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    English version of the DA

    English version of the DA


    Long-term strategy designed to advance Premier League Youth Development

    Related Articles
    Youth: Games Programme
    Youth: Education
    Youth: Elite Performance
    The Elite Player Performance Plan (EPPP) is a long-term strategy with the aim of developing more and better home-grown players.

    The EPPP is the result of consultation between the Premier League and its clubs, representatives of the Football League, the Football Association and other key football stakeholders.

    Introduced in 2012 with the mission of producing more and better home-grown players, the plan promotes the empowerment of each individual player through a player-led approach.

    Harry Winks, Spurs
    Tottenham Hotspur's Harry Winks (left) was one of 49 home-grown debutants in 2016/17
    The EPPP works across three phases: Foundation (Under-9 to Under-11), Youth Development (U12 to U16) and Professional Development (U17 to U23).

    The Premier League Football Development Department work for, with and on behalf of our clubs to deliver a world-class youth development system via the delivery of four key functions:

    Games Programme

    The Premier League provide up to 6,000 matches to clubs across all age groups (data for 2014/15 season that could yet increase), through competitions, festivals and tournaments.

    Premier League 2, Professional Development League 2, Premier League Cup and Premier League International Cup, and the Under-18 Premier League and U18 Professional Development League 2 help to bridge the gap from youth football to the rigours of senior competitions on the international and domestic stage.

    A range of other festivals and tournaments from Under-9s and above are also operated by the League. You can find out more by visiting premierleague.com/youth/games-programme.

    Aston Villa v Brighton, PL2
    Premier League 2, now in its sixth season, consists of two 12-team divisions
    Education

    The Premier League aims to provide world-class education via inspirational and innovative teaching, which develops educationally rounded people through the delivery of a holistic approach.

    The League has its own Education Department that delivers a programme to support the technical, tactical, physical, mental, lifestyle and welfare development of all Academy players.

    The Premier League is also responsible for the formal education programmes for all Apprentices aged 16-19 who have signed a full-time Scholarship Agreement at a PL Club.

    You can find out more by visiting premierleague.com/youth/education.

    Coaching

    Developing a world-leading youth coach fraternity is a key part of the EPPP, which the Premier League implements via a range of coach development programmes.

    This includes the Elite Coach Apprenticeship Scheme (ECAS), an intense two-year programme to accelerate the development of coaches currently employed by clubs. From 2015/16, ECAS has and continues to include six black, asian and minority ethnic (BAME) and female coaches per intake as part of the League’s commitment to equality and diversity.

    The League’s ‘Leadership Journey’ coaching workshops, the Coach Competency Framework (CCF), Annual Coaches Conference and Technical Match Observers (TMO) are also key aspects of the League’s coach development programme.

    You can find out more by visiting premierleague.com/youth/coaching.

    At least six female and BAME coaches join ECAS each year
    At least six female and BAME coaches join ECAS each year
    Elite Performance

    Always striving to find innovative and effective ways to enhance the production or more and better home-grown players, the Premier League have implemented a range of programmes to aid and inform player recruitment, development and transition through Foundation, Youth Development and Professional Development phases.

    Clubs can not only track all information that is relevant to the Academy through the League’s Performance Management Application (PMA) and Injury Surveillance, but they also benefit from the help of Club Support Managers (CSMs), with each one the first point of contact and support to their assigned Club’s Academy.

    The League has also launched the Bio-Banding programme, with a series of tournaments organised each season with the aim of matching players based on their biological age instead of the usual chronological age groups, which historically makes it tougher for players born in the latter stages of the British school year (September to August) to make the grade. Growth and Maturation Screening is also used to assess all Academy players’ biological growth.

    You can find out more by visiting premierleague.com/youth/elite-performance.

    Bio-banding does not merely measure young players by their height
    Bio-banding does not merely measure young players by their height
    Categorisation

    Academies are independently audited and given a Category status of 1 to 4, with 1 being the most elite. Up to 10 different factors will be considered in the grading, including productivity rates; training facilities; and coaching, education and welfare provisions.

    The higher a club's Category the more funding will be available to it and the EPPP will see the Premier League and FA invest more central income than ever before in Youth Development programmes across the country.

    #2
    Originally posted by Unregistered View Post
    English version of the DA


    Long-term strategy designed to advance Premier League Youth Development

    Related Articles
    Youth: Games Programme
    Youth: Education
    Youth: Elite Performance
    The Elite Player Performance Plan (EPPP) is a long-term strategy with the aim of developing more and better home-grown players.

    The EPPP is the result of consultation between the Premier League and its clubs, representatives of the Football League, the Football Association and other key football stakeholders.

    Introduced in 2012 with the mission of producing more and better home-grown players, the plan promotes the empowerment of each individual player through a player-led approach.

    Harry Winks, Spurs
    Tottenham Hotspur's Harry Winks (left) was one of 49 home-grown debutants in 2016/17
    The EPPP works across three phases: Foundation (Under-9 to Under-11), Youth Development (U12 to U16) and Professional Development (U17 to U23).

    The Premier League Football Development Department work for, with and on behalf of our clubs to deliver a world-class youth development system via the delivery of four key functions:

    Games Programme

    The Premier League provide up to 6,000 matches to clubs across all age groups (data for 2014/15 season that could yet increase), through competitions, festivals and tournaments.

    Premier League 2, Professional Development League 2, Premier League Cup and Premier League International Cup, and the Under-18 Premier League and U18 Professional Development League 2 help to bridge the gap from youth football to the rigours of senior competitions on the international and domestic stage.

    A range of other festivals and tournaments from Under-9s and above are also operated by the League. You can find out more by visiting premierleague.com/youth/games-programme.

    Aston Villa v Brighton, PL2
    Premier League 2, now in its sixth season, consists of two 12-team divisions
    Education

    The Premier League aims to provide world-class education via inspirational and innovative teaching, which develops educationally rounded people through the delivery of a holistic approach.

    The League has its own Education Department that delivers a programme to support the technical, tactical, physical, mental, lifestyle and welfare development of all Academy players.

    The Premier League is also responsible for the formal education programmes for all Apprentices aged 16-19 who have signed a full-time Scholarship Agreement at a PL Club.

    You can find out more by visiting premierleague.com/youth/education.

    Coaching

    Developing a world-leading youth coach fraternity is a key part of the EPPP, which the Premier League implements via a range of coach development programmes.

    This includes the Elite Coach Apprenticeship Scheme (ECAS), an intense two-year programme to accelerate the development of coaches currently employed by clubs. From 2015/16, ECAS has and continues to include six black, asian and minority ethnic (BAME) and female coaches per intake as part of the League’s commitment to equality and diversity.

    The League’s ‘Leadership Journey’ coaching workshops, the Coach Competency Framework (CCF), Annual Coaches Conference and Technical Match Observers (TMO) are also key aspects of the League’s coach development programme.

    You can find out more by visiting premierleague.com/youth/coaching.

    At least six female and BAME coaches join ECAS each year
    At least six female and BAME coaches join ECAS each year
    Elite Performance

    Always striving to find innovative and effective ways to enhance the production or more and better home-grown players, the Premier League have implemented a range of programmes to aid and inform player recruitment, development and transition through Foundation, Youth Development and Professional Development phases.

    Clubs can not only track all information that is relevant to the Academy through the League’s Performance Management Application (PMA) and Injury Surveillance, but they also benefit from the help of Club Support Managers (CSMs), with each one the first point of contact and support to their assigned Club’s Academy.

    The League has also launched the Bio-Banding programme, with a series of tournaments organised each season with the aim of matching players based on their biological age instead of the usual chronological age groups, which historically makes it tougher for players born in the latter stages of the British school year (September to August) to make the grade. Growth and Maturation Screening is also used to assess all Academy players’ biological growth.

    You can find out more by visiting premierleague.com/youth/elite-performance.

    Bio-banding does not merely measure young players by their height
    Bio-banding does not merely measure young players by their height
    Categorisation

    Academies are independently audited and given a Category status of 1 to 4, with 1 being the most elite. Up to 10 different factors will be considered in the grading, including productivity rates; training facilities; and coaching, education and welfare provisions.

    The higher a club's Category the more funding will be available to it and the EPPP will see the Premier League and FA invest more central income than ever before in Youth Development programmes across the country.
    Lots of good stuff in with the jibbersih. Emphasis on developing coaching! Academies are audited and given a category status Look at the Biological age using more than height.

    Comment


      #3
      Originally posted by Unregistered View Post
      Lots of good stuff in with the jibbersih. Emphasis on developing coaching! Academies are audited and given a category status Look at the Biological age using more than height.
      Excellent ideas - take note United States!

      Comment


        #4
        EPL is a crap league and most of the time the worst players on an EPL team are the English players. You don't find too many English players on the field when the top clubs meet in an EPL match. One of the biggest problems with US youth development are the English and Irish that come here to train US players. 99% of the time they are frauds!

        Comment


          #5
          Originally posted by Unregistered View Post
          EPL is a crap league and most of the time the worst players on an EPL team are the English players. You don't find too many English players on the field when the top clubs meet in an EPL match. One of the biggest problems with US youth development are the English and Irish that come here to train US players. 99% of the time they are frauds!
          EPL is a crap leauge?Super Bowl Audience world wide 100 million .Man Utd /liverpool last weekend for just a regular league game, World wide audience 900 and 50 Million.Your a complete tool.

          Comment


            #6
            Professional wrestling and NASCAR get big ratings too and have similar qualities as the EPL. La Liga and Italian Serie A are much better quality. If I had to have a European coach working with my kids my last choice would be someone from the british isles, but I would pull him out of the sport and enroll him in baton twirling before that happened.

            Comment


              #7
              HaHa! People from England don't even want the English coaching their kids!

              Comment


                #8
                Originally posted by Unregistered View Post
                EPL is a crap league and most of the time the worst players on an EPL team are the English players. You don't find too many English players on the field when the top clubs meet in an EPL match. One of the biggest problems with US youth development are the English and Irish that come here to train US players. 99% of the time they are frauds!
                We’ve seen this in PBG. Crappy Irish. Club was way better when we had more South American influences and training.

                Comment

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