Several different topics came up today including training the creativity out of players and selecting players based on size. There is an interesting discussion currently in the coaching forum entitled Is age the best way? It is questioning how we group players by age and asks the question whether we should group players by size instead, like some other sports do. The topic originator brings up the point of early selection based on size and others mention the early bloomer/late bloomer quandrum. I'm not starting this thread for that purpose; however.
The reason I've started this thread is to throw out some ideas of how to develop better players. IMO one of the first things we need to do is get away from the static team mentality. So once again, I'll mention what the Chicago Sockers are doing as they seem a pretty innovative club with their eye on the best development practices that they can apply to their program within the confines of youth soccer in the US.
Previously I mentioned that their A and B teams are coached by the same coach and players are regularly moved between the two teams. In the opinion of one of their parents, the difference between the two teams is more often than not a difference in size in the early years. They are also involved in providing those players interested in an alternative to high school soccer a program where they can continue to play and train during the high school season. Only those who wish to play and they combine players from various teams and age groups. If capable, some of them will actually play in adult leagues. Here is another description of one of the things they do that was mentioned in the size/age thread. Keep in mind that one of the directors of the Sockers program grew up in Brazil and played for the Brazilian National team, so I am assuming some of the things they do are draw from his experiences. The son of the poster I am quoting played for this Brazilian coach as a U13 and U14.
Another poster pointed out the inherent danger in grouping kids by physical maturity is that they might not have the emotional and psychological maturity to play with older kids to which the Socker dad wrote:
The reason I've started this thread is to throw out some ideas of how to develop better players. IMO one of the first things we need to do is get away from the static team mentality. So once again, I'll mention what the Chicago Sockers are doing as they seem a pretty innovative club with their eye on the best development practices that they can apply to their program within the confines of youth soccer in the US.
Previously I mentioned that their A and B teams are coached by the same coach and players are regularly moved between the two teams. In the opinion of one of their parents, the difference between the two teams is more often than not a difference in size in the early years. They are also involved in providing those players interested in an alternative to high school soccer a program where they can continue to play and train during the high school season. Only those who wish to play and they combine players from various teams and age groups. If capable, some of them will actually play in adult leagues. Here is another description of one of the things they do that was mentioned in the size/age thread. Keep in mind that one of the directors of the Sockers program grew up in Brazil and played for the Brazilian National team, so I am assuming some of the things they do are draw from his experiences. The son of the poster I am quoting played for this Brazilian coach as a U13 and U14.
The Brazilian youth clubs move kids down as well as up, and being moved down doesn't mean the club thinks the boy sucks (because if they thought that, they would just cut him), but rather that he should be matched up against players who are similar physically.
My son's soccer club is aware that "ability" can make a 14 year old a starter on one of the state's top high school teams, when the competition is older players who are inferior technically, tactically, and athletically, but that "ability" doesn't get the job done at the club level, when the competing players are similar technically, tactically, and athletically. There, that boy gets his lunch eaten at his own age group by the more physically advanced players. So the club places him on an indoor team with other players who are at a similar level of physical maturity, and promotes kids his very same age who are more physically advanced into an older group.
Doesn't mean they think the other guys are better college prospects, means the other guys have bodies right now that enable them to do different things.
Brazilian youth clubs have similar approaches, they move kids down as well as up according to how their bodies are developing.
My son's soccer club is aware that "ability" can make a 14 year old a starter on one of the state's top high school teams, when the competition is older players who are inferior technically, tactically, and athletically, but that "ability" doesn't get the job done at the club level, when the competing players are similar technically, tactically, and athletically. There, that boy gets his lunch eaten at his own age group by the more physically advanced players. So the club places him on an indoor team with other players who are at a similar level of physical maturity, and promotes kids his very same age who are more physically advanced into an older group.
Doesn't mean they think the other guys are better college prospects, means the other guys have bodies right now that enable them to do different things.
Brazilian youth clubs have similar approaches, they move kids down as well as up according to how their bodies are developing.
Good point, that's why such an exercise should be conducted by somebody who understands the issues, and who has full knowledge of the player.
FYI, our club currently groups the kids into multi-year age bands for indoor training, and for intermural matches. To cite an example, one band consists of -
1) 50% of the U16s
2) 85% of the U15s
3) 25% of the U14s
Groupings to an extent are done on "ability," but for the most part on age/maturity. The U16s in this band would be the younger/smaller less mature U16s, the handful of U15s that are absent are all physically mature kids born in the first half of the club calendar who were promoted up to the next age band, and the U14s in this band are the relatively old, large, and mature players of the U14s.
To cite another example, last year the most gifted player technically at the U15 group was placed on the middle team when the U15s were split into 3 groups, because he was physically less mature and relatively young. He played against a younger age group that session than did the less talented players of his age group who were older, larger, stronger, more developed.
So in his case, it was decidedly not "ability" that placed him in the middle group for his age cohort.
FYI, our club currently groups the kids into multi-year age bands for indoor training, and for intermural matches. To cite an example, one band consists of -
1) 50% of the U16s
2) 85% of the U15s
3) 25% of the U14s
Groupings to an extent are done on "ability," but for the most part on age/maturity. The U16s in this band would be the younger/smaller less mature U16s, the handful of U15s that are absent are all physically mature kids born in the first half of the club calendar who were promoted up to the next age band, and the U14s in this band are the relatively old, large, and mature players of the U14s.
To cite another example, last year the most gifted player technically at the U15 group was placed on the middle team when the U15s were split into 3 groups, because he was physically less mature and relatively young. He played against a younger age group that session than did the less talented players of his age group who were older, larger, stronger, more developed.
So in his case, it was decidedly not "ability" that placed him in the middle group for his age cohort.
Comment