Monday, December 10, 2012

Recent Events

It Was The Best Of Times, 
It Was The Worst Of Times...

Some bullets and links on the events in the soccer world the last couple days, both locally and abroad.  Interesting, frustrating, exciting...good sports drama, all.

  • Falcao.  Columbia's greatest export.
  • Springboks win Friday, show some class in front of goal.  The 5 goals scored by the Springboks were all excellent team goals.  Individual skill, passing and movement off the ball featured pleasantly in the girls' efforts to score, and while the opponent wasn't exactly the Japanese national team, they were not without some talent.  This coach was pleased to see a real bounce in the step of all the Springboks...they played lively soccer with a very positive approach.  
  • The Quick Boys had it a bit differently...a massive, lopsided win...which as most of the boys know, I'm not prone to encourage. (some may recall the comments at the end of this post from the Labor Day Weekend tournament.)  But, given that the boys are playing up an age group (and aren't even the top team in our age group in our own club) and played to modest results in division II outside this fall, our opponent ought to have acquitted themselves better, simply by virtue of being a little older/bigger/etc.  The match left me fuming on the sideline as I watched Quick Boys playing as though there was no opponent, or at least as though they were playing shorthanded.  I wish I could say it was due to our excellent play...but in truth, the goals came from an utter lack of defensive awareness or pressure from the Westmont players.  At that age group (recall that U13 is the broadly used first season of 11 v. 11 soccer) there is no excuse for a team to get on a field and fail to pressure the ball carrier, leave first defenders uncovered, or not mark and contest service in the penalty area.  The LMSC players were asked to only attempt on goal from a cross and a header, but several times found themselves unchallenged deep in the opponent's half while on the ball...it's unreasonable to tell them not to shoot in that case.  Jed had a goal from such a situation, and I couldn't see what else he could have done, save play it back to Henry (GK)...part of me thinks I should have told the boys to do so; the other part of me was so ticked that coaches would let a group get to that age in such defensive disorder, I simply can't be bothered.
  • Ingram doesn't have to get his head shaved.
  • Man City and Man U had a crazy game Sunday...The arrest list is getting longer by the hour...
  • All hail Messi...some more.  He's 25, for heaven's sake.
  • Clint Dempsey beat US teammate Tim Howard for the opener, but Everton won late in a remarkable finish.  Good either way for American fans.
  • Congrats to Indiana on winning the men's division I NCAA tournament...but credit to fellow finalists Georgetown for knocking off Maryland in the semis in one of the craziest matches in playoff history.  Yet another reason to watch and support college soccer!
  • UNC Women took the title this year as well (21 and counting)...there's parity in women's soccer these days, but perhaps not #1-#323 but at least #2-#323!

Friday, December 7, 2012

Player Development Addendum II

In Support Of Extracurricular Activity

A great piece on WHYY's Radio Times show this morning caught my ear.  It was about the program in Venezuela called "La Sistema" in which kids are exposed to a highly organized and methodical training program in...classical music.  Venezuela, of all places!

What struck me most was that Stanford Thompson of Philly was making comments throughout the show that not just echoed a lot of what is being talked about in youth soccer, but was almost verbatim.  At one point I had to chuckle when Thompson was talking about the West Philly kids he works with, and the methodology his organization uses to advance the kids abilities...He could have switched seats with me and I could have given the answers; the approach to learning music, I gather, is essentially the exact same as football.  Perhaps intuitive enough, but it's awfully nice to hear some other idealistic slob out there (who knows his stuff, probably more than I know mine) pushing the same agenda.

I especially liked his all-comers approach.  No child is turned away, all are seen as having the potential to be anything they hope to become in the musical world.  A big part of my hoped-for change in youth soccer; take 'em all in, and give them all the same chance, and see where they end up when they're 18!  Or, better, yet, help them get there...

At any rate, if the player development movement is of interest, here's a couple links from today's story that parallel the approach soccer is slowly coming around to.  Is it not a little crazy that the arts, as well as athletics are only now, in the early 2000's coming to be seen as endeavors within which every kid has equitable potential?  I agree with Gandhi; Western Civilization would be a good idea!

Radio Times Links
http://stanfordthompson.com/heart.html
http://elsistemausa.org/el-sistema/venezuela/
http://whyy.org/cms/radiotimes/2012/12/07/changing-lives-el-sistemas-transformative-power-of-music/

192 Square Feet Player Development Series
Part I
Part II
Part III
Part IV
Part V
Addendum I



Tuesday, December 4, 2012

Player Development V

Why Does A Goalscorer Become 
An Outside Back In College?

When players are evaluated on their physical (rather than technical) abilities, a chain of events is set off that is shockingly limiting to the player's future options and extremely difficult to escape.  When a club starts ranking players into "A" and "B" classes at age 8-9-10, a significant oversight occurs.  At this age, technical skill is rudimentary, if extant at all.  So what to evaluate a player on?  Obviously, the biggest, fastest kids make the best soccer players.  Or so one would be tempted to think.  Here's a few guys this thinking would have overlooked: Messi, Donovan, Maradona, Pele, Best, Lahm, Cannavaro, Iniesta...heck, even Rooney is pretty short in the terms of stereotypical athletes.  None of those guys are over 5'9".  OK, they are fast as a group, but Theo Wolcott is faster than any of them, as is Gareth Bale...but I'm not sure those two would be quite in the same pantheon as the group of short kids.  Point?  Iniesta's lack of speed has to be made up with his brain (see study cited below...):
It was the biggest advantage the holders [SPAIN] had over Ireland, who they beat 4-0. Still, Spain’s speed isn’t raw, Usain Bolt-style explosiveness. There are a number of players in this tournament that could beat Andres Iniesta, David Silva, Cesc Fabregas, and Xavi Hernandez is a 100 meter dash. What they can’t do is move full speed with the ball at their feet, and while it’s a slight exaggeration to say Spain’s playmakers can, they sure seem to come close.
http://prosoccertalk.nbcsports.com/2012/06/18/spain-vs-croatia-preview-euro-2012-european-championships-uefa-group-a-luka-modric-andres-iniesta/