To the person who mentioned #23 on Crush. Why are you picking on her. She is only 11 and plays up.
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8 year old girls soccer
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Originally posted by Unregistered View PostHaving been at those games I still have no idea who this dominant MF who needs advanced coaching is. I have been around CFC for years now and can think of several players at this age who actually were amazing standouts and trust me there wasn't a girl on either side that made you step back and say wow. Not saying that with training some wouldn't develop just saying their was not some amazing raw talent that could be sculpted into a phenom or something. As far as coaches scouting and marking, I've never seen a player who knew how to effectively mark a dominant player til U-11 so I doubt the Keizer coach did mark this mystery superstar.
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Originally posted by Unregistered View PostThat study holds water for musicians but it's a bunch of bunk in relation to soccer. In soccer there are too many other variables- athletic ability, speed, quickness, motivation, aggressivness etc.. I can show you lots of examples of players at our local club who practice alot more but on the field get overshadowed by bigger, faster, stronger players. They might win a juggling contest though.
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Originally posted by Soca lova View PostThis study is based on a long term success rate. Starting at 8 and going through around 20 years old, athletic ability, speed, and quickness are all byproducts of practice. You can look at a given age and argue if this is true or not, but hardwork will carry the day. Remember this is research focused not on music, but on how individuals learn. This process is the same no matter what the endeavour.
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Originally posted by Unregistered View PostIf you want local private training Abbe Doane is great. Her practices are organized no nonsense tough. Your daughter will grow for sure. adsoccerskills@gmail.com
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So help me understand...
Originally posted by Unregistered View PostI'm sorry but I respectfully disagree. Usain Bolt is not the fastest man alive because he practiced more than anyone else between the ages of 8 and 20. That guy was born fast. You can enhance your speed, athletic ability and quickness but to some extent you either have it or you dont. When it comes to basic soccer skills, I would agree with you.
The study looks at extreme elite performers. Individuals who at the age of 12 are training 8 hours per week, and at the age if 20 have grown to practice 30 hours per week.
With all respect to your clubs jugglers, this is discussing a totally different level. It is tempting to look at natural ability and attributes like physical strength as the deciding factor in success. To say you are either born with it or you don't have it. This goes a long way to excuse all those who don't get there. The shame of it is it is nonsense. Hardwork focused over a long time will overcome any natural ability. I would love to see any studies you can show to the contrary. Unfortunately anectdotal evidence is not enough.
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Originally posted by Soca lova View PostYou mentioned there are some at your club who practice a lot, but they are overshadowed by those who are bigger stronger faster. So how did these bigger stronger faster players become that way? Surely they didn't emerge from the womb like that. Just like I suspect if you found usain bolt's coaches you would learn that yes he had some natural gifts, but he also trains his tail off.
The study looks at extreme elite performers. Individuals who at the age of 12 are training 8 hours per week, and at the age if 20 have grown to practice 30 hours per week.
With all respect to your clubs jugglers, this is discussing a totally different level. It is tempting to look at natural ability and attributes like physical strength as the deciding factor in success. To say you are either born with it or you don't have it. This goes a long way to excuse all those who don't get there. The shame of it is it is nonsense. Hardwork focused over a long time will overcome any natural ability. I would love to see any studies you can show to the contrary. Unfortunately anectdotal evidence is not enough.
RUDY! RUDY!! RUDY!!!
Worked his ass off and still sucked, you got to have a strong athletic foundation (and size for that game). As far as Bolt goes he was born with a freakish level of quick twitch muscle fiber making him amazingly fast even without training. With training he becomes the human cheetah. He could have trained to be a marathoner since he was 6 and would be terrible. Genetic gifts play a HUGE part in sport. A study of musicians has no merit, I have been around extremely high caliber athletes some were the laziest human beings you have ever met. They were just genetic freaks. Now when you get a genetic freak with an amazing work ethic and drive that's when you get your Jordan's or Wambach's.
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Originally posted by Unregistered View PostRUDY! RUDY!! RUDY!!!
Worked his ass off and still sucked, you got to have a strong athletic foundation (and size for that game). As far as Bolt goes he was born with a freakish level of quick twitch muscle fiber making him amazingly fast even without training. With training he becomes the human cheetah. He could have trained to be a marathoner since he was 6 and would be terrible. Genetic gifts play a HUGE part in sport. A study of musicians has no merit, I have been around extremely high caliber athletes some were the laziest human beings you have ever met. They were just genetic freaks. Now when you get a genetic freak with an amazing work ethic and drive that's when you get your Jordan's or Wambach's.
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Originally posted by Unregistered View PostWill someone please post a serious response since that is what I'm looking for. obviously the one who responded has no idea what I'm talking about. My Brother wrestled in the olympics and so I know you have to build a good foundation to succeed, they started wrestling at age 5 with the best. I just want my daughter to build a good foundation and learn from the best not people who have zero history in the sport. So can someone reccomend a good club within an hour distance from salem oregon. We have played with local clubs and it's just parents who get talked in to helping out and know nothing about soccer. Why start them out with the wrong training, it will just be harder to retrain them, want to build a solid foundation. So any help on a good soccer club is appreciated.
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Originally posted by Unregistered View PostThat study holds water for musicians but it's a bunch of bunk in relation to soccer. In soccer there are too many other variables- athletic ability, speed, quickness, motivation, aggressivness etc.. I can show you lots of examples of players at our local club who practice alot more but on the field get overshadowed by bigger, faster, stronger players. They might win a juggling contest though.
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Practical Advice to the Origional Poster
My daughter displayed the same passion and early technical ability at a simular age. We have had to always seek out good training and as she got older, make sure she was with a team that was the right fit as far as coaching and style of play. Technical skill will always stand out as she gets older, and putting her infront of as many soccer opportunities as possible when she is younger will help her to continue to develop her love of the game.
Here is some practical advice that served my daughter well, especially at the earlier ages:
1 - Stay as local as you can for now.
2 - Get involved in a positive way with her team. Examples would be setting up a 3 v 3 team(s) to play in local tournaments with other interested parents. Set up small group or private training with a good coach/trainer from your club. Often we set something up for 30 minutes before practice with a higher level coach from an older team that would have a practice starting the same time as ours. Futsal and indoor soccer is also great for footskills and speed of play and often these are coed, which is great. See if you can find a local facility and encourage some of her teammates to do it too. Ball girl opportunites at local college games are also fun.
3 - My daugher loved soccer camps over the summer and during school breaks. There are tons of them out there. She even did the residential camps from age 9 and hasn't stopped.
4 - If she still wants more after all that, talk with your coach / doc about having her train with an older or or boys team once a week if you feel the physicality won't be too much.
5 - Get her involved in the "culture of soccer" Get her a jersey of her favorite team / player to wear to training. Watch some soccer games on tv together. Take her to watch older girls teams with some of her teammates.
6 - Have fun!
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FC Portland
FC Portland has the best JR Academy. The boys won Mt Hood and the girls lost in the final. Jason Carney is their coach. He coached professionally in the UK for six years. Go to www.fcportland.org website to get Jason's contact info........Good luck
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