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One of the challenges facing this country, and
particularly the FFA in their quest to make improvements in the long
term to Australian football, is to develop a culture of football,
which is almost the complete opposite to where we are at this point
in time.
A culture, which values the ball over the athlete, skill over
strength, and football intelligence over graft and effort.
We will need to develop intuitive players who are adaptable during a
game by instinct not input, and the natural precursor to this of
course is first to develop intelligent coaches.
As Johan Cruyff once said, how can the student be better than the
teacher?
So, to produce outstanding players we need excellent coaches who
have an understanding at the highest technical level.
This is indeed a long-term project requiring tremendous improvement
in our licences and methodology, but in the meantime one area that
can be addressed is to continue to advance the understanding of the
football community, particularly at the grass roots level, of what
represents ‘good football’, and of the importance of a philosophy of
play based on possessing the ball.
Yet when we talk about a culture of the game and particularly a
philosophy of play, all those reading this with a good understanding
of the game will know that all around us are signs that at present
our national philosophy is deficient.
For instance, visit any junior club around the country and you will
see more running than playing, and most players being encouraged to
play the ball forward as soon as possible, regardless of the quality
of the pass or any evaluation of the option chosen.
In other words, there is a predominance of lumping the ball forward
for big, quick and usually strong kids to chase, to the detriment of
players who prefer to hold the ball and build up play in a slower
and more intelligent manner.
This is a by product of a poor football philosophy inherited from
England, which values fast play over good, and which manifests
itself in poor youth coaching.
But this is a short sighted strategy which is anti player
development since, whilst this may win games for now, this style of
play produces technically deficient players who will be learning
nothing about how to play the game which is precisely, and only,
what junior football is for!
And not only is it boring for the players, enforces results over fun
and enjoyment and therefore arguably produces a larger drop out rate
of youngsters in the early teens, it is in fact also ineffective
once the players mature and their physical strengths converge as
adults.
Every junior club in the country should be teaching their coaches to
appreciate that until the very late teens, the total focus must be
on producing players who understand and can play the game, that is
to say they can control and manipulate the ball with great skill,
maintain possession both individually and collectively,
intelligently construct an attack and respond well in defence, and
that teaching these principles of play fundamentally must take total
precedence over results.
And we will only be starting to improve when every youth coach is
judged on the quality of players he produces, not on the amount of
trophies he wins.
We must all recognise that effort and running alone don’t win
football matches, technique, skill, and intelligent players do. That
is why Brazil and Italy have nine World Cups between them, Germany
three and Argentina two. Because their football cultures, and their
philosophy of play, are based on these characteristics.
If you want absolute confirmation of the need for change, this year
take a look at the Under 14 or 15 National championships where tour
best juniors come together, and you will see that I am right.
These championships are shockingly low on teams that are both
technically (that is the individuals are capable), and tactically
(the team works together, demonstrates good cohesion, and can solve
problems collectively), competent at keeping the football for long
periods.
Or, better still, take a look at our national teams.
Both the Joeys and Young Socceroos who failed at even the earliest
Asian pre-qualifying stage could not keep the ball, clearly neither
could the 17 girls. In fact the only team that played with any
reasonable tactical skill was the Under 20 Young Matildas, as yet
our only youth age team to qualify though Asia, who were intensely
trained to do so and proved, as did the Socceroos, that when our
teams are well coached they are capable of adaptation.
This inability to play to a high level is a factor of both culture
and philosophy.
And it remains a fundamental problem even at the highest senior
levels of our game.
In the last few weeks you might have noticed Sydney FC struggle for
long periods to keep the ball against pressure, likewise Adelaide
United against the Vietnamese, and the best sign of what our poor
philosophy of football and no insistence on playing from defence at
junior levels produces, is to see Australia struggle to play under
defensive pressure against China in the second half of the recent
international.
So, enough of where we are, let’s explore some key elements of a
good philosophy of football.
Here is a start for any youth coaches and parents interested to know
where they now stand, and in what direction they should be heading:
1. To play the ball on the ground at all times, which
requires both supporting play and good technique;
2. To play short passes, which requires players to support
each other in attack and defence, and is harder to defend and
anticipate;
3. To play only longer balls in response to a movement by a
team-mate not in the hope of one - to move and ask for the ball
after which the pass is delivered;
4. To play longer passes, and particularly those in the air,
predominantly only when there is no closer option and always into
the feet of an attacker, never just into space for them to chase;
5. To discourage young keepers in kicking the ball long
unless there is no other option (and even here one can almost always
be manufactured) and at all times have the keeper roll the ball to a
team-mate so the team can begin to play immediately from the back;
6. If, at any time, a youngster has no option to find a
team-mate, they should be encouraged always to keep the ball. This
may mean shielding it, keeping it moving to wait for a pass, or to
dribble forward to attack an opponent. At no time should they be
told to kick it away regardless of the position they play or where
they are on the field, and if the child loses the ball they should
be encouraged to try again;
7. To encourage players to express themselves through their
football and recognise that everyone is not the same, and shouldn’t
play so. Some play fast, others slow, some play simple, others read
situations and find more complex solutions, and some have enough
skill to individually dominate a game, while others can only dream
of doing so, but all should be allowed to find their own game not
forced to conform to a uniform way of playing;
8. And, to SLOW DOWN, or more specifically, vary the speed of
play during a game, which requires a team to hold the ball. After
working to recover possession, every young team should break forward
only if they have an advantage in attack, otherwise they should slow
the play down and possess the ball, back and across the field,
resting and starting to position themselves in attack to take
advantage of overloads in numbers, or weaknesses in defence. Youth
coaches need to understand that the object of football is to keep
the ball and to score goals through breaking down a defence with
passing and skill, not by booting the ball forward hoping for a
defensive mistake.
And of course a change in philosophy has ramifications for youth
training.
It means that at youth levels, the only suitable training sessions
should be completely with the ball, with every player touching the
ball between 500 and 1000 times, refining technique and 1 v 1
skills, learning the game principally by playing in small games of 2
v 2, 3 v 3, 4 v 4, 5 v 5 and overload practices such as 4 v 2, 4 v
3, 5 v 2.
In this way good coaches can coach the key moments when in
possession, the opponent in possession or the changeover, build
awareness in the players to aid understanding and decision making,
and allow the players to develop a fee for the game that comes only
from thousands of hours playing it.
But at the same time the uneducated coach - such as the voluntary
parent supervisor - can, by playing these games, give the players a
structure, which aids their learning process without having to coach
specific points of play.
All fairly straightforward, but a long, long way from where the bulk
of our young teams are at right now.
So, how do you know where your club or coach stands from a
philosophical point of view? One of the best ways is by their
instructions to the players.
If the coach encourages players to slow down and relax on the ball,
to take their time, to possess the ball, to support each other, to
play together, to take opponents on, to take up positions at angles
to each other, to circulate the ball quickly around the team, to
play one and two touch football, to create triangles and diamonds in
their play, to pass backwards when no forward option is rational, to
use the goalkeeper to maintain possession, to read game situations
and play away from pressure not into it, and to recognise and create
numerical overloads, they are on the right track.
If you hear a coach telling players to ‘get rid of it’, ‘clear their
lines’, ‘get it in the box’, ‘get stuck in’, ‘don’t play at the
back’, ‘don’t take risks’, telling a keeper to kick the ball long or
players to ‘hit the channels’, run a million miles.
Your child is in danger of becoming a boring and uninventive player,
and is most unlikely either truly to discover the joy of playing the
ball, or to even excel in the game against other players who have
spent a decade or more possessing the ball.
And as to the physical aspect and all those coaches who want to make
their young players run instead of learning to manipulate the ball
and the game itself, yes, at the elite level players are very strong
and often gifted physically like Thierry Henry and Kaka, but just
like these two the best are footballers before athletes, and value
technique over physique, because they recognise that runners don’t
make it to the top any more in football.
And don’t forget that Australia has always been physically strong,
but we only started to improve when Guus Hiddink finally told the
players to keep the ball, to play out from the back (or in his
words, ‘to start the attack from defence’), to use space more
intelligently through better positional awareness, to stop hitting
the ball forward in hope or desperation, to understand how to
utilise the team’s spare man to keep possession, to support the ball
possessor in attack, and to be patient and play in all directions in
the build up phase until in a position to strike at the opponent.
These are the principles, which underline the correct philosophy of
football, and the very ones every junior club and coach should be
required to teach.
Sometimes, of course, pictures tell a story most effectively and I
was recently sent an excellent video presentation by former Marconi
player and now youth coach Vince Colagiuri, which is one of the best
discussions into a youth development philosophy of football that I
have seen.
It compares the philosophy of play at youth level in the USA against
that of Brazil, and the findings presented about the USA correlate
exactly to what is happening here in Australia.
The video, titled Player Development Philosophy can be seen by
clicking
here and should be required viewing for every
youth coach in the country.
Once you have watched it, you would do the game a great service by
distributing it to your entire football email database, and thereby
being proactive in encouraging debate about Australia’s philosophy
of football.
Because through debate comes understanding, and until we arrive at a
better one, our kids will not be given the best chance to excel.
Let me know your thoughts at
craig.foster@sbs.com.au
Best wishes and, as always, enjoy your football.
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modified: 29 March 2007 05:27:02 |