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    Youth Development

    I read these posts on rawk, all by the same poster who regularly watched the academy and has a son who recently left Liverpool. I found the posts interesting but depressing at the same time. It's sad that we still appear to have a lack of quality coaching below the u18's and still appear to focus on physique more so than technical ability. The last post summed up why in England we are still light years behind countries like Spain, Brazil etc when it comes to developing technically gifted players.

    It's the same at my school where I work, we've got a number of youngsters representing Forest and County at different age groups and if you were to watch them you would think to yourself "what is all the fuss about." If it weren't for their strength and pace they wouldn't stand out. You inevitably find out anyway when players who they once towered over start to develop physically themselves at which point the lack of technical skills becomes even more apparent. It's sad really because if the coaches across England spent more time developing players technical skills from the get go and not worry too much about a players height and strength, you would definitely see massive improvements.imo. I know people will say Kenny's here so things will change but it's easier said than done, espcially when you know this is the culture England have adopted for years and years.

    All clubs have "golden" age groups, as currently the majority of lads in the U16's and below are pretty local, up to 1.5 hours, with the odd very talented exception (this is due to the current though changing rules on distance travelled by the lads). Everton, Chelsea and Utd have very good U13 teams, we have good lads in the U16's, however this changes next year when the lads become scholars and have to mix with the younger U18's and the new foreign lads who will arrive. While this doesn't diminish the talent it obviously affects the team dynamics.


    From my time attending the academy regularly which ended when my lad moved to Blackburn (our choice after he was given a 2 year contract by Liverpool) none of the younger age groups which are now 11-15 were that great and there were no real stand out players. Indeed from the current U13's the two stand out strikers now play for Man Utd and Everton and shared all 5 goals when Utd beat Everton 3-2 last week. We played Liverpool two weeks ago and got beat 2-1 in a game we should of won, yet Everton who we play next week beat us 9-0 before xmas. Last year while still at Liverpool we went to Chelsea and got hammered 10-2.

    Liverpool are excellent in the older academy age groups when we can buy talent from around the country to bolster the local lads, however the younger age groups suffer from poor coaching and even poorer local scouting, hopefully something that may eventually get fixed. Sadly they also suffer from an attitude that they are special and so players should want to play for them regardless of how they get treated, something many people have decided isn't what they want, hence the boys leaving.


    You have Frankie McParland who is the Director, John Owens (who was there under Heighway) as Ops Manager, then you have Segura who develops the technical programmes for all the age groups from 9-18 (pre academy as well but not signed from 6-8). Borrell is purely the U18's coach, we never saw him at all in the time we were there, although Segura was there looking at the young lads most of the time and seemed a nice fella.

    You then have Mike Garrity who is head of 6-11's (mini soccer) and Steve Cooper who is head of 12-16's. They then have minimum Uefa B coach running each age group with an assistant who is working towards that standard, all local lads, some ex academy players who never made it and some who are teachers, the vast majority are part time working 3-4 nights a week and a Sunday for games.

    The scouting system, certainly locally has took a real hit recently with both Elias and Paul Johnson, who were senior guys on big money leaving and two local lads replacing them, in my opinion promoted above their level but both good lads.

    I've supported the club since 74 so for me to move my lad when he had a contract until he was 15 and quite well thought of was a major decision, however I felt that he would have a better chance elsewhere which so far has proved a good move. Most parents understand that unless your lad is very special they won't make it at the major, money driven clubs, so must make decisions based on this fact. For most kids it is about maximising potential through good coaching, increased game time and the most opportunities.


    Don't like naming names, certainly for the younger lads as it is not fair, certainly on a public forum.

    To be fair over the 5 years I have been watching academy football I think I have seen maybe 8-10 kids who you could say "wow, they will make it". Chelsea had one, Utd a couple and Everton who have a strong team but whether any are special I'm not sure. That includes watching all the older lads train most nights while at Liverpool for 4 years. Sterling stood out for his pace from the first time he trained with the then 15's and another lad who will be in the 15's this season looked a bit special.

    Sadly most of the lads who play at this level are there to provide a team for the one or two each year who might have a chance at some level in the game. It is no coincidence that since academies were set up a decade or so ago the lower leagues including non leagues have a lot of technically gifted lads, rather than the hoofers you used to get. Most of these are ex academy lads who didn't make it.

    A mixed bag to be honest, they get better the older you get, however from talking to them most find it very frustrating that they basically get told exactly what to do during matches the day before by the head of age group even down to subs and positions.

    An example was last year when we went to Derby and were 3-0 down by half time. The coach knew that the centre half was better in midfield but had been told not to play him there, however he made the change and we won 4-3. All the lads/parents were made up but the coach said he would get bollocked when he reported in, sure enough he did apparently. The coach who was experienced and a good lad left at the end of that year.

    Main improvement was a more pass and move style of play both in training and during matches and from what I have heard from people still there they play far more football in training since Dalglish has had more influence.



    El Matador - I agree with what you are saying almost entirely regarding how and where players are played, the point I was making is that coaches from the conversations I have had, feel they need to have flexibility to make decisions on the ground in order to affect games, otherwise they feel useless and move on. My lads U10, U11 and U12 coaches all left Liverpool at the end of that season, all were quite experienced and all left under less than friendly circumstances. Not great for continuity, especially when in this country we only have a finite number of sufficiently qualified coaches.

    Winning is important believe me and not just with the players/parents but also the coaches at all levels, rightly or wrongly, as evidenced on numerous occasions in conversations and responses I have seen.

    My lad played at a Premier League U14 tournament at the London Soccerdome at the weekend, in effect playing a year above himself, that was won by Chelsea who defeated Arsenal in the final, you would not believe the size of the players involved in this tournament. My son's comments after losing 1-0 to Fulham were "wow dad, some of those lads had beards". Whatever ****e gets spouted by the likes of Trevor Brooking and his FA cronies, size does matter at academies certainly in the age groups under 16, when players can't be bought. Why is this? Because games are won by the team with the biggest, generally very athletic and generally black players (apologies if that sounds racist in any way it is not meant to). That is the reality of academy football in this country, including Liverpool both pre and post Segeura and Borrell.

    Liverpool continue to scout big lads at the expense of smaller more talented ones, here is an example from last year. Under Seguera, the lads were assessed a couple of times a year on things like keepy ups, shooting accuracy, dribbling in and out of cones and other skill based assessments, with one small but feisty lad getting near the top in most areas. The lad was gone however within months as he wasn't getting games because he wasn't big enough. Sad but true. In the same time span we had two very big lads and I mean big, one of whom had a six pack and the build of a middleweight boxer at 11, the other marginally smaller, who to be fair were technically awful, nowhere near academy standard, however had pace and scored goals. I spoke to the lad who scouted them and after a bit of banter he admitted that they were just hoping they could develop some touch in time, which is indicative of the approach taken by all clubs in this country.

    While I am highlighting a lot of negatives, in general Liverpool is one of the best academies out there and we all loved our time there. We don't go to the lengths some clubs go to with regards size and try to coach the lads to play the game in the correct way, however don't think that since the new regime took over we have suddenly become Barcelona at all levels because from my experience we haven't.

    #2
    Sadly its not just At Liverpool this is a problem - A friend of mine who has two sons has experienced much the same, although his lads were a bit older. One of them, played for Bolton youth and was on the verge of getting into the ressies only to be told he wasn't big enough. He's now playing in Portugal
    The other one went to Everton for a few quid and was in essence bullied to adapt. He's now playing in the lower leagues where he's excelling.
    In both cases they weren't big enough or muscular enough to be in with a shout at Premier league sides, both are very very talented.
    I make no apologies, this is me

    Comment


      #3
      What that bloke has posted isn't rocket science. Not quite sure what he exepects, approx 25 years ago when I was 10/11 and with a league club they guestimated my final height by looking at the height of my parents and my build and I know for a fact it is part of the decision making process now as it was then.
      Football is a results business, would he rather we won all the age group matches and produced absolutely no-one for the first team like we did under Heighway???

      Some bits like the time the team were 3 down and the coach changed the lad from defence to midfield is 100% wrong. He was played in an unfamilier position for a reason, for the greater good of teaching him positional and responsibility skills and this is what he like most parents don't grasp. It isn't about winning that game 4-3 it is about developing the individual players in the way the club deems fit and proper.
      Not so some coach can appease the parents by winning 1 solitary game of football.

      I'm an ex pro, my lad is half decent and has a chance because he's good technically and he's left footed and it is firmly my opinion that parents shouldn't be allowed to watch the games certainly between the ages of say 10-16.
      I know it's harsh, I know the travel and commitment involved because I do it but a little organisation getting the lads together to meet a mini bus or something or even parents taking it in turns to ferry the boys there removes all the pressure.

      Parents are the problem with english youth football because every single one of them lives their hopes, dreams and financial greed through their kids.
      The King was back for a short while. Long live The King.

      Comment


        #4
        A mixed bag to be honest, they get better the older you get, however from talking to them most find it very frustrating that they basically get told exactly what to do during matches the day before by the head of age group even down to subs and positions.

        An example was last year when we went to Derby and were 3-0 down by half time. The coach knew that the centre half was better in midfield but had been told not to play him there, however he made the change and we won 4-3. All the lads/parents were made up but the coach said he would get bollocked when he reported in, sure enough he did apparently. The coach who was experienced and a good lad left at the end of that year.
        That bit is promising but shows the uphill battle Segura is facing
        "that is my opinion and that is more important than what anyone else has to say about it" - Mr A.Fergusson, Oct 2011

        Comment


          #5
          Quote:

          A mixed bag to be honest, they get better the older you get, however from talking to them most find it very frustrating that they basically get told exactly what to do during matches the day before by the head of age group even down to subs and positions.

          An example was last year when we went to Derby and were 3-0 down by half time. The coach knew that the centre half was better in midfield but had been told not to play him there, however he made the change and we won 4-3. All the lads/parents were made up but the coach said he would get bollocked when he reported in, sure enough he did apparently. The coach who was experienced and a good lad left at the end of that year.



          As a coach that would infuriate me what the above coach did. There is too much emphasis on winning games here rather than concentrating on the development of an individuals technique.

          The dutch model doesnt have their kids playing competitive games where the score matters until well into their teens.

          For example the coaching staff may have wanted the centre half above to develop his awareness - to have the game played in front of him, learn to command the defence - whatever the strategy the score of the game was placed above the development of the player and that's fundamentally wrong

          Comment


            #6
            No problemo, this country will never win the world cup and we think internationals are sh*t anyway. This adds to the reason. As long as we keep nurturing the likes of Suso and Sterling, and if they break through, our own coaches might take a different approach in time.
            One tit for another.

            Comment


              #7
              pumping money into youth development doesn't come under the new rules? use the arsenal model of hovering up the best young talent around the globe

              Comment


                #8
                have to give they guy credit. he responded to my post and fair play to him and his lad.

                he's spot on about the black players, ive mentioned it a few times myself (sylvain marveau - he's small but black !) at that sort of age group, the tallest, strongest and fastest players tend to get picked more so than smaller technical players.

                invariably, the teams with most black players tends to win. also without being too controversial, the teams that combine black brawn with white brains in the key areas tend to do very well.

                i think we could do with a few more black players for the first team to add more athleticism and power to the side.

                anyway, youth football in this country is ****ed from top to bottom. there are too many **** fa level one qualified numpties out there who think that after spending 4 days learning about how to organise training pitches they are somehow fit to coach kids basics about football.

                ive seen coaches (even at our club) who know nothing about football, never played it, not the foggiest about basic technical skills shouting at kids to pass it, get rid of it.

                we produce atheletes but not technically gifted footballers. we wont because technically brilliant players tend not to be 6 2', or run 100 yards in 11 seconds.

                they are smaller, slower players who have developed these skills to compensate for a lack of athleticism. we have them theres no question about that but they arent getting enough game time to hone their skills.

                the next generation of top quality english players (not including lfc players) is probably 20 years away.
                [B]Sir Isaac Newton knew the universal law of karma - any action has its equal and opposite reaction.[B]

                Comment


                  #9
                  Same thing happened to a couple of friends of mine. All got told they would not make the cut due to height. One of them played at Utd. I laughed at him because he was very very talented but He got told by Nobby Stiles that due to his height he was not going to make it. IIRC we were 15 at the time back in 1997. So I guess the english coaching scene has not changed much

                  Comment


                    #10
                    Originally posted by Baracus View Post
                    Same thing happened to a couple of friends of mine. All got told they would not make the cut due to height. One of them played at Utd. I laughed at him because he was very very talented but He got told by Nobby Stiles that due to his height he was not going to make it. IIRC we were 15 at the time back in 1997. So I guess the english coaching scene has not changed much

                    Comment


                      #11
                      one of my best mates was at crewe and looked outstanding for our age group - around 10 to 13.....until dario gradi himself pulled him to one side and said you won't make it because you are not tall enough.....another lad in our school......was ****e....but like 6ft when he was 12, went and played for tranmere and went right through the acadamy etc...
                      i own everton fans on the internet....that's what i do

                      Comment


                        #12
                        I can see how height and build are considerations but there must be other factors to be considered. How does such methods explain that someone like Jay Spearing has come all the way through the youth system? He is small for a professional footballer 5'-6" (according to wikipedia) and with all due respect he isn't the most skillful player. How does a player such as him* get this far through the system.

                        * I'm not having a dig at Jay - I don't watch youth level games. But to me he seems to be an example of a player that goes against what some people are saying. Perhaps someone who watched Jay at youth level can explain what qualities he had to get him through.
                        The only gracious way to accept an insult is to ignore it; if you can't ignore it, top it; if you can't top it, laugh at it; if you can't laugh at it, it's probably deserved.

                        Comment


                          #13
                          Originally posted by el matador View Post

                          invariably, the teams with most black players tends to win. also without being too controversial, the teams that combine black brawn with white brains in the key areas tend to do very well.
                          this is such a bad statement in so many ways

                          Comment


                            #14
                            Originally posted by redstaralex View Post
                            this is such a bad statement in so many ways
                            i agree that its controversial and a bit stupid but it also happens to be true.

                            When I was younger (playing for villa juniors) I was the only non-black player in the team. When we played against the london clubs especially their teams were dominated by black youths.

                            These lads are exceptionally tall for their age, quick, agressive and very tough to play against.

                            We're seeing the same thing in rugby for instance, where especially in new zealand, the smaller white lads where being bullied all over the place by bigger quicker black / native lads.

                            The thing about the white 'brains' is proved by the europeanisation of african football. 10 years ago their african cup of nations was a joke, the teams were full of atheletes without any football brains whatsoever. They had no organisation, no tactical nous, players were taking shots from 40 yards out.

                            Since the introduction of foreign (mostly white) coaches, their teams play with more fluidity and organisation. They resemble proper football teams.

                            its the introduction of black youths into football that has led the drive away from emphasis on technical ability towards atheletic prowess.
                            [B]Sir Isaac Newton knew the universal law of karma - any action has its equal and opposite reaction.[B]

                            Comment


                              #15
                              That's a better way of putting it el matador. Its not white brains per se, but European brains. Over time (15-20 years?), Asia and Africa will benefit from these same European brains except most of these brains will proabably belong to black European people.

                              There is only one way to beat bigger (and dare I say it blacker) players who will dominate in terms of speed, stamina and strength. And that is the Spanish model. Build the whole structure (youth/first team) around football, and football alone, then see the benefits. Its only in England we seem to have this 70s/80s hangover that just won't go away. Sadly. Maybe once the older coaches (Grady, etc) start passing on to the big football pitch in the sky that we may see attitudes shift.
                              One tit for another.

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