build-up to the England fixture in 1963 on a training pitch with the exact dimensions of Wembley’s, or how it was actually a Scot who moved to Uruguay in 1909 who was later credited for Uruguay’s 1930 triumph at the World Cup – a Scotsman (capped 17 times by Uruguay) who managed to transform a long-ball nation into a short-passing and aggressive (off the ball) who would look to play patiently out from the back. It’s these smaller success stories that have gone lost in many of football’s history books; these smaller success stories that captured my imagination and inspired me to spend the best part of 3-4 months devoting my time to researching possession football back to the Scottish in the late 1800s through to Pep Guardiola and Barcelona.

From Brazil’s Tabelinha to River Plate’s La Maquina, through to the Mighty Magyars of Hungary, Totaal Voetbal, more scientific football approaches found in the east right through to tiki-taka, I’ve covered a lot in the book and I truly believe that without each and every daring game-changing ‘inventor’, we wouldn’t have had many of the great footballing sides in the last few decades. I hope those who read my book notice that I’ve credited Shankly, Bielsa and others not covered in the timeline, because they too have played their part in strengthening the belief that football can be both innovative and beautiful and will continue to capture the imagination of football fans for the eternal game of football. A game that will never stop evolving. A game that stands still for nobody and simply won’t wait eighteen years for innovative thinkers to be proved right

http://tomkinstimes.com/2013/11/interview-with-jed-davies-football-coach-and-author/

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Interview
Dennis Bergkamp: Arsenal, aesthetics and a blueprint for British coaching
The former Arsenal and Holland forward Dennis Bergkamp, now a coach at Ajax, on learning and teaching technical excellence

Amy Lawrence
Amy Lawrence in Amsterdam
The Guardian, Saturday 19 October 2013 09.11 AEST   
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Dennis Bergkamp biography presentation
'The basics for me is the first touch,' says Dennis Bergkamp. 'With that you can create your own time.' Photograph: Koen Van Weel/EPA

Staring at a nondescript brick wall in the west of Amsterdam, a clue to the great English coaching conundrum stares you in the face. The wall is outside Dennis Bergkamp's childhood home, in a modest apartment block around the corner from a canal in Bos en Lommer. It was here that the young Bergkamp refined his technique with the kind of specifics that would not occur to most footballers. He worked his technique with such precision he would aim for a corner of a particular brick, time and again, with different pace and power and spin to see how it changed the ball's trajectory and challenged his ability to tame it.

It was fitting somehow that Bergkamp returned to this spiritual spot to talk about his philosophy. The pursuit of control in football inspires him as much today as a coach with Ajax as it did when he was on the pitch as a player trying to change games with a flawless moment. Control is so much his obsession that he is completely frank when he says he prefers the first touch that started any of his most memorable goals than the strike that finished them. Others might say that, but it is doubtful they really mean it. Bergkamp does. The glory, for him, is all about control and touch.

Can that be taught? "The basics for me is the first touch," he says, as if a perfect first touch is some kind of alchemy. "First touch in football is so important. If you talk about Mesut Özil people say he is not marked properly, he always has a lot of space but he has got that space because he can create space by his vision and his first touch. With that you create your own time."

It is quite an arresting concept, creating time with a moving ball. "Teach that to children," he says. "Do something with the ball, let it bounce, back, back, back against the wall, left, right, that's the main thing."

The business of establishing technique fascinates him. It is a subject he elaborates on in his illuminating book, Stillness and Speed. On the subject of how young players are "over-coached" nowadays, he becomes animated about getting the right balance between teaching young players, and allowing them freedom to express themselves.

"If I look at my coaches in the youth at Ajax, with all due respect they were two elderly men who would stand at the side of the pitch, shouting a few things," he says. "So in a way you create your own career, you create your own development, and that helps you later on. Whereas now there are a lot of coaches, everyone has got their badge, they all think they are Mourinho or Wenger, even with the 12- to 13-year-olds.

"They know exactly what to do, what kind of exercises they have to do with the kids, and in a way they don't have to think for themselves any more. It is all done for them. It's a problem because they don't think for themselves. If they get a new situation, they look to someone as if to say, 'What do I have to do now?' I believe that is over-coaching. It's too much. Let them have their freedom. You have to create the environment where they can be unique and not a clone."

Bergkamp is not a fan of the way youth football in England is results-orientated. "You have to win these games, so the coach is going to manage to win the game instead of developing the player. In my opinion it should be totally the opposite. Sometimes you put your strongest player on the bench just to let others shine. Or you put a right-footed player who can't do anything with his left on the left side and force him to use his left foot. Of course in that game you will probably lose because you don't use your strongest players in their strongest position, but in the end you have a player who used his left foot when he was 12 and 13 and 14, and he can use both feet when he comes into the first team. That's what we have at Ajax and I really stand behind that."

Bergkamp was in a way a reluctant coach. He found it difficult to adjust his thinking – a player used to the highest technical standards working with aspiring players who were not at his level. "I struggled a bit," he confessed. "You look at a player and think, 'Why can't you control that ball?' But you have to take a few steps back." He still enjoys demonstrating during coaching sessions, although he blushes and sounds slightly reproachful that he cannot be "explosive" any more.

"There are times not to coach," he says. "You have to be balanced to know that. The urge is to step in and show how good you are as a coach and show you know everything and you can tell them. Sometimes it is better to let them make a mistake. Sometimes they learn more from that than being told what to do."

Seeking out beauty and refinement in football still excites him. He sees it in Lionel Messi, obviously, but also picks out Özil, who is expected to be fit to face Norwich today, as a player he is particularly captivated by. Does he see some of himself in the German playmaker? "I do," says Bergkamp, with the caveat that he is not fond of comparisons. "The way he is finding his space, in his free role, and his first touch is fantastic. I really enjoy him. The main thing now is that he will bring more to Arsenal, and push them towards victories, towards trophies."

He reckons something has changed to make for "a different Arsenal" this season. "It looks fresh, sharp, a lot of good movement, it feels like – also because Mesut came – there is an awareness they can do something. Maybe that was the missing link."

While Bergkamp rules out a future in management, he has not been shy about his aim to one day be part of the coaching set up at Arsenal. English football still gets him to the core. The marriage of aesthetic and hectic is perfect in his eyes. "For me, that is beauty," he says. "I saw Arsenal against Spurs. The pace of the game was incredible. An hour later I watched a Dutch game, and there is no point. It was so slow. A lot of things are happening in English football, openings, the high pace, that is beauty too."

Dennis Bergkamp, Stillness and Speed (Simon and Schuste
http://www.theguardian.com/football/2013/oct/18/dennis-bergkamp-arsenal-british-coaching

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From practice sessions to the real match – expert insights into transfer & learning
Posted on 20th September, 2013 by Mark Upton
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The concept of using a game-based approach in practice is far from new or groundbreaking in Coaching and/or Physical Education. Yet the uptake continues to be modest, as the socio-cultural influence of the “traditional” approach (isolated technique drills and high volume of instructions) is extremely strong.

Drawing from practical experiences and knowledge of Skill Acquisition (essentially the “science of sport skill learning”), I have tried to use this blog to explain some of the principles that underpin a game-based approach and why they may be more effective. In this case, “effective” = transfer into improved performance of a skill in the “real match”.

One of the major tenets of this is Perception-Action Coupling (look through some other posts on this blog for an introduction and insight). This coupling between what a player perceives ( in a match that would be teammates, opposition, the ball, boundary markings, goals etc) and how he/she decides to act (with or without the ball) is seen to be a critical one for transfer from practice to the real match. That is why Rick Fenoglio, a Sports Scientist involved in researching and setting up a 4v4 pilot program with Manchester United a number of years ago, had this to say….

When I posted this on Twitter a while back, it naturally led into discussions with others around the question – “do isolated technique drills have any value?”. As far as I am aware there is not any sport-specific research that has proven isolated technique work has NO benefit (ie transfer). Also, anecdotally, many coaches who support a game-based approach would still support and see some value in isolated technique drills.

Another related question, and I think more pressing, is – do children/novices need to develop technique in isolation FIRST before adding perceptual and decision-making demands?

It is a fascinating topic, one that can be further explored outside of the sporting domain by understanding how humans learn to interact with their environment (since sports players are humans!). This concept of Perception-Action coupling is what allows humans to function and effectively complete tasks in any given environment (too a point).

So I thought I would contact a genuine expert in human perception and action for his thoughts. Below are some quotes from Dr Andrew Wilson, from Leeds Metropolitan University, whose research and interests are in perception, action and learning.

“The old school way of thinking about learning is as you describe; the learner has to acquire some core competence, a motor programme that they can then roll out on demand and tweak to fit the current context. This, frankly, isn’t true at all.

Learning really requires that you spend time learning to perceive the relevant information which will support your action selection and control, and this information is only created by the task as it unfolds. So learning to kick in drills is not learning to kick in the game and there really will be relearning required.

Learning a task entails learning to perceive the information for that task and using that information to select and control appropriate actions. Because this is how it rolls, learning is highly context/task specific.

So kicking in drills and kicking in a game is not kicking + context (same basic dynamic plus some other stuff) but actually more like kicking-in-drills and kicking-in-games (two different dynamics which create different information). If that is the case (and it likely is) then you would only expect limited transfer.”

These are some really important insights and a huge thank you to Dr Andrew Wilson for taking the time to share them. (you can follow Andrew on twitter – @PsychScientists)

I will not expand on these comments for now – instead why don’t you let them “sink in” and think about how they align with your current approach to practice sessions and player development…


Mark Upton has extensive experience applying Skill Acquisition and learning principles in the design of on and off field environments for player development. He also has over 10 years experience using Performance Analysis systems to evaluate and inform player & team development.

If you would like Mark to work with you or your organisation please get in touch -

mark at sportsrelations com au

http://www.sportsrelations.com.au/blog/blog/2013/09/20/from-practice-sessions-to-the-real-match-expert-insights-into-transfer-learning/

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Arthur wrote:

Bergkamp is not a fan of the way youth football in England is results-orientated. "You have to win these games, so the coach is going to manage to win the game instead of developing the player. In my opinion it should be totally the opposite. Sometimes you put your strongest player on the bench just to let others shine. Or you put a right-footed player who can't do anything with his left on the left side and force him to use his left foot. Of course in that game you will probably lose because you don't use your strongest players in their strongest position, but in the end you have a player who used his left foot when he was 12 and 13 and 14, and he can use both feet when he comes into the first team. That's what we have at Ajax and I really stand behind that."



Interesting point.

For any people reading this interested in rep coaching, this is a point that FFA wants to occur. Development of players is paramount over results.


Conversely, parents and kids want to win.
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While Bergkamp rules out a future in management, he has not been shy about his aim to one day be part of the coaching set up at Arsenal. English football still gets him to the core. The marriage of aesthetic and hectic is perfect in his eyes. "For me, that is beauty," he says. "I saw Arsenal against Spurs. The pace of the game was incredible. An hour later I watched a Dutch game, and there is no point. It was so slow. A lot of things are happening in English football, openings, the high pace, that is beauty too."

Dennis Bergkamp, Stillness and Speed (Simon and Schuste
http://www.theguardian.com/football/2013/oct/18/dennis-bergkamp-arsenal-british-coaching


Another interesting comment.

The high speed of the English game in theory should burn players out more quickly.
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Link to Rondos and how to use them

http://www.slideshare.net/Kieran85uk/rondos-how-to-use-spains-secret-weapon#btnNext




Europe is funding the war not Chelsea football club

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Premier League: Manchester City midfielder Yaya Toure says football is a science - Sky Sports

Manchester City midfielder Yaya Toure believes he has been able to make an impression on the Premier League due to his scientific approach to football.

The Ivory Coast international has been a formidable presence in Manuel Pellegrini's side this season, finding the net seven times in all competitions as City look to close the gap on league-leaders Arsenal.

Toure is one of four English-based players amongst this year's Ballon d'Or nominees and he says that his most crucial education in the game came whilst starting his career at Belgian side Beveren.

"At the academy, coach Jean-Marc Guillou was the teacher," he told France Football.

"He taught us how to play, but above all, how to understand football. Because football is a science. If you don't understand, you cannot reach the highest level.

"In football you have to be fit, above all in England. In Spain, sometimes you can walk or make long passes to get a short rest, but not here. I am a 30-year-old so I take care of my body to recover well.


"Football is primarily a science. A bit like physicists who try throughout their careers to crack a scientific code, I'm trying to break all the mysteries of football."
Yaya Toure
"I admit I spend more time with coaches. Mancini and I exchanged many things. He knew I loved strategic and tactical work. The goal is not to leave any room for doubt or chance.

"I talk a lot with Pellegrini too. He understands what I like. I am a fanatic of this game and constantly looking for explanations, like a professor who wants to constantly complete his knowledge.

"For me, football is primarily a science. A bit like physicists who try throughout their careers to crack a scientific code, I'm trying to break all the mysteries of football."

Toure also spoke of another key moment in the early stages of his career following a discussion with Arsenal boss Arsene Wenger.

"I remember a trial period I did at Arsenal when I was under contract at Beveren," he explained.

"Arsene Wenger told me: 'I can't see you as a defensive midfielder.' I replied: 'I want to be like Patrick Vieira.'

"He finally told me: 'You would be much more at ease to support a forward.' He told me staying in the midfield would be a mess.

"But I was convinced a bit back then that I could blossom. Probably because it would allow me to be just like Patrick Vieira, my idol."

http://www1.skysports.com/football/news/12040/9056813/premier-league-manchester-city-midfielder-yaya-toure-says-football-is-a-science


And a related article from Barney Ronay, of the Guardian:

http://www.theguardian.com/football/blog/2013/dec/06/yaya-toure-manchester-city-notebook



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Football academies: kicking and screaming
Football academies were developed by the leading clubs so that they could identify and nurture talented players from as young as eight. The 9,000 boys in their ranks are desperate to succeed, but only a handful will make it to the top.

By Sally Williams
4:43PM GMT 04 Mar 2009
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http://www.telegraph.co.uk/sport/football/4938593/Football-academies-kicking-and-screaming.html

Last April, Danny, 16, received devastating news. After six years at a London football academy he was told he was no longer wanted. For those years his parents had driven three times a week from their home in south London to the training ground (plus matches on Sundays) in pursuit of Danny’s dream to play left wing for a London Premier League side in 2013.

Danny is obsessed with football. He has a framed photograph of Steven Gerrard on his bedroom wall, could do a Cruyff Turn at the age of eight, has the balance of a gazelle and can do so many keepy-uppies even he loses count. Being scouted for that academy was the best day of his life. He worked fantastically hard. He loved the training, camaraderie and free drinks - 'loads of Lucozade, Yazoo. You could take as many as you wanted!’ He loved feeling special. 'Saying who you play for at school makes you twice the man you are.’ Football is his life.

But now his fantasy future is over. 'You feel like your head has been cut off,’ he says. 'He was so quiet,’ his dad says. 'Just destroyed. It was awful.’ And now he has his GCSEs coming up and the last thing he wants to do is study. 'You’re thinking, I want to be a footballer, I don’t even need this stuff – and your mum is saying, “You’ve got to work.” And you think work is just a back-up because your real aim is to be a footballer.’

Danny has not turned his back on the dream. He still plays for a local club and for his school. He still works phenomenally hard training in his back garden. He still hopes he will be spotted. The trouble is, scouts like potential: six-, seven-, eight-, nine-year-olds. But should a scout turn up tomorrow, next week, whenever, Danny is ready. 'I feel I’m still standing out,’ he says, 'I’m killing these guys!’

Danny is not unique, of course. Any elite sport or rarefied field with few slots at the top is underpinned by an invisible stratum of talented also-rans. They are very, very good and work very, very hard. They deserve to be rewarded, but they won’t be, because they are not quite good enough. But the big difference with football is volume. All the Premiership and leading Cham­­pionship clubs have academies. The rest have schools of excellence. In all, there are some 9,000 boys attending these intensely competitive places. More than 90 per cent of those who join a Premier­ship academy will fail to make it into the first team. Most won’t even become professional footballers.

'You’re talking about a lot of kids chasing very, very few options,’ points out Jim White, journalist, broadcaster and the author of You’ll Win Nothing with Kids: Fathers, Sons and Football. 'One of the problems with the academy system is that its ethos, basically, is to throw enough **** against the wall and hope that some of it sticks. They take in 30 or 40 kids at eight, knowing full well that the chances of any of them becoming footballers is pretty unlikely. The trouble is, those kids who come in at eight think they already are footballers.’

A friend’s eight-year-old was scouted for Chelsea, and he went from being top of the class to the skiver in the back. 'Why aren’t you trying any more?’ his mother asked. 'I’m a footballer and I’m going to be rich,’ he replied. Needless to say, he was 'released’ a year later. At eight he still had time to recover. At 15 he might have sunk into a depression for the rest of his life. 'The shedding of people at 16 has always been football’s hidden secret,’ White says. 'The brutality of axing kids hasn’t been improved by the academy system in any way. In fact, it’s probably made it worse.’

Saturday November 29: the Grade II Myddleton House sits in about 21.5 acres of land in Bulls Cross, Enfield, north London. To many visitors it is a beautiful Royal Horticultural Society recommended garden with award-winning Bearded Iris. But for the Tottenham Hotspur Academy, it is a great place for youth matches. The club leases the private sports field to the west of Myddleton House, and at 9am the car-park is packed with vehicles. Little boys in kit and coats are pouring out of cars. Parents are trailing behind with buggies, picnic bags, cameras, grand­parents, aunts and uncles. The 1960s sports pavilion behind Myddleton House is brightly lit with large picture windows at one end showing the sports fields and the trees frosted white. Everywhere you look, boys are dumping bags, taking off coats, being reminded to take out chewing gum and do up their laces. Across its 16 pitches, wannabe Ronaldos and Beckhams are doing quick-fire sprints, dashing, darting, all fired up by a competitive relish. 'It’s like a puppy farm,’ squeals one of the mums. 'We describe it as the factory,’ corrects Richard Allen, the chief scout for the Tottenham academy.

Today is particularly significant because it is trials day. Every eight weeks Tottenham runs academy trials for the whizzes spotted by its 40 British scouts. (These scan for talent at youth matches from Sunday league to school knockabouts. 'If you’re good, we’ll find you,’ they promise.) In all, 67 boys aged eight to 15 are up for a place with Spurs and they know it is a life-changing opportunity. The difference between being a very, very good footballer and a star, as Malcolm Gladwell points out in Outliers: The Story of Success, is practice. 'In fact,’ he writes, 'researchers have settled on what they believe is a magic number for true expertise: 10,000 hours.’

The key advantage to being in an academy is you get to play as much football as possible (a minimum of three hours’ training a week at age eight; five hours for 12-16 years olds – time spent passing, moving, finishing, over and over again, so the skill becomes ingrained in the muscles). Experts say this is the right sort of training, and the wrong sort can lead to 'damaged goods’: players who are injury-prone (such as Tottenham’s captain, Ledley King: 'over-trained and not properly managed as a boy,’ Allen says). Plus, in an academy, you don’t communicate about anything but football and watch lots of live matches (free tickets are a perk). So, a trial is a big deal. 'I have to hold the trialists’ induction evenings at [Tottenham’s ground] White Hart Lane,’ Allen says, 'because I know all 67 boys will bring the whole extended family. It is the biggest thing that has ever happened to them. They think, this is it! Off we go!’

Tottenham also has development centres: waiting-rooms, basically, for those who have been earmarked as talented but are too young or not ready to be signed up for the academy. Tottenham has 10 development centres coaching a total of about 600 boys. Last year the club signed 20 under-nines.

So what are you looking for, I ask Allen, who says he has 'the eye’ – the ability to spot potential. (His 24-year footballing career straddles the extremes of running the Crown and Manor, a boys’ club in the East End, and looking after visiting elite international teams.) Technical skill, he says. 'It’s about trying to beat someone and get the ball past them, not pass it past them, we can all do that. Good movers, very smooth in the way they run. Plus they have to be willowy and athletic-looking. You don’t get many stocky players.’ But what about Maradona? Gazza? Rooney? There are always exceptions, he says. 'Scouting is not an exact science.’ Particularly with the wild card of puberty.

We watch the match. Number 5 looks great, but Number 3 is even better – floaty, graceful, his legs stretching and powering with mesmerising athleticism. 'He’s a nicer shape,’ Allen enthuses. 'More slimline rather than heavy in his legs [like Number 5]. He is quick and agile and that is important in the modern game.’ This may be why Number 3 has been scouted not only by Tottenham, but also by Charlton, Chelsea and Arsenal. And he is still only seven. But then young talent is like nectar, enough to get seasoned football addicts wide awake and licking their lips.

I look at Number 5, cheated of his dream by heavy legs. Summer-borns are similarly outcast. Far more Premiership footballers are born in October and November than in June and July. 'They are bigger and make more of an impact on the pitch,’ White says, 'then, of course, they get selected, better coached and leave the other guys behind.’ What else do you need? Parents with cars and the kinds of jobs where they can drive to training twice a week for 5pm. 'When I went to Manchester United Academy what struck me was the car-park full of smart cars,’ White says. 'The academy is in the middle of nowhere. There is no way you can get there unless you’ve got a car. No way you can get there three or four times a week unless your parents take you. What that is doing is middle-classing the game. The whole system precludes kids from the rougher end of town, because how the hell do you get there?’ Take Theo Walcott, the England starlet, who came through the academy system at Southampton. His father served in the RAF, his mother is a midwife; his grand­father was an RAF Warrant Officer and one of the first black Conservative councillors in Britain.

Later, Allen gives me the results: 10 of the 67 boys were signed.

Football academies were set up in 1998, following a landmark report, Charter for Quality, by Howard Wilkinson, 65, then the Football Association’s technical director, and now chairman of the League Managers’ Association. Before academies, most clubs had 'centres of excellence’ for talented young players. But the pinnacle of football education was Lilleshall Hall in Shropshire, a footballing boarding school for England’s elite 18 players, selected in trials at age 14. (Jermain Defoe, Michael Owen, Joe Cole, Scott Parker and Wes Brown are all Lilleshall graduates.) 'The Lilleshall model was very efficient,’ Wilkinson recalls, 'apart from the huge difficulty and inequity of selecting 18 players at such a young age from the whole of England.’ The aim of academies, he says, 'was to establish a similar model to Lilleshall, but to do it locally and therefore the process of selecting would be fairer because you would have a large pool.’ The other advantage was control. 'In the old centres of excellence the school, the city, the county, the district all had first call on the boys in terms of games played and practice times. Some boys played upwards of 100 games a season. In academies it is the club that has first call.’

At academies, boys are signed from age eight to 16. Signing seals mutual commitment: the boys agree to good behaviour and morals and to turn up to training; the club agrees to provide elite coaches, tournaments, physiotherapists. Boys are initially being offered yearly contracts ('retain’ and 'release’ are words that quickly enter boys’ vocabulary) extending to two-yearly at age 12. At 16 boys become full-time 'scholars’, often moving near the club to lodge with landladies. They are paid £100 a week as an apprentice, and education becomes the responsibility of the academy. (Every Thursday, Tottenham converts its hospitality room at White Hart Lane into a classroom for 'education day.’) At 17 they sign a 'professional’ contract, which means they can start earning money. Just how much is down to the club. I was told the average is £15-30,000; more if you’re a Jacob Mellis (Chelsea), or Danny Welbeck (Manchester United).

The FA rule is that 8-11s have to live within 60 minutes’ travelling time of the training ground; 12-16-year- olds within 90 minutes. This gives Tottenham a catchment area that runs from Bedford and Buckinghamshire through north and south London around to Essex, and a pool of 15-20 million people. South­ampton academy, on the other hand, is less lucky. Half its radius is the English Channel.

Now, of course, academies are under attack. People argue boys are brought in too young; that clubs do too little for the schools and amateur clubs from which boys are taken, and that, ultimately, the pressure on boys and families simply isn’t worth it because there are too few places at the end of it all, and those that do make it aren’t good enough anyway.

But then, football has changed. Fifty years ago the game was community-based; the players and those who paid to watch them came from the same areas and the same social backgrounds. The directors were local dignitaries and businessmen. Even top-class players would play for the same local club for their entire career. But this was before football became a global industry. Now clubs are owned by billionaires who have little connection to the country let alone the local area. After a game, spectators travel by Tube, train or car; players by Lear jet or limo. And players shift between clubs so often that John Terry’s eight years with Chelsea is seen as undying loyalty. What’s more, because of the massive money coming into the game, Premier League clubs are able to recruit from all over the world. On the first weekend of the first Premier League season in 1992, 76 per cent of the starting XIs were English. Today that figure has dropped to 37 per cent.

'Opportunities [at the top level] are very tight,’ agrees John McDermott, the academy head at Tottenham. 'Boys have to realise the path is not what it was 10 years ago.’ You once had to be among the best players in Britain, now you have to be among the best in the world to make it here. Three of the 23 scholars at Tottenham are European (a Swede, an Italian and a Belgian).

At age 16 the 90-minute rule goes out of the window and clubs start to bring in boys and their families from all over the world. 'It must be hugely frustrating for kids at English clubs to be told they’re not good enough at 16 because of the number of overseas youngsters filling academies,’ commented Trevor Brooking, the Football Association’s director of football development, in a recent attack on youth football. 'When we set up the academy system, I don’t think anyone envisaged it would be filled with anything other than Brits.’

McDermott, a former FA national coach, takes a Darwinist line. 'My belief is that talent will get you through. Cream will rise to the top.’ But not necessarily the very top. 'If God has given you the ability to play in the second division and you achieve that, then that is a success. (Jim White told me that non-league football, which used to be filled with butchers, bakers and lorry drivers, is now full of kids who have gone through the academy system, but haven’t quite made it.) Plus, McDermott urges, give academies a chance. They’re only 10 years old. It’s only now and over the next year or two that you will see the real worth of the system, and he has several players who are 'very interesting’.

He is keen for me to meet one of them, Ryan Mason, 17, a Tottenham scholar who is tipped to be a potent force. I find this hard to believe because the figure who emerges is unequivocally unathletic: pale, nervous, gangly, shuffling into the meeting room at the academy HQ at Spurs Lodge, Chigwell, with none of that high-testosterone swagger of pro footballers. 'Physically he is very underdeveloped,’ admits Allen, who remembers him being so scrawny at 12 that he couldn’t even kick the ball across the pitch. But this doesn’t matter – everyone agrees he is brilliant and scores loads of goals and in fact recently played with the first team in the Uefa Cup game against Dinamo Zagreb.

Everyone is looking to Mason as evidence that the academy system works. He joined Tottenham’s academy soon after it launched in 1998, when he was seven. His father, a BT engineer, got him playing aged six for a Sunday league team near his home in Cheshunt, Hertfordshire. Mason says he’s thrilled to be here. It’s fun, but also very hard. 'I’ve seen around 100 boys released,’ he says. One was a good friend. 'We’d been close for about six years, our families too. My dad would drive us [to training] on a Monday and his dad would do Wednesday, and then he got released.’ He shrugs. 'But that’s football isn’t it? Technically he was fine, but mentally he wasn’t there. He would go out with his mates,’ he explains in a tone that says, 'Need I say more?’

So what has Mason got that the others haven’t? Mono vision, says McDermott, who believes talent alone will take you to the age of 16, no further. 'He’s incredibly dedicated, verging on obsessed.’ When Mason’s not playing football, he’s thinking about it or watching it and spent last night analysing the Arsenal game on Sky – he has a TV in his bedroom. Everything in his life is football and he never loses focus. He may be 17 and have left home – he lodges with a landlady – but he looks at me as if I’m deranged when I ask if he ever goes to clubs or gigs. 'Nah! Nothing like that! I don’t do anything [that’s not related to football]. I’m pretty boring to be honest.’ So, what will he do with his four GCSEs should it not work out? 'I’ve not thought about that,’ he replies. 'I’d rather not.’

Martin Tolworth knows what happened to his son, Robert, 24, after he was 'dumped’ from Crystal Palace Academy, aged 16, after six years with the club. 'He went from being as high as a kite to devastation,’ he says. 'One Saturday he was told he’d been picked for a scholarship, that after six years of waiting he’d got to the first rung of the ladder, a young apprentice. But then a new manager went in and the following Saturday, he said, “No, we’re not going to pick you.”?’ Robert’s mother, normally a placid woman, was very upset. 'How can you treat boys like that,’ she raged. 'Cut their ties and just get rid of them. He’s just like a piece of meat hanging in the butchers.’ Robert got angry, put on weight, drifted out of football and is now a carpenter in Spain. The problem with football, his dad says, is that it’s not about absolutes. 'In swimming or athletics you’re picked on times. If you don’t make the time, you’re not in the swim team. But football is about the whims of managers. It’s a game of opinions.’

Glenn Hoddle, ex-footballer, former England coach and manager, agrees. 'There are no rights or wrongs in football,’ he says, 'One man’s opinion doesn’t mean it’s another’s.’ And to prove

his point, last year Hoddle launched the Glenn Hoddle Academy, a live-in academy in southern Spain, to offer a route back into professional football for those discarded by the system. 'As a manager of Swindon and Chelsea back in the early 1990s, I had that horrible job of shattering dreams by telling young kids at 18 they weren’t going to be signed on [to a professional contract]. I even had to do that to my cousin, who came on trial for three months at Swindon. But 18 is far too young to make a judgement. I always wondered what would happen to these boys if they’d been given that extra bit of time, and unfortunately the system doesn’t allow it.’

Last summer 60 players turned up to trials for the academy’s 24 places. More than 200 players are now registered on the website. 'We have to work on them mentally as much as on techniques,’ Hoddle says. 'They’re often very low. Some have been harshly dealt with. Some have been out of the academy for six or seven months because of injury and haven’t caught up and had a chance to show their true talent.’ But motivation is not a problem. 'Someone is giving them a second chance,’ he says. 'We’re changing their lives and that is as important as winning medals.’

November 13, 2007, and Watford academy under-14s are working out, sprinting the length of the pitch, tracking back and marking. It is 11 on a Thursday morning and the boys should be at school. But they are at school. In September 2007, Watford moved its 11-16-year-olds to Harefield Academy, a secondary school in Uxbridge, west London, arguing that for the club to come to the boys made more sense than the other way around. The boys are picked up from their homes in the morning by special academy buses, coaches come to the school for sessions, special homework clubs are laid on after school, and then the boys are ferried home again for 7.30. This way the boys get to play more football, they say. They also get an education, which is important, said one coach, because 'they’re more comfortable speaking in front of cameras’.

'The academy product is flawed,’ says Mark Warburton, assistant academy manager and the architect of the new model, based on one at Ajax in Holland. 'It involves hours and hours of driving, hours of standing outside watching the boys with the rain lashing down, getting home at half nine or 10, eating meals in the car, being behind on homework, and always being generally tired, because that is what it takes to be a pro footballer – it’s always been that way. But it’s not that way in Holland, or France. So if it works there and we’re buying their players, doesn’t that tell you that we’ve got to change the way we do things?’

It has certainly changed the life of Oli Sprague, 15, and his family. Oli, who lives in Ruislip, was scouted for Queens Park Rangers at age eight, then Chelsea, and now Watford. This means that Oli and his dad, Clinton, 44, a director of an accident management company, have a thorough knowledge of the M40 and M25. This was a problem for his wife, Susan, and his two other children, Jordan, 10, and Bliss, six. 'Really that amount of travelling started to kill our lives,’ Clinton says. 'It put a lot of strain on the family.’ But now Watford takes care of it all. 'I’ve got a home life again!’ Plus, Oli is less tired, he says, 'and incredibly happy playing football.’

This is a relief, because Oli hit a bad patch, aged nine, soon after he was bought by Chelsea for an alleged £25,000. The surprise is that it isn’t just pro footballers who are bought and sold. Children are too. It is 'compensation’, I was told, for the money invested in training and so on. Neither the boys nor their families apparently get any of the money – indeed, many might wish it was the 1950s again when Mrs Edwards at least got a washing machine out of Manchester United for her son, the legendary Duncan Edwards. But still, £25,000 is a lot of money. 'Theo Walcott cost £3 million at 16 when Arsenal bought him from Southampton,’ White points out; '£25,000 for a nine-year-old is good value if he turns out to be the next Theo Walcott.’

But Oli’s dad sees it differently. 'It puts way too much pressure on the kids. For it not to put pressure on, you’ve got to be a Ronaldo or a Rooney, someone who is so excellent it’s not going to make a difference.’ When Oli reported for duty at Cobham, Chelsea’s training ground in Surrey, he says he felt scrutinised. 'It was hard,’ he remembers. 'They thought you were the star player and you could run rings around everyone, but it wasn’t as easy as that. I wasn’t amazingly better than anyone else.’ He also sprained his ankle soon after the season started. Oli’s dad says

he became a lot quieter, a lot more tired. Then Oli fell awkwardly during a match and damaged his knee. He was released after two years. 'They thought I was a bit injury-prone.’ But he picked himself up, carried on and within a month or two was spotted by Watford – clubs operate as a network, and will often have trials for boys released from other clubs. 'You scored a blinder, didn’t you?’ recalls Oli’s dad. 'Within a few weeks he was signed up.’

So do academies treat boys like commodities? Some said yes.

I was told that one regime was so 'brutish’ that the parents felt too scared to tell the coach their son had glandular fever. 'We didn’t want him to look weak,’ his father says. 'The ethos was you had to be tough at all costs. If you’re injured or poorly, you’re out.’ The eventual confession was greeted with a chilly silence. The boy quit soon after. I was told of favouritism (more free tickets to matches); of coaches screaming like sergeant-majors; of a pack mentality that turns on the losers. I was told they should be Ofsted-inspected; that the bosses are a shambles who need lessons in management because 'they’re not dealing with a conveyor belt in a factory, but human beings – and young ones at that’. I was told of the pressure to impress all the time; and how the coaches reinforce that by standing there with clipboards, shouting, 'There are lots of boys who want your place.’

But each academy is different. Take Manchester City’s, which is hugely successful – former academy boys Micah Richards, Joey Barton and Shaun Wright Phillips are now worth £40 million; 10 other boys are millionaires; sixty per cent of graduates make a living out of the game. 'We’re by far the tops,’ says Jim Cassell, 61, the academy manager, who puts this down partly to 'care, time, knowledge, understanding and patience with young players’. Cassell, a former bookkeeper and local government officer, looks like a schoolteacher, acts as a guru and sounds like a dad. This has been especially valuable to Kieran Trippier, 18, captain of Man City’s youth team, who joined the academy aged nine.

'Kieran lives near me and I quite enjoy giving him a lift home after the game,’ Cassell says. 'We have a chat and it’s usually pretty boring because I keep on reminding him of all the things he got to do. He’s probably glad when he gets out of the car.’ Trippier nods, smirking.

There is another problem, Cassell says. 'There is so much pressure at the top, managers want instant results. They don’t have time to work on the players and grow them.’ Plus, managers change every year. 'This doesn’t give the boys the stability they need. They’ve come from an environment where I’ve been their only manager for the last 10 years. This means boys have to adjust and not many people like change.’ Jim White predicts that opportunities for home-grown talent at Man City will be reduced now it has a new billionnaire owner, Dr Sulaiman Al Fahim, who heads the group linked to the Abu Dhabi royal family. 'They bought Man City as a vehicle to promote Abu Dhabi. They’re not going to do that successfully if Man City’s got a bunch of unknown locals playing for them rather than world-known superstars.’ Last September Man City signed the Brazilian Robinho from Real Madrid, for £32.5 million.

Back at the Tottenham academy, John McDermott talks me through options for boys who are 'released’: lower league club; university (both here and in the States) to study something like sports science; club abroad; other apprenticeships; one Spurs reject recently went into the City. He says it’s never easy: boys cry, parents cry. One father expressed his heartbreak by pinning Allen against the wall with his hands around his neck. But, 'Tottenham will look great on their cv,’ he says. 'They’re super-fit, disciplined, have travelled the world playing football, had a go at achieving their dream.’ But their chances of reaching it were minuscule in the first place, I say. 'The boys are told that, the parents are told that,’ he stresses, 'but you’re also trying not to burst their dreams.’ That’s the thing about football academies, he says. 'We’re focused on success, not failure.’

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"......Kieran Trippier, 18, captain of Man City’s youth team, who joined the academy aged nine."

he now plays for Burnley

http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Kieran_Trippier

Years Team Apps† (Gls)†
2007–2012 Manchester City 0 (0)
2010 → Barnsley (loan) 3 (0)
2010–2011 → Barnsley (loan) 39 (2)
2011–2012 → Burnley (loan) 25 (1)
2012– Burnley 86 (2)
National team‡
2007 England U18 1 (0)
2008–2009 England U19 10 (0)
2009 England U20 5 (0)
2010–2011 England U21 2 (0)

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Germany's youth development strategy is paying off
Giants have invested heavily in youth in bid to return to glory days

.PUBLISHED : Saturday, 14 December, 2013, 9:32pm
UPDATED : Saturday, 14 December, 2013, 10:03pmAgence France-Presse
http://www.scmp.com/sport/soccer/article/1380543/germanys-youth-development-strategy-paying

Germany have not won an international trophy since Euro 1996, but a carefully crafted strategy to develop young stars is paying dividends, says respected coach Frank Wormuth.

The German game is enjoying a purple patch at club level with the re-emergence of a strong Bayern Munich, who defeated compatriots Borussia Dortmund to win the Champions League in May.

With the 2014 World Cup looming, Wormuth says Germany is preparing to reap a rich harvest after a decade of planning involving the bottom-up revamping of the national game.

Wormuth suggested that some of Germany's rivals - he named England as a prime example - are by contrast losing ground.

"We have been patient, whereas in England the league do not like to be told what to do by the federation. They are not on the same wavelength," Wormuth said.

"Maybe we are missing a little Brazilian pizzazz, but we Germans are very structured. We looked at our recent record and said, 'this can't go on'."

After three World Cup titles - the last in 1990 - and three European championships "we were having no more success. We lacked a pool of young emerging talents, new coaches.

"So we changed things around. We have been working from the grass roots up to the top," Wormuth said at a meeting of the Footecon football trade fair in Rio de Janeiro.

Wormuth, under-20 coach with the German Football Federation (DFB), says former Germany coach Jurgen Klinsmann made a conscious decision ahead of the 2006 World Cup to overhaul old methods which had grown stale, building on early work instigated from 1999 by then-Bayer Leverkusen general manager Rainer Calmund and DFB director of youth development Dietrich Weise.

That involved the creation of a huge nationwide network of talent centres with DFB-salaried coaches hunting down raw talent at youth level and nurturing the players as they moved up the age scale to the brink of the professional game.

"We can thank Klinsmann as he sowed some of the seeds that are now blossoming," said Wormuth, whose brief playing career at the second division level included a spell playing alongside current Germany coach Joachim Loew at Freiburg.

Wormuth proudly pointed to the emergence of several current stars from a system which now runs the rule over as many as 600,000 youngsters each year.

Bayern and Germany star Thomas Mueller is one, another is Chelsea newcomer Andre Schurrle, whom the Londoners signed from Leverkusen earlier this year.

Wormuth said that after Euro 1996, as old stars passed their sell-by dates, many figures in the game did not want to accept the need for wholesale overhaul, but "after the results started to appear they began to accept it" and young coaches such as Dortmund's Jurgen Klopp began making a name for themselves.

"Our goal in Germany is straightforward - talent must not be allowed to fall through the net. It must be nurtured," Wormuth said.

Although German football has invested around €100 million (HK$1 billion) in the system, he says the net cost should be much lower.

"You send a scout [to a youth game] and when the talent emerges the clubs ultimately can make money on their investment. [German] stadiums are full, so money is coming in."

A further positive by-product is that the proportion of young homegrown talents in the Bundesliga far exceeds that of the foreigner-dominated English Premier League.

At the last World Cup in South Africa, 19 of Germany's 23-man squad had come through club youth academies. They finished third, beating Uruguay in the third-place play-off after falling to eventual champions Spain in the semi-finals.

"Now to our next goal," Wormuth said. "We want that fourth [World Cup] star on our shirts!"

.This article appeared in the South China Morning Post print edition as German example worth following
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I have only recently come across this section and am enjoying the reads.
Something a bit left field is a football manager thread of, adapting Ajax youth development into the game, whether you play the game or not he references Ajax in real life, even has a few drills posted!
http://community.sigames.com/showthread.php/380395-Ajax-When-Real-Life-Meets-Football-Manager-FM14
Further down the thread he concentrates on football manager (as the purpose of the thread), so if your not interested, you may miss this article. I haven't read every post in this thread so it could have been posted before, but I found it interesting.

http://whitehouseaddress.blogspot.co.uk/2013/12/cruyff-ajaxs-way-forward.html?m=1

I'm posting from my phone, so I won't bother with the cut and paste.

Edited by moops: 12/1/2014 02:15:24 AM
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Youth accademy reports from ecaeurope.com

http://www.ecaeurope.com/Research/ECA%20Report%20on%20Youth%20Academies/ECA%20Report%20on%20Youth%20Academies.pdf
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Practice Design – Progression & Challenge
Posted on 25th January, 2014 by Mark Upton   

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This is a short post based on recent observations of some practice activities/sessions being shared online.

I’m seeing a few recurring examples (usually of the “isolated technique” or “breakdown” drill variety – more on the issues with that here) where progressions of an activity are based on doing a skill(s) quicker, more accurately and/or executing greater number of repetitions without an error. The philosophy seems to be based on the idea that by doing this players are being “stretched” and improving performance – which seem logical.

The reality is players are getting better at performing in THAT activity. If this activity bears little resemblance to the situations in a match where the skill may be used, then performance in those MATCH situations is not being enhanced. The images below represent this dynamic – improvement in static handpassing from 50 reps to 100 reps without a mistake (picture on the left) is unlikely to contribute much to improved performance in the context of handpassing in match situations (picture on the right).

Remember the purpose for creating a simplified activity to begin with is so players can experience a certain level of success (& exposure to mistakes) in order to facilitate learning.

Once they reach a relative level of success, we should then be “stretching” or “challenging” players by increasing the complexity of the activity. So if we are doing an unopposed 4-point square passing activity, once players can frequently pass to a teammate accurately (say 60-70% of the time), the objective is NOT to get to 100% or do it quicker (often perfection is unattainable and not required). From my own experiences, I know it is easy to get caught up in trying to master or perfect performance in a drill and forget about the “bigger picture” of how it relates to the match.

Instead, exceeding a certain threshold of “success” should be the cue to increase the complexity of the activity, such as…

adding a defender(s) (hopefully at least 1 is already present in your activity!)
creating more variability in types of passes and ways ball is received/controlled (on the move, movement not restricted by cones)
incorporating other skills interspersed with the passing (random practice)

With increasing complexity the activity generally increases it’s resemblance (“representativeness”) to game situations, even to the point where the activity may become more difficult than situations faced in a match, ie extremely limited time and space. By doing this we are increasing the probability of performance gains in the activity transferring into the “real match”.

When the long-term objective is quality performance at the elite level of a team sport, players need to develop the ability to perform effectively & efficiently, but not necessarily perfectly, in highly complex & dynamic situations. Creating appropriate progressions in complexity of practice activities is critical, and a key skill for a coach to possess.

Do you have this skill?



Mark Upton has extensive experience applying Skill Acquisition and learning principles in the design of on and off field environments for player development. If you would like to discuss the consultancy and mentoring services Mark offers, please get in touch -

mark at sportsrelations com au
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This thread should either be a sticky or there should be a locked sticky thread to help people access the best threads in the performance section.

The thing about football - the important thing about football - is its not just about football.
- Sir Terry Pratchett in Unseen Academicals
For pro/rel in Australia across the entire pyramid, the removal of artificial impediments to the development of the game and its players.
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When It Is Too Early To Predict
Monday, June 9, 2014

Coming at around the same time that Greg Dyke was announcing his plans for English football which included the proposed introduction of B teams, one would have expected the Under 17s participation in the European Championship of the age category to receive greater publicity. Instead it went by largely un-noticed until they reached the final (which they won) at which point everyone suddenly got excited.

That England eventually won (and on penalties!) did little to diminish enthusiasm and rightly so because the team was made up of a number of genuinely talented individuals. Whether it was the best team or not is debatable – the technique of the Portuguese, where every player on the pitch looked an exquisite passer of the ball, was extremely impressive - yet they won when it mattered which is a great lesson to learn at that age.

And that is what these tournaments are for: learning. Playing against in a different climate against teams who adopt different approaches to the game provide them with challenges that they don’t normally come across, meaning that they have to come up with new solutions in order to win. These games will serve as the building blocks on which they can build their careers, and the experience will be stored for future reference. For sure, they will have less fear of penalty kicks, given the confidence with which they dispatched them.

Inevitably, this point got lost once they won with the effort going instead on identifying which player could be billed as the most talented of this generation.

The truth is that it is very difficult to predict what will happen to any of these players. They are too young and their bodies have too much development to go through to be able to discern what will happen of them.

For proof of this one only has to look at the list of top scorers from previous editions. Going through the five editions held between 2005 and 2009 (i.e. players who today are aged between 21 and 26) the only one that you could probably count as a genuine star of the game is Toni Kroos. Others like Victor Moses and Luc Castignos have had fairly respectable careers so far and could push on to reach another level.

The majority, however, have descended into anonymity. Players like Lennart Thy, Yannis Tafer, Manuel Fischer, Tomas Necid and Tevfik Kose have ended up playing in lower divisions or minor leagues. Not that there is any disgrace in that, anything but, yet it is a far cry from what their early success hinted could lie in store for them.

For a lot of players, those age category tournaments end up being the highlight of their career, something from which there are two lessons to take. The first is one that is often mentioned which is that at those ages it is more important that players learn rather than winning. But, and this is the second lesson, if they do win it is important that they be allowed to enjoy the experience because it might, literally, be the only one shot of glory they ever get.

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Friday, June 6, 2014Atalanta: The Italian Talent Factory
This is the first in a two part series focusing on Atalanta. The second part can be read here.

When people talk about clubs who have managed to develop a system that consistently brings through talented players, they’re usually referring to the big continental giants whose success stories are well known; teams like Barcelona, Ajax, Manchester United and Bayern Munich.

There are, however, other clubs who are just as successful – perhaps even more – at developing players but whose work gets far less recognition because they do not have the same platform on which to showcase their results.

Atalanta is one of those clubs. When in 2011 the CIES Football Observatory ranked clubs by the number of players whom they had produced and who were playing top flight football across Europe, Atalanta came eighth, the highest placed Italian side on the list and ahead of a lot of continental heavyweights whose investment far exceeds theirs.

Yet, outside of Italy they are virtually unknown something that is partly down to the fact that except for a Coppa Italia won in 1962 they have never registered any success at national, let alone international, level. This anonymity is also caused by the way in which their model works which, stripped down, essentially equates to this: bring a player through, give him room to develop, sell him, plough back the money into the system and bring the next one through.

It is an efficient and self-sustaining model that has seen the club develop into the biggest ‘provincial’ side in Italian football, something that is a success in itself. Of course, the fact that their young players keep finding room in the first team – something that the regular sale of top players ensures – is one of the reasons why they are so good at it; players simply get the opportunities that they wouldn’t necessarily get elsewhere.

What this is not, however, is a strategy that allows whoever is managing the side to build year on year. There are years that are better than others (and, conversely, some which are worse than others) but long term success is unlikely.

That is something that is accepted and embraced. Fans might not enjoy seeing one good player after another getting sold so that they can fulfil their potential elsewhere yet they’ve come to realise that this strategy has allowed them to progress beyond many other clubs as well as giving them occasional joys of bloodying the noses of the big sides.

It is a system that works well for them. Yet it is also one that is always in danger with predators lurking everywhere.

Whereas other Italian clubs have traditionally given Atalanta time to develop their players, making their moves only after they had played for the senior side and proved that there was more to them than potential, English clubs aren’t that patient.

Over the past decade, Atalanta have lost three of their brightest talents – Samuele Dalla Bona, Vito Mannone and Jacopo Sala – to Premiership clubs as soon as these players were out of school. There could be more losses along the way with fifteen year old Christian Capone being rumoured to be interesting Liverpool.

With Atalanta receiving little or nothing for these players, the risk is that their whole model can be ruined. The simple truth for them is that they need to generate certain amounts in transfer fees to keep on funding the whole system, something that is unlikely to happen if their brightest prospects are stolen away before they’re anywhere near reaching full maturity.

Unfortunately, there is little that they can do. Their best option is to point at the lengthy list of players that have managed to play at the highest level thanks to the education and opportunity that they got at Atalanta. It is a strong argument and, hopefully, one that will ensure that the list keeps growing longer.

The Atalanta Production Line
Atalanta have always been proficient at developing players with the likes of Gaetano Scirea and Antonio Cabrini – both of whom would go on to become Juventus legends – as well as Roberto Donadoni coming through the ranks.

Yet the club really pivoted its attention on to youth in the late eighties, providing Italian football with some of its finest players. Here are some examples.

Riccardo Montolivo
Spotted as an eight year old, he would make his first team debut ten years later at the start of a season where Atalanta where in the Serie B. His talent immediately came to the fore and he promptly became a regular helping the side to promotion. The following season he would retain his place in the side and, even though Atalanta would go on to finish last, he had shown enough for Fiorentina to move in and sign him.

Alessandro Tacchinardi
Having initially started out at his home-town side of Pergocrema, Tacchinardi was signed by Atalanta and placed in their youth sides. In 1992 he made his first team debut and immediately caught the attention of Juventus who would sign him before he made ten appearances for Atalanta. It would turn out to be a wise choice as Tacchinardi would go on to form one of the best midfields in Europe.

Massimo Donati
After progressing through all the youth ranks at Atalanta, Donati made his first team debut at the start of the 1999-2000 season going on to make 20 appearances as the side successfully battled to get out of the Serie B. He would play even more the following year (26 appearances) in the Serie A convincing AC Milan to make a move for him.

Giampaolo Pazzini
Pazzini was in the same youth side as Montolivo and, like him, made his first team debut in 2003-04, scoring nine goals as Atalanta won promotion. The following season he found goals a bit harder to come by yet, even so, he wasn’t allowed to finish the season at the club because by January they had received an offer from Fiorentina that was too good to refuse.

Domenico Morfeo
Of the players on this list, Morfeo is perhaps the least known yet he was a supremely talented player who perhaps should have made more of his abilities. Spotted by Atalanta as a fourteen year old, he made his debut at just 17, scoring three times in nine games. Despite Morfeo’s contribution, Atalanta were relegated that season and, strangely, he would only play a bit-part role in the following season as they successfully won promotion back to the top flight.

Once there, Morfeo would get a starring role scoring eleven times in thirty appearances. Having survived relegation, Morfeo opted to remain at the club but injuries restricted him to 26 appearances (and five goals) as Atalanta were relegated. That summer he moved to Fiorentina

The Reasons For Atalanta's Success With Youths
This is the second in a two part series on Atalanta BC. The first part can be read here.

Given that they are continuously faced by clubs with far larger resources, the fact that Atalanta not only compete well at a national youth level but have actually registered a number of important wins in their history is perhaps the biggest proof of the quality of work that they do.

Contrary to what some presume there are no secrets to their success, just a number of factors that when put together contribute to a system that is far better than most at doing what it should be doing: developing players who are good enough to play for the club at the highest level.

Coaches
Although this might seem obvious, it is often overlooked when reasons for a youth system’s success are looked at. No matter how good the ideas, regardless of the quality of the players that are recruited and irrespective of the amounts invested in facilities there can be no success if there aren’t the right coaches in place.

This means that the coaches must be able to pass on their knowledge to those put in their charge; competent people who are the right fit with the age group that they are assigned to and who know how to help the individuals progress.

But there is more to it than that. They have to be people who know in detail what the club is trying to achieve and how their teams play. They know the value that is placed on technique and creativity, attributes that are encouraged here more than anywhere else in Italy.

More significantly, they must be fully convinced that it is the best way to proceed. If that conviction is missing then sooner or later it will come out and it will show in their work.

True to form, Atalanta are very selective in deciding who gets a job within their Settore Giovanile (Youth Sector) with their preference frequently falling on individuals who have gone through their system or have played for the club. Their Under 18 side is coached by Valter Bonacina (265 games for Atalanta) whilst their Under 16s are in the hands of Sergio Porrini (100 games for Atalanta as well as a Champions League winner with Juventus).

It has always been that way: current Italian national team manager (and a man with 116 appearances in the black and blue shirts) Cesare Prandelli spent almost a decade working within the Atalanta youth system handling various age groups before he took his first steps in the pro game.

And that is how it will continue to be because it ensures the presence of people who have gone through the experience themselves. There is no one who can be as convinced about the system’s validity more than those whose careers have largely been the result of the work they did within that same system.

For the kids placed in their charge they are examples of what might be achieved if they work hard enough. Or, if the coach isn’t someone who progressed beyond playing for Atalanta’s youth sides, there is confirmation that the club will keep on looking out for you regardless of how good you happen to be.

Stay Local
As with most Italian sides, Atalanta have very close links with a number of youth clubs. These clubs, usually village sides or teams from particular neighbourhoods, get backing from the professional teams either in the form of coaching or else financial (the sums aren’t typically very significant ones but enough to help them cover some expenses like new kits) in exchange for informing them about any particularly talented individual they come across.

It is a very healthy symbiosis where the professional sides put something back into the grassroots game while ensuring that they cast as wide a net as possible to discover talents.

Perhaps the big difference that Atalanta have with the rest is that, as much as possible, they try recruit locally. That is not to say that there haven’t been exceptions –there have been recruits from South America, Eastern Europe and Africa – but these are largely one-offs.

Instead Atalanta go for local boys with the main reason again being cultural: these players have less of a hard time to integrate and settle in, making their footballing education run all the smoother.

No One Is Left Behind
At many clubs, the future of a lot of players is sacrificed in order to ensure that the one or two who are seen as the brightest prospects manage to develop and their talents maximised. Others put their focus on the team results, looking to boost their profile by winning at youth level but without succeeding in the ultimate goal of any youth system which is that of seeing any talent progress into the first team.

Not so Atalanta where every player is important. The progress of each individual who enters their system is tracked with coaches setting goals for each one which are then communicated and agree by the players. This ensures that everyone knows what they have to work on and where they need to improve. Whether they do so, and to what extent, allows the people at the club to determine what comes next and how they can ensure that there is further progress. There is absolute commitment from the part of the club that when an eight year old is signed everything will be done so that he goes all the way.

The fact that some of these players even get opportunities coaching within the youth sector, allowing to have a career in football even if it isn’t a player, helps reinforce the image of Atalanta as a club that genuinely cares for ‘its boys’.

Equally, their commitment to local players avoids the (common) situation where a player who has come through the junior ages is suddenly forced out with his place going either to someone brought in either from another Italian club or else from overseas.

Club Culture
Any manager who comes in at Atalanta will be well aware of what the club is all about and must be willing to work within those parameters. This means that they must be willing to play the club’s young players, giving them the opportunities to grow and show their worth. This also means that if a player attracts the attention of a bigger side then they must be ready to lose him if a good enough offer comes in.

Atalanta offers managers a great opportunity to forge their reputations – as many have done – but it also offers a challenge that is unique in Italian football.

Current manager Stefano Colantuono knows all about it. His first spell in charge ended when he moved to Palermo, lured by the promise of a club with the reputation of more heightened ambition than Atalanta. Yet his time there ended after just a few months; engulfed by the chaos and lack of patience of a club that is the polar opposite to Atalanta.

It is an experience that probably helped him understand and appreciate better both what he has at Atalanta and also what he has to do.

Out of the fifteen players who made more than ten appearances last season – one in which they comfortably retained their top flight status - six (Daniele Baselli, Gian Bellini, Giacomo Bonaventura, Davide Brivio, Andrea Consigli and Cristian Raimondi roughly 40%) came from their youth team. Plenty more got their first taste of Serie A with Colantuono testing them to see how they would do.

Of those who played regularly, the most impressive was attacking midfielder Giacomo Bonaventura who earned an Italy cap and was close to making it into their World Cup squad. Yet he is unlikely to be there when the season kicks off again in September, continuing a tradition of seeing their best players move to bigger sides.

To replace him, and to strengthen the team, Atalanta look first and foremost within. That might seem as an obvious place to start but it is a big departure from other clubs’ normal practise.

In truth, Atalanta do their best to assist their players’ development. As with many other Italian clubs, they send a lot of players out on loan (in excess of forty last season) all over the country at different levels. The fact in itself that a lot of these have come through Atalanta’s system is a guarantee of their potential, meaning that there are many willing to take a bet on their youngsters.

The progress of these players is monitored closely. The main aim is that of seeing how they handle the experience, looking for indications as to whether they can step up. But it is also a way of putting these players in the shop window, giving them the best opportunity of making a career out of football even if it isn’t in Atalanta’s colours.



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Louis van Gaal cares only about winning, not about Dutch ideology
Jonathan Wilson The Guardian, Wednesday 2 July 2014

The World Cup has highlighted the ability of an older, wiser Holland manager to compromise on principles to the team’s benefit. Manchester United fans (and suits) will be encouraged

In the late 1980s two young coaches on opposite sides of the world came up with similar ideas about how football should be played. Both were deeply influenced by the Dutch total footballing sides of the early ’70s but both recognised the romanticism of that style had to be adapted to a world in which players were fitter than ever and pressing was widespread.

A quarter of a century on this is their World Cup, a breathtaking festival of thrust and counter-thrust, with transitions foregrounded and most teams looking to win the ball back high up the pitch. The majority of coaches at this World Cup have been influenced, directly or indirectly, by either Marcelo Bielsa or Louis van Gaal. And one of them is Louis van Gaal.

Of course, being Van Gaal, he has not fitted comfortably into the narrative. His idealism has been tempered and, while certain traits remain the same as ever – the insistence on discipline, the combative approach to press conferences, the majestic brick-faced self-certainty –this is an older, wiser, more flexible Van Gaal, one who understands the value of compromise.

Holland’s 2-0 win against Chile in the final game of the group stage was a masterclass. In Jorge Sampaoli Van Gaal faced a self-professed disciple of Bielsa, somebody he knew would press and look to disrupt the natural passing patterns of his side high up the pitch. Tactically speaking, he was essentially looking into a mirror.

The old Van Gaal might have accepted Sampaoli’s challenge to fight mano a mano, might have sought to show that nobody beat him at his game. This Van Gaal, though, sat off, defended deep and waited for an opportunity to exploit Chile’s lack of central defensive height at a set play. He had noticed, Van Gaal said, that Chile’s level tended to drop in the last 10 to 15 minutes, so he bided his time; sure enough, Arjen Robben picked Chile off on the break to cross for Memphis Depay to add a second in injury time.

Afterwards Van Gaal, who takes over at Manchester United after the tournament, was challenged as to whether he was somehow betraying the Dutch style by not playing what the journalist in question termed “attacking football”. Van Gaal’s response was typically belligerent as he asked the journalist to define “attacking football”.

The implication, that attacking football is not simple to define and is somehow in the eye of the beholder, seems to have become increasingly relevant over the past decade. The former logic that possession football equalled attacking football no longer pertains. Germany, for instance, were praised for their attacking play at the last World Cup but they were a reactive side, countering with thrilling vibrancy. The opposite is true of Spain, a radically proactive side dismissed by some as being boring despite – or rather because of – their mastery of the ball.

Van Gaal’s philosophy was never as possession-oriented as that of Rinus Michels or Johan Cruyff but still his Ajax and Barcelona sides and the foundations he laid at Bayern Munich were clearly derivative of the old school of Dutch football, even if they were opposed by Cruyff and other Ajax romantics. He favoured a 4-3-3 with a playmaking central defender who stepped up into midfield, later incorporating an additional holding midfielder and adjusting to a 4-2-3-1.

The switch to a counterattacking style has taken many by surprise, as has the dabble with three central defenders. Van Gaal has pointed out, quite rightly, that he won the Eredivisie with AZ Alkmaar playing counterattacking football without traditional wingers, but the change of shape was seemingly an emergency measure undertaken after the injury to Kevin Strootman.

The Roma midfielder was injured in the 2-0 friendly defeat by France in March, a match that was decisive in the evolution of this Dutch side. Karim Benzema tore Bruno Martins Indi apart and Van Gaal decided he could not risk his defenders being left one on one against top-class strikers. That meant bringing in an additional defender as cover and the switch to a back five. Happily three of his defence – Martins Indi, Stefan de Vrij and Daryl Janmaat –played together at Feyenoord in a side that occasionally operated with three central defenders. They were coached by Ronald Koeman, whom Van Gaal had disliked and distrusted at Ajax, but his pragmatism overrode that and he went with Van Persie, his captain, to watch a Feyenoord game. They came away enthused and Van Gaal then telephoned Arjen Robben to persuade him of the value of moving away from the more traditional approach.

Van Gaal was badly burned by his first spell as Holland coach, which ended in failure to qualify for the 2002 World Cup. He recognised that, given the lack of time available to coaches at national level, it is almost impossible to institute the sort of overarching philosophy he would with a club side. Instead he has opted for a more piecemeal approach, essentially creating a platform for Wesley Sneijder to create and looking to exploit the pace of Robben, whose switch from left to right after the drinks break in the Mexico game was critical.

Van Gaal has never been as hung up on ideology and playing the right way as many other Dutch coaches but this tournament has highlighted his ability to micromanage as well as philosophise. His only interest, he says, is winning, a pragmatism that, in the Dutch context, makes him as radical as ever.

http://www.theguardian.com/football/blog/2014/jul/03/louis-van-gaal-tempers-idealism-holland-strengths
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June 27, 2014 12:42 pm

The great Dutch football tradition By Simon Kuper

Holland’s football team may be the last surviving unmistakably Dutch cultural product

When I arrived in the Netherlands in 1976, I was six years old and had never previously heard of the country. My father just happened to have taken a job there. We moved into a typical small Dutch terraced house, with big front windows through which passers-by could peer to make sure nothing untoward was happening inside.

On our first Dutch evening, my brother and I ventured on to the street to meet the other children. They greeted us by singing what were probably the only English words they knew: “Crazy boys!” But we soon became regulars in the street’s daily football match. It turned out that we had landed in the middle of a golden age. In 1974 Holland had reached the World Cup final playing glorious passing football. In 1978 they got there again. And the present Dutch team, which faces Mexico in the second round of the World Cup on Sunday, is in that tradition. It isn’t as good, yet it won its three group games. Holland’s football team may be the last surviving unmistakably Dutch cultural product.

Read more by following the link
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http://leeroden.wordpress.com/2014/06/29/fc-barcelonas-football-v-dutch-football-a-coachs-view/

Jun 29 2014
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By Lee Roden Football
FC Barcelona’s football v Dutch football – A coach’s view
As a football journalist who likes to pay the bills, I live in permanent fear of the day when coaches collectively catch up and decide they want to be football writers themselves. While simply being a qualified coach doesn’t necessarily make you a good analyst, a good analytical brain along with a strong experience in football coaching is a formidable combination, and it’s something I have a feeling we’ll see a lot more of in the future, as the base of football writers continues to grow with the ever-expanding internet.

As writers, most of us are guilty of educated guess-work, reaching our own conclusions over why any given manager made any given decision regarding systems, individual player roles, reactionary substitutions and so on. These conclusions may or may not be correct – the chances of reaching a more accurate conclusion increases with better research and greater degrees of expertise, as with any type of analysis – but if you’re a highly experienced football coach, chances are you will have seen many of these decisions on a training pitch or game in which you yourself have been involved. I think that in order to provide the most accurate analysis possible, drawing on that kind of knowledge is important, and as such it’s no coincidence that the best football writers tend to spend a great deal of time in conversation with the people who practice the game daily.

One such person is Jordi Pascual, a UEFA A licensed coach with over 20 years of experience in his field. Along with his practical expertise, Jordi is also one of the ‘coach-writers’ who are likely to put me out of a job in the future, with a book on coaching Spanish football, an excellent blog, and thousands upon thousands of pieces of mini-analysis on Twitter under his belt. When he speaks, it’s worth listening.

I asked Jordi to write something in response to one of my own pieces for talkSPORT, in which I debated the ‘uniqueness’ of FC Barcelona and the Spanish national team’s football (horribly mislabeled as ‘tiki-taka’). I find it difficult to see this style of play as an entirely separate movement from the style gradually developed by the likes of Johan Cruyff, Louis van Gaal and Frank Rijkaard in Barcelona, later adopted by the Spanish national team.

Jordi’s response is what I had hoped for, drawing on both his practical experience in coaching and his years as a football observer. You can find it below. As a final note, Barcelona’s style of play is referred to here as ‘positional play’, a phrase we both feel more aptly describes its fundamentals than the nonsensical ‘tiki-taka’, and one that has been in common use by journalists and coaches in Spain for years now. Enjoy.

Total Football v Positional Play
I’ve been asked if I think that Total Football and Positional Play – the name given to the style of FC Barcelona in recent years – are the same or different. My answer is neither one, nor the other, really.

I’ll explain. As we all know, the style of the Ajax sides and Dutch National Team of the 1970s (mainly when Rinus Michels was manager) is considered Total Football. Other coaches, like Stefan Kovacs and Vic Buckingham worked with it earlier, but it wasn’t until the 1974 World Cup played in Germany that this way of playing really became famous.

So what’s at the heart of this way of playing football? Mobility. Mobility is the key word. Mobility of players to cover the pitch. Mobility of players to appear and disappear from the “scene of the crime”. What does that really mean in practice, you may rightly ask? Let’s take the classic formation used by these teams, 1-4-3-3, as an example, and see what happens.

The starting positions in this 1-4-3-3 are defined as: one goalkeeper, two centre backs, two full backs, one central /holding midfielder, two attacking midfielders, two wingers and one striker/centre forward. The graphic below shows their starting areas on the pitch.

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http://leeroden.wordpress.com/2014/06/29/fc-barcelonas-football-v-dutch-football-a-coachs-view/
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Futsal - the game behind Brazil's superstars
By Ben Smith
BBC Sport There is a saying in Brazil that a great footballer is born here every day.

A stroll along Rio's breathtaking beaches is enough to show you why they believe that. As far as the eye can see, footballs dance in the evening air, propelled by one deft touch after another.

Alongside the sun-worshippers, towel hawkers, muscle-men and bar-crawlers are boys and girls, men and women, repeating skills and drills, honing their feel for the football, hour after hour.

Tempting as it is to conclude that Brazil's success stems from this carefree childhood practice on the sand, the real reason may lie elsewhere.

In these parts, they believe Futebol de Salao - or futsal - is the game that made Brazil great.

Pele, Zico, Socrates, Romario, Ronaldo, Neymar are just some of the Brazilian national icons who spent their youth playing with the smaller, heavier futsal ball - a ball that could not be lofted into the air, but demanded speed of mind, fleetness of foot, flair and flamboyance.

"Futsal makes you think fast and play fast," Pele said. "You try things, it makes you dribble. It makes you a better player."

In Fortaleza, in the north-east of Brazil, some of the region's best young players train in the stifling midday heat. The basketball-size court is surrounded by stepped concrete seating, painted yellow and blue. A group of spectators look on as the ball skims around in a blur of artistry, fizzing frequently into the small goals.

It is the ball that makes the game. According to one version of futsal history, the ball is weighted because it was began on courts surrounded by windows - near impossible to kick into the air, the heavy ball was therefore less likely to break glass. But whatever the origins, the weight and size compels a certain brand of football - a style Brazil made their own in the early 1970s.

And it is a style you can still detect today. Watch Neymar closely and you will see him use techniques he developed playing futsal. The Brazil No 10 often traps and then shifts the ball with the sole of his foot, rather than the instep, a skill young Brazilians use on court in every game.

"Football owes futsal so much," said Manuel Tobias, one of futsal's greats and three-time world futsal player of the year, watching the youngsters in Fortaleza. "If we look at the Brazil team in this World Cup, around 10 players were registered with futsal clubs. Neymar, Willian, David Luiz, Daniel Alves, Luis Gustavo, Marcelo - they are a different type of player.

"They think fast, they are skilful and they are able to get out of difficult situations."

Oscar is another Brazil player whose game has been shaped by the sport. His goal against Croatia in the opening game of the World Cup was dismissed by many as a tired toe-poke. The Chelsea midfielder had a different view.

"It was like something you might do in futsal," he said."When you get the chance you just shoot. You don't wait."

With space limited on the futsal court, players do not have time to pull their leg back for a shot. Romario, a World Cup winner in 1994, was the master of the art.

"The best player I have coached? It has to be Romario," Johan Cruyff once said. "His technique was extraordinary. Curiously, most of his goals were toe-pokes."

There was nothing curious about it. Futsal had helped him develop a technique of finishing without warning and often just when defenders felt they had closed him down.

The great dribblers of Brazilian football also came from futsal. Garrincha was arguably the greatest of them all. Former Wales international left-back Mel Hopkins, who lined up directly against Garrincha at the 1958 World Cup, told BBC Sport. "His legs went one way and his body the other."

Rivelino, Ronaldinho and even Neymar have developed a dancing, elastic sway to their dribbling that is uniquely Brazilian. Some describe it as 'ginga' - a loose body. Again it is born of necessity, the need to find a way beyond your opponent in the close confines of a futsal court.

"Because you play in a small space you have to know what you are going to do before the ball gets to you," former Brazil international and BBC pundit Juninho said. "I was six when I started. It has helped Brazil a lot over the years."

The origins of the sport are a matter of debate. Some believe it began in the Young Men's Christian Associations (YMCA) in Montevideo, Uruguay, at a time when the church used sport to instil moral values, like discipline and honour.

Others believe Brazil invented the game, as the urban sprawl of cities such as Rio and Sao Paulo wiped out the space for 11-a-side pitches.

What is not disputed is that the rules were formalised in Uruguay as a combination of basketball, water polo, handball and, of course, football - 20 minutes each way, five or six-a-side.

Since then its practice, and its influence, has spread. The first futsal World Cup took place in 1982, Brazil winning the final in Sao Paulo - and four or the first five tournaments. Fifa began to take notice and in 1989 took control of the sport.

With wider popularity came changes. With television companies interested, Fifa made the ball twice as big - a size four rather than the size two with which the game began - and much lighter. Spain began to take futsal seriously, using Brazilian-born players to strengthen their team, winning futsal's World Cup twice. It soon became a regular part of the academies at Barcelona, Real Madrid and elsewhere in La Liga.

"In futsal, you see whether a player is really talented," Spain midfielder Xavi - winner of football's World Cup and two European Championships - said. "In normal football you don't necessarily identify talent as easily because it's so much more physical. But with futsal, you notice small details in quality, class and tactical understanding."

Portugal, Italy and Germany have, like Spain, been playing the game for the past 20 years in an attempt to emulate Brazil's technique, and England is belatedly catching on, albeit gradually.

It is 20 years since schoolteacher Simon Clifford returned from Brazil, a trip he paid for with a £5,000 loan from a teaching union, determined to spread the gospel in England. Clifford's Brazilian Soccer Schools have been doing that for almost 20 years and the game is, at last, beginning to take off.

In Brazil, there is no sign of its popularity waning. Indeed, according to Louise Bede, vice-president of the Brazilian Futsal Association, it is more popular now than ever.

"Government figures tell us futsal is the most popular sport in Brazil even more so than conventional football," she said. "The athletes who started with futsal are the cornerstone of the Brazilian squad."

The game is played in all Brazilian football academies, and is part of what distinguishes coaching in the country, where the biggest fear is over-coaching its next generation of boys and girls, not under-coaching them.

Coaches are discouraged from giving players formal positions until they are 14. Talent is allowed to breathe, to find its natural path in games such as futsal. From the age of seven to 12, young players tackle futsal three days a week.

It remains to be seen whether the adapted, TV-friendly version of the game will have an impact on Brazil's fortunes on the world stage in the long term. What is clear, however, is that it is still regarded as the incubator of Brazilian talent.

Futsal is proof that in Brazil - despite that popular saying - great footballers are not born, they are made.

http://www.bbc.com/sport/0/football/27980859
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