A suggestion for youth football development
BY ANDREW C EDWARDS
Friday, April 12, 2013
TWO recent JFF-sponsored sojourns have enlightened my thinking. In July 2012 I was a student on the first JFF/Brazil Coaching Course, staged in Brazil.
There it was "forcefully" pointed out to us that, at least for the people at Traffic Academy, Sao Paulo FC and Santos FC, football is a business from which serious profits must always be made. Professor Adolfo Canavesi actually stated "Traffic exist not for the love of football, but because someone realised it's good business".
Alvas Powell (left), who has come up through the youth ranks of the national football programme, being chased by Rodolph Austin during a senior team training session at the JFF Technical Centre in preparation for the recent CONCACAF World Cup qualifier against Panama at the National Stadium. The game ended 1-1.
Last December, I was a member of a three-man delegation to the annual US Soccer Development Academy's Winter College Showcase. For five days we watched football from 9:00 am to 9:00 pm across 22 football fields all located on one complex in Sarasota, Florida. The quality on display, in my humble opinion, was largely average. Strikingly though, the players had an admirable "sticktoitiveness" that never waned regardless of the score line or which players were on the pitch. It was almost mechanical, from the warm-up to the game to the cool down. Every player knew exactly what his role was and within his own limitations executed the basics with completeness of purpose.
Read more: http://www.jamaicaobserver.com/sport...#ixzz2QGdmNGyB
BY ANDREW C EDWARDS
Friday, April 12, 2013
TWO recent JFF-sponsored sojourns have enlightened my thinking. In July 2012 I was a student on the first JFF/Brazil Coaching Course, staged in Brazil.
There it was "forcefully" pointed out to us that, at least for the people at Traffic Academy, Sao Paulo FC and Santos FC, football is a business from which serious profits must always be made. Professor Adolfo Canavesi actually stated "Traffic exist not for the love of football, but because someone realised it's good business".
Alvas Powell (left), who has come up through the youth ranks of the national football programme, being chased by Rodolph Austin during a senior team training session at the JFF Technical Centre in preparation for the recent CONCACAF World Cup qualifier against Panama at the National Stadium. The game ended 1-1.
Last December, I was a member of a three-man delegation to the annual US Soccer Development Academy's Winter College Showcase. For five days we watched football from 9:00 am to 9:00 pm across 22 football fields all located on one complex in Sarasota, Florida. The quality on display, in my humble opinion, was largely average. Strikingly though, the players had an admirable "sticktoitiveness" that never waned regardless of the score line or which players were on the pitch. It was almost mechanical, from the warm-up to the game to the cool down. Every player knew exactly what his role was and within his own limitations executed the basics with completeness of purpose.
Read more: http://www.jamaicaobserver.com/sport...#ixzz2QGdmNGyB
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