Dear Coach,
Q: What do Lionel Messi, Ronaldo and Kaka have in common with Pele, Maradona, Johan Cruyff and George Best?
A: They are some of the most skilful dribblers of a soccer ball the game has ever seen. They are (or were) very exciting to watch and thousands of young soccer players dream that one day they will become the next Pele or Kaka.
Sadly, however, most of them will have the creativity knocked out of them by coaches who are terrified to let any of their players take a risk in case it results in the team conceding a goal and, god forbid, losing the game.
So many coaches insist that young children pass the ball before they are challenged by an opponent that seeing a young player happily take on opponents and dribble the ball towards goal is a rarity.
These "safety first" coaches are backed by a growing army of adult "supporters" who yell "CLEAR IT!" or "PASS!" at children who have hardly had two touches on the ball.
Will we ever see a player with the skills of Messi or Ronaldo emerge from organised youth soccer today? I very much doubt it... unless enough youth soccer coaches stop focusing on results and allow their players to take chances and fail occasionally.
If you remain calm when your defenders try, unsuccessfully, to dribble the ball out of your penalty box, the next Messi or Ronaldo could come from your team.
So why not stop shouting "clear the ball!" and admire the bravery and on-the-ball skills of your players instead?
Q: What do Lionel Messi, Ronaldo and Kaka have in common with Pele, Maradona, Johan Cruyff and George Best?
A: They are some of the most skilful dribblers of a soccer ball the game has ever seen. They are (or were) very exciting to watch and thousands of young soccer players dream that one day they will become the next Pele or Kaka.
Sadly, however, most of them will have the creativity knocked out of them by coaches who are terrified to let any of their players take a risk in case it results in the team conceding a goal and, god forbid, losing the game.
So many coaches insist that young children pass the ball before they are challenged by an opponent that seeing a young player happily take on opponents and dribble the ball towards goal is a rarity.
These "safety first" coaches are backed by a growing army of adult "supporters" who yell "CLEAR IT!" or "PASS!" at children who have hardly had two touches on the ball.
Will we ever see a player with the skills of Messi or Ronaldo emerge from organised youth soccer today? I very much doubt it... unless enough youth soccer coaches stop focusing on results and allow their players to take chances and fail occasionally.
If you remain calm when your defenders try, unsuccessfully, to dribble the ball out of your penalty box, the next Messi or Ronaldo could come from your team.
So why not stop shouting "clear the ball!" and admire the bravery and on-the-ball skills of your players instead?
Yours in soccer,
Steve Watson, Editor
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