August 8, 2008

Children and Soccer

Just played soccer this morning with my son, it was great!

Kids are just like sponges. You tell them something and they just soak it up and learn so fast.

This is something we can all learn form, if you need to learn something all you need to do is go back to being a kid again and you can learn anything!!

All of the clutter in your head can sometimes block the learning process as we get older but a kids mind is clear and ready to absorb the information needed to learn that skill.

Do you remember my earlier post about the four stages of learning? A child goes through this without knowing, now you know it you can consciously check which stage you are at and check your progress, how good is that!!

All the great players went through this process and do you know what? They never, ever, ever, ever gave up!

PRACTICEANDPERSISTENCE   PRACTICEANDPERSISTENCE  PRACTICEANDPERSISTENCE  PRACTICEAND PERSISTENCE

That is the Key!!!

See You Later

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August 3, 2008

Soccer - The differences between England and Holland ?

This an interview I did for a friend of mine, Simon Kuper, a very successful journalist who has written some great books on football and the effects it has on society in different countries and cultures, google his name or take a look on www.amazon.com  there may be something for you there!! Simon looks deeply at the game, like myself and writes incredibly interesting articles on the game.

Dressing-room consultations keep Dutch team happy

Dressing-room consultations keep Dutch team happy

By Simon Kuper

Published: June 21 2008 03:00 | Last updated: June 21 2008 03:00

Edward, my best friend from primary school, came to Bern to see Holland play Romania. I'm not Dutch but I grew up in a small Dutch town, and 30 years ago Edward and I used to phone each other at half-time during Holland's games for breathless analysis. On Tuesday we sat on the pavement in the Swiss sun, had a beer and swapped news about our mothers. Then Edward said: "Simon, all this is unprecedented."

It's true. These 30 years the Netherlands has generally been the best small football country on earth, but we've never had a fortnight like this. So far at Euro 2008 we have beaten the world champions Italy 3-0 and the runners-up France 4-1, while our reserves have tossed aside Romania 2-0. Whatever happens in tonight's quarter-final against Russia, this feels miraculous.

To try to understand, I've been reading what foreign journalists say about Holland. There is one recurring story: the Dutch always destroy themselves through infighting, but this time they haven't yet. This shoddy half-truth misses the point about Dutch football. Holland are good precisely because our players quarrel about football. And that is particularly true now, because the genesis of the current side was an argument in a hotel room.

The Dutch have quarrelled about the game since about 1970, when Johan Cruyff emerged as the father of Dutch football. He said: "Football is a game you play with your head." Every Dutchman who ever placed a pass - and the country usually has the world's highest density of registered footballers - grew up in this tradition. When I was 12 and playing in a kids' team, half of us would go to the snack bar after matches and debate what had gone wrong over frites .

The English don't have that tradition. Mark Burke had played for various English clubs when in 1995 he joined the Dutch side Fortuna Sittard. "In England if the manager said it, you just did it," Burke told me. "When I went to Fortuna I noticed how much the players talked." During games, team-mates would call to him: "One metre, one metre left!" Training sessions would be interrupted by 15-minute seminars on the relative positioning of the centre-backs. Burke says: "I really started to understand the shape of the field, horizontally and vertically. In England the only time I had training sessions like that was when I went on coaching courses."

Of course the Dutch debates have downsides. Cruyff, who favoured what he called the " conflictmodel " of working relations, quarrelled with the great goalkeeper Jan van Beveren before the 1974 World Cup. Van Beveren didn't go to that World Cup, or the one in 1978. Holland lost both in the final, partly due to goalkeeping errors. The conflictmodel also destroyed Holland at the 1990 World Cup and at Euro 96. This summer, the midfielders Mark van Bommel and Clarence Seedorf have stayed home rather than work with Holland's manager Marco van Basten.

And yet the quarrels over football are now helping Holland. In recent years it had become clear that the traditional Dutch formation with two wingers no longer worked. Last autumn Van Basten asked his captain, Edwin van der Sar, to consult the other players about what to do. Van der Sar called a "group of seven" senior players to his hotel room. They proposed playing with just one forward and five midfielders. Van Basten acquiesced.

It was exactly the sort of consultation that management books would recommend. It was done without conflict, because Dutch football, after passing from an amateur era through the pop-star 1970s, is now as corporate as football everywhere else. And the employees liked being consulted. Before Euro 2008, two friends of mine organised a football quiz for the Dutch squad. Wesley Sneijder won, with cheating. But what struck my friends was how happy a camp it was. When Van der Sar raised his hand to protest that a question was wrong, the entire squad in unison began chanting, "Losers!" (in English) at the quizmasters.

Here in Switzerland the Dutch are even happier. The new formation has worked beautifully. With two defensive midfielders behind them, the creative midfielders are free to create. Nobody is glued to the touchline anymore like a parody of a 1970s winger. Instead of stringing together endless passes, the Dutch now wait until the opposition lose the ball and then break instantly à la Arsenal.

The Dutch could absorb a new system only because they think. Each player is a playmaker, making autonomous decisions on the field. When leading 2-0 against the world champions, left-back Giovanni van Bronckhorst decided to gallop 80 metres forward and score with a header. Meanwhile, another player instantly took over his position, because everyone is thinking, and consulting on the field. When it goes quiet during games here, you hear the Dutch players calling out instructions.

Dutch football is a fragile plant, and we could easily go home tonight. But if Edward and I are lucky enough to have another beer on some foreign pavement at the World Cup 30 years from now, we might conclude that this week was the peak.

 

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July 30, 2008

Soccer is just a game

Remember to enjoy the game!!

"We do not cease to play because we

 grow old.

We grow old because we cease to

play."

- George Bernard Shaw

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Children and Coaching

I came across this some time ago and I really liked it.

 

It would be useful if some Soccer coaches took a look at this and applied it in a soccer sense.

 

What do you think?

Children Learn What They Live

Dorothy Lois Nolte

  • If a child lives with criticism, he learns to condemn.

 

  • If a child lives with hostility, he learns to fight.

 

  • If a child lives with ridicule, he learns to be shy.

 

  • If a child lives with shame, he learns to feel guilty.

 

  • If a child lives with tolerance, he learns to be patient.

 

  • If a child lives with encouragement, he learns confidence.

 

  • If a child lives with fairness, he learns justice.

 

  • If a child lives with security, he learns to have faith.

 

  • If a child lives with approval, he learns to like himself.

 

If a child lives with acceptance and friendship,
He learns to find love in the world.

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Ten Best Soccer Players

Hi Guys,

 

I thought I would give you a list of the ten best players I have played with during my career. This is a fun list to do as it makes you think about some of the characters you have played with and met during your career.

 

As you get older you start to realise what it is that makes the great players just that little bit better than the average player.

 

Maybe when you have read this you can make your own list of your ten favourite players and send it to me, I would be interested to see who you think is a great player and why.

 

10.Fernando Ricksen- Fortuna Sittard, AZ Alkmaar, Glasgow Rangers Zenit St Petersburg  - Netherlands

 

Fernando is a tenacious player; he really loves to tackle and sometimes goes a little too far! He is so committed to every game he plays but I really enjoyed playing with him he had a great attitude, I have since heard that he has had a few disciplinary problems so he has moved to St Petersburg in Russia with his old coach Dick Advocaat, I have met Dick and I know he will sort him out!

 

9.Mark Walters Aston Villa Glasgow Rangers Liverpol -England

 

Mark is a very good friend of mine and we play squash together regularly. Mark was an incredible talent and scored some memorable goals including one in Moscow, Russia in the European up for Aston Villa which is still talked about and I am pretty sure was voted one of the best ever European goals

 

8. Mark Van Bommel Fortuna Sitard, PSV, Barcelona Bayern Munich Netherlands

 

Mark is a player who developed himself into a top European player and has gone on to play for some of the biggest clubs in European football. A very tactically aware he uses this to organise the players around him and this can be valuable to a team.

 

7 Martin Keown Aston Villa Everton, Arsenal England

 

Martin was maybe the most difficult player to play against. He absolutely loved defending and took real pleasure in blocking a player out of the game. As we say in England he was all over you like a rash!

 

6 Steve Bull Wolverhampton Wanderers  England.

 

Bully was a real goal scoring machine who scored over 300 goals for Wolves, he was totally dedicated to scoring goals. The great thing about Bully was that he worked really hard for the team and never stopped running. Even with all his success he was very down to earth and his fame never really changed him.

 

5 Steve Hunt Aston Villa New York Cosmos, England

 

Steve was a player I played with early in my career and he had fabulous quality, a really sweet left foot. When he was about 21 he left England to play for New York Cosmos playing with the likes of  Carlos Alberto, Beckenbauer, Chinaglia and the legendary Pele! I loved sitting on the bus listening to Steve’s tales of these great players.

 

4 Gary Shaw Aston Villa England

 

Gary won the European Cup with Aston Vila at the age of 21 and was voted European young payer of the year, an award he shares with famous names such as Marco van Basten, the great Dutch striker, Roberto Baggio the magical Italian, Ronaldo of Brazil and Real Madrid and Wayne Rooney of Manchester Utd and England.

 

If Gary had avoided the serious knee injuries he picked up he would have gone to be one of the most famous names in football, when he was doing well at Vila both Manchester Utd and Real Madrid wanted to sign him, which shows how good he really was. He was best finisher I have ever seen.

 

3 John Wark, Ipswich Town, Liverpool Scotland.

 

 John came to Middlesbrough when I was there and I have never been so impressed by a player. His passing of the ball was so simple and crisp and he never lost the ball. If you ever see a football film called ‘Escape to Victory’ John played a starring role in what is probably the best film ever made about soccer.

 

2 Nigel Spink Aston Villa England.

 

Spinksy was a giant of a keeper and impossible to beat, he also has the best kick of any keeper I have seen, he could kick the 80 metres and put it directly on to your chest! He was a keeper with real presence which is very important.

 

1 Gary Pallister Middlesbrough, Manchester United England.

 

I played with Pally at Middlesbrough, he was only young when I went there, I think about 22( I was 18) and the thing I remember was that he was so thin! But he was great defender, good in the air, quick and one of the best at bringing the ball out of defence, my only surprise was that he didn’t play more times for England.

 

 

I have put Gary at number one but as I said these are all great players and on different days the list numbers would probably change but the beauty of football, opinions, opinions and more opinions.

 

This is only ten players but there are many more and the thing about football is that it changes quickly and that means opinion changes quickly, so don’t hold me to this list, if you asked me tomorrow then I might have changed my mind!!

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