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Youth Soccer Nationals Standards to be set by NSCAA and US Club Soccer

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    Youth Soccer Nationals Standards to be set by NSCAA and US Club Soccer

    Youth Soccer Training Goes High Tech as NSCAA and US Club Soccer Sponsor “The National Standards Project” powered by iSoccer

    Youth Soccer training around the country will utilize online video and high tech assessment techniques when The NSCAA and US Club Soccer support the National Standards Project and incorporate iSoccer Assessment software into their coaching education, player development, and marketing initiatives starting in June 2010.

    Watch the National Standards Project video:

    http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=bh0WzUMz6zs

    San Francisco, CA June 1, 2010 — In an effort to raise the level of technical ability across the country, the NSCAA (National Soccer Coaches Association of America) and US Club Soccer are going high tech to measure, assess and train the future soccer stars of America. In partnership with iSoccer, the leader in technical assessment and online youth soccer training software, the NSCAA and US Club Soccer will be participating in The National Standards Project, a long-term initiative to measure, benchmark and track the technical ability of the 18.2 million soccer players in the US.

    To ensure a representative sample, iSoccer will collect 1,000,000 assessment results from players and coaches around the country by the end of 2010. Scott Leber, iSoccer’s Founder and CEO explained: “if our collective goal as coaches is to produce more technical players, we need to start by determining our current technical level. Once we have standard benchmarks, we will be able to evaluate and improve our player development efforts.” With their youth soccer expertise and combined memberships of roughly 1.5 million players and 40,000 coaches, the NSCAA and US Club Soccer will be instrumental in achieving these goals.

    “This partnership and initiative is representative of NSCAA’s mission to help our members excel in their coaching careers through advancing the coaching of soccer and improving players,” states Joe Cummings, NSCAA CEO and Executive Director.

    “For more years than I care to admit, I have advocated the need for improved technical ability in our players as the number one priority in American soccer,” said Phil Wright, Chairman of US Club Soccer’s Board of Directors. “Often the first step in improving anything, whether in sport or in business, is to assess the current ‘status quo.’ This joint venture between iSoccer, the NSCAA and US Club Soccer will provide that critical first step. I have put players through the iSoccer program and they have thoroughly enjoyed seeing their individual improvement over time.”

    iSoccer becomes the official “Assessment Provider” of the NSCAA and US Club Soccer. The NSCAA becomes the “Official Coaching Education Partner” and US Club Soccer becomes the “Official Player Development Partner” of The National Standards Project. All National Assessment tools are free for both coaches and players at www.TheStandardsProject.org. Additionally, the NSCAA is sponsoring one-month free premium iSoccer memberships for every coach who registers during the month of June. US Club Soccer will also sponsor player upgrades for specific premium content in the coming months.

    About iSoccer
    iSoccer is an award winning, online training and coaching platform that provides players, coaches and clubs with the tools and motivation to improve the technical ability of youth soccer players. Players, teams and clubs are able to assess their current level using the proprietary iSoccer Assessment, analyze their strengths and weaknesses using sophisticated tracking tools, target their training with a customized practice session builder and download over 500+ iPod ready video clips to help raise their technical level through self-guided training.

    Contact me, Abe Geiger, iSoccer VP of Marketing, abe.geiger@iSoccer.org with inquires regarding the National Standards Project.

    #2
    "technical ability"--the magic words of the us soccer world. we can coach until we're are blue or red in the face and we get nowhere. when young athletes decide to juggle, dribble or just bandy a ball around incessantly, much like our basketball brethren, for the love of just doing it, that is when we will see the improvements in technical ability. coaches can instruct and then should just get out of the way, or better, kids should watch their favorite player and emulate; that's how it's done everywhere else. far too much time is spent organized on a pitch and that needs to stop.

    Comment


      #3
      Originally posted by Unregistered View Post
      "technical ability"--the magic words of the us soccer world. we can coach until we're are blue or red in the face and we get nowhere. when young athletes decide to juggle, dribble or just bandy a ball around incessantly, much like our basketball brethren, for the love of just doing it, that is when we will see the improvements in technical ability. coaches can instruct and then should just get out of the way, or better, kids should watch their favorite player and emulate; that's how it's done everywhere else. far too much time is spent organized on a pitch and that needs to stop.
      Nonsense. Players parents should keep shilling out loads and loads of money for their kids to play club soccer.

      Comment


        #4
        Marketing nonsense, that's all. Nothing new here, these are the same folks that "train" all of your HS coaches, nuff said

        Comment


          #5
          Originally posted by Unregistered View Post
          Marketing nonsense, that's all. Nothing new here, these are the same folks that "train" all of your HS coaches, nuff said
          Sorry forgot the important link to US Club Soccer....

          http://www.usclubsoccer.org/main.asp...5-b0b168b0fee2

          Comment


            #6
            Originally posted by Unregistered View Post
            Marketing nonsense, that's all. Nothing new here, these are the same folks that "train" all of your HS coaches, nuff said
            ......and the same crew who "trains" your club coaches.

            Comment


              #7
              After what I saw at Lancaster this weekend, the naysayers to this thread are out of their fing minds if they don't think something has to be done to improve both the quality of coaching and technical ability of American players.

              Comment


                #8
                Originally posted by Unregistered View Post
                After what I saw at Lancaster this weekend, the naysayers to this thread are out of their fing minds if they don't think something has to be done to improve both the quality of coaching and technical ability of American players.
                Something should be done, but a bunch of online videos comprising a program and sponsored by this group will do zip, zero, nada to actually help. Their attempt to gather "data" and then use videos to fix it is almost laughable.

                Comment


                  #9
                  Originally posted by Unregistered View Post
                  After what I saw at Lancaster this weekend, the naysayers to this thread are out of their fing minds if they don't think something has to be done to improve both the quality of coaching and technical ability of American players.
                  Club soccer = money.

                  Comment

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