Ha! The mystery 3-pack!Getting a good coach from the sea of track suits requires some luck..................
https://www.soccer.com/shop/details/mystery-jacket-3-pack-150-value_A70638
Ha! The mystery 3-pack!Getting a good coach from the sea of track suits requires some luck..................
https://www.soccer.com/shop/details/mystery-jacket-3-pack-150-value_A70638
Getting a good coach from the sea of track suits requires some luck..................
https://www.soccer.com/shop/details/mystery-jacket-3-pack-150-value_A70638
Thanks for the link...I just put an order through...couldn't resist.Getting a good coach from the sea of track suits requires some luck..................
https://www.soccer.com/shop/details/mystery-jacket-3-pack-150-value_A70638
Can they still call it "Indian Guides"?A dad approached me at back to school night recently. He asked me to join Indian Guides. I was already against that but entertained him to be polite. Then he told me the price tag; $2000.
I’m happy my money is spent on a soccer field. I get to work on my tan, I get to watch my kid laugh. I get to watch my kid be athletic.
Can someone fill me in on the track suit thing? It seems like a running joke here, but I don't get it. (What are coaches suppose to wear if not track suits? Not every coach can look like this: https://encrypted-tbn0.gstatic.com/...JkDUnVr19K3O8FY1wRFO3YDeeVx8BeRA84XBsVOUaCb1Q)Ha! The mystery 3-pack!
No. Adventure Guides/Princesses. At least at our Y. Yet we still have "tribes," Medicine Men," "Chiefs," etc..Can they still call it "Indian Guides"?
When coaches start dressing more like Diego Simeone and less like Coach Sonski from Saved by the Bell - We will fully know that we have made the sport to expensive.Can someone fill me in on the track suit thing? It seems like a running joke here, but I don't get it. (What are coaches suppose to wear if not track suits? Not every coach can look like this: https://encrypted-tbn0.gstatic.com/...JkDUnVr19K3O8FY1wRFO3YDeeVx8BeRA84XBsVOUaCb1Q)
Gareth Southgate has style. It’s a negative descriptive generalization that came about from the many foreign/European coaches. In particular coaches from the UK. Their typical style of dress is of course the track suit. You could say it’s like all gangsters (ie Paulie Walnuts) look like this...Can someone fill me in on the track suit thing? It seems like a running joke here, but I don't get it. (What are coaches suppose to wear if not track suits? Not every coach can look like this: https://encrypted-tbn0.gstatic.com/...JkDUnVr19K3O8FY1wRFO3YDeeVx8BeRA84XBsVOUaCb1Q)
Don't you dare make fun of Simeone. He is hero to many who subscribe to "we don't need no stinking possession".When coaches start dressing more like Diego Simeone and less like Coach Sonski from Saved by the Bell - We will fully know that we have made the sport to expensive.
Don't you dare make fun of Simeone. He is hero to many who subscribe to "we don't need no stinking possession".
Love this idea. I coached two teams for my daughter, was very new to soccer and never played. Took all the classes, learned to referee, and also had my daughter playing Club(as a keeper but she still wanted to play the field at this time) and had a chance to watch club practices. Daughter would lead practice, help with all the drills, teach footwork, help the keepers while I'd stay out of the way (just kidding but having someone on a team that can demonstrate a coaches intent is huge). 4 of the girls I coached are now in club and every kid learned some and had a fun.
AYSO 37 in Corona had players from the UK teach on Friday's and I'd always push the kids to attend, even showing up and scheduling a practice with them.
You do realize that those UK players get paid, I have worked with those guys for years. Majority of all the regions do the Friday night clinics with UK folks because they have a contract with them.
The program is pretty much pre-set for them, so it's hard for any one of them to make a mess of it (they tend to be enthusiastic and to the extent there are problems in the training, it's largely a problem of the program....which in turn is largely a problem of soccer in the UK).
And what problem is it they have? The England teams in the last year won the U19 European Championships, U17 World Cup, U19 World Cup and reached the World Cup semis.......and we wonder why the rest of the world laughs at us....
Well, no nation has the perfect soccer program....the game is always developing. Just got through Arena's butt-covering book. It's clear one of the reasons he wasn't able to turn it around is because he is approaching the game like it was in the early 2000s in his heyday. Soccer is always evolving. Tiki-taka and everyone jumped on the Spanish bandwagon, the German high press countered and everyone sung Germany's praises, the French negative game and everyone wants to be like France.
The English papers are constantly bemoaning the problems with English soccer. While they are doing a lot of things right, their long ball game was easily defeated in the World Cup by teams playing negatively and they got lucky in the brackets and in their goalkeeper. At the early/lower levels, their kickball is bad as our own (my son has a little friend whose also a keeper/youtuber....our AYSO games are more possession oriented....you could argue that we shouldn't be worrying about possession and the long ball game should rule). They have a problem in talent selection...their academies track early and are limited, and so you have a bunch of players that are used and losed after having fallen off the academic track (or forced to come to America to get back on that track by playing college here). They have a professional development problem, like our MLS or Mexico, where foreigners are being developed at the highest levels instead of homegrown talent. And they have the same gap problem that we do (also highlighted in Arena's book, though sadly he refused to take on the NCAA directly)...they can develop up to age 18/19 but they are struggling with developing their first teams.
If you want to argue England is doing better than we are, well that's just self-evident. But to say that they are problem free ignores the very issues their press, fans, and people in authority have been discussing.
Of course their media bemoans things; The expectations there are exponentially higher than here and their soccer press is not in the pocket of SUM. I also wouldn't describe their style at the WC as long ball, they repeatedly played out from the back until they went into panic mode vs Croatia in the second half. The press and expectations in Europe are so different. I speak Dutch and you should read what they say over there, plus similar in countries like German, Spain and Argentina where there are myriad issues not least the high average age compared to the French and English NTs. Too many foreign players in the EPL a detriment to the ENT? Sure, but they're doing better than you understand.
I never argued they were problem free in England... it is you who are making blanket statements that their issues = our issues. To compare their development pathway with MLS is ludicrous.
No. Adventure Guides/Princesses. At least at our Y. Yet we still have "tribes," Medicine Men," "Chiefs," etc..