Simisoccerfan
PREMIER
Money is and always will be the motivation. Until we find the formula to that uses money to reward the development of world class players we will continue to fail.
What has not been mentioned (I think as I read through this thread) is a unified curriculum from the youth level to the national team. One where all participants need to adhere to and be held accountable for. Twellman speaks of it in his rant last night about Germany. France did it as well. Will US Soccer do this???
Of course let coaches/programs decide on the system they implement on the field. But create a curriculum that fosters creativity, vision, IQ, skill, an understanding of positions, and team play. Replace building a team around a player, individual play, and so much more.Agreed about curriculum BUT not system of play. Mandating the 4-3-3 was the dumbest thing the DA has done. Build as soccer IQ please.
Money is and always will be the motivation. Until we find the formula to that uses money to reward the development of world class players we will continue to fail.
Is it true that DA now has soccer IQ classes?Of course let coaches/programs decide on the system they implement on the field. But create a curriculum that fosters creativity, vision, IQ, skill, an understanding of positions, and team play. Replace building a team around a player, individual play, and so much more.
Sorry, how about you MAP? You know more about soccer than anyone I know.
I will start a campaign for you, maybe RF and Driver can be your assistants?
Everything all have said here on this thread rings true, but no matter what happens a curriculum is needed to guide all programs without it nothing will change.We are far away from a unified curriculum at the youth level. Right now, the "let them play" advocates have the upper hand....guided self-learning with minimal coaching of skills or soccer IQ. Players are expected to do that on their own outside of the context of team training, especially in the early years. Which means, in the early years, either having a really good club training academy day (and that's usually just 1 evening), getting a private trainer (which knocks out most working class kids) or having parents that play. It also means, in the early years, a competitive soccer program where training in possession and soccer IQ may be sacrificed for run and shoot soccer because it works and we've told the parents winning is everything.
Ha! Don't know my kids are not old enough to be in DA.Is it true that DA now has soccer IQ classes?
Of course let coaches/programs decide on the system they implement on the field. But create a curriculum that fosters creativity, vision, IQ, skill, an understanding of positions, and team play. Replace building a team around a player, individual play, and so much more.
3. The US had been known for years for producing world class goal keepers. Howard, Guzan, Keller, Meola, Friedel, Rimando (maybe). Was Howard the last great american GK?
I'll answer the goalkeeping part of your post. First of all, last night wasn't Howard's fault. Howard is beginning to show signs of his age, and this was probably his last hurrah, but there wasn't much he could do with either of those goals. US goalkeeping has always developed on the assumption that since we have so many kids that play sports that catch (football, baseball, basketball), it's easy to convert one of those players into a goalkeeper. And US goalkeepers have been very well known for being keepers that catch, as opposed to players that punch all the time like in Europe. The problem with that first the change in the backpass rule, and then the rise of Neuer have changed all that. Goalkeeping has changed radically in the last 5 years, as has what they are expected to do. You see it in the LA Galaxy keepers....Diop is the classic European keeper that is most comfortable sitting on his line....either someone has told him to play out of the box or he's decided to imitate Neuer but he's not physically or by training suited to that style (at least not yet) and it's led time and time to disaster. Rowe is the classic American keeper blocking with his legs and trying to catch it, but he can't really support the attack the way a sweeper-keeper can. In the 90s, the kids that were recruited to play the role were big lugs who were often slow but could battle on the cross, English style. In the 00's, they were giants, particularly in Europe, that were taught to not leave but to sit on their lines. Everything has changed now, and speed and agility are the most vital aspect of a keeper....the training even in the US is changing along with it (my son recently switched form a 40 year old goalkeeper coach that taught him to bend his knee on the ground ball and he's switched to a younger one that wants him to forward dive on it, for example). The US has to decide whether it's going to keep producing American-style goalkeepers like Rowe, or whether its going to switch to a sweeper-keeper format. So, they'll be a break before we get some worldclass goalkeepers again, and one of the changes US soccer needs to do is improving the education of American goalkeepers (or something we did well in the past will become something we were passed by as the rest of the world evolves).
Good enough for me.I'm on the Eric Wynalda train.... Make American Soccer Great
Great post Timbuck. Let me give you a story for you all. Our B2008 Blue team for the last 2 years has been getting its ass handed to them 6,8,10-zip. This year we have been beating all those teams by 4,5,6 zip. These kids have been drilled the Barca possession way for the past 3 seasons by an American coach that grew up here in SoCal, that didn't grow up playing possession but saw the writing on the wall 10 years ago that that was the wave of the future. 2 years ago ( he happens to be our DOC and we got a slew of coaches teaching the same thing) he got the parents (the whole f'ing key) to buy in and realize that we are going to get our asses handed to us for a few years but you just wait cause right now just doesn't matter as long as we get the foundation right. Now we have to shut the jets off typically at half and knock the ball around in the second half. Last week we were playing a team from the inland empire and this exact scenario played out. The other coach was actually doing a fantastic job trying to get his team to play he just wasn't there yet. After the game he asked our coach how the hell did you get those kids to play like that. He told them the story. He also told that coach he was doing a great job. As folks were walking out to the parking lot a parent from the other team started berating that coach because they lost and that he was a horrible coach. One of our parents overheard the conversation went over to that other coach and said "Coach you could coach our kids anytime cause you're trying to do it right". I think this sums up the situation in the US pretty damn good.
I was so glad LAG traded OG and Z-German dropped him because he was to slow. BA had other options that would have been better like Matt Miazga. Like the article, blunt.I agree. Pulisic and Wood shouldn't have to deal with such mediocrity. WTF was Omar Gonzalez doing in the lineup. The refs missed his horrible foul in the box that should have been a PK. I feel like crying but I am too pissed off.
https://deadspin.com/fuck-all-of-this-1819346770
I'll answer the goalkeeping part of your post. First of all, last night wasn't Howard's fault. Howard is beginning to show signs of his age, and this was probably his last hurrah, but there wasn't much he could do with either of those goals. US goalkeeping has always developed on the assumption that since we have so many kids that play sports that catch (football, baseball, basketball), it's easy to convert one of those players into a goalkeeper. And US goalkeepers have been very well known for being keepers that catch, as opposed to players that punch all the time like in Europe. The problem with that first the change in the backpass rule, and then the rise of Neuer have changed all that. Goalkeeping has changed radically in the last 5 years, as has what they are expected to do. You see it in the LA Galaxy keepers....Diop is the classic European keeper that is most comfortable sitting on his line....either someone has told him to play out of the box or he's decided to imitate Neuer but he's not physically or by training suited to that style (at least not yet) and it's led time and time to disaster. Rowe is the classic American keeper blocking with his legs and trying to catch it, but he can't really support the attack the way a sweeper-keeper can. In the 90s, the kids that were recruited to play the role were big lugs who were often slow but could battle on the cross, English style. In the 00's, they were giants, particularly in Europe, that were taught to not leave but to sit on their lines. Everything has changed now, and speed and agility are the most vital aspect of a keeper....the training even in the US is changing along with it (my son recently switched form a 40 year old goalkeeper coach that taught him to bend his knee on the ground ball and he's switched to a younger one that wants him to forward dive on it, for example). The US has to decide whether it's going to keep producing American-style goalkeepers like Rowe, or whether its going to switch to a sweeper-keeper format. So, they'll be a break before we get some worldclass goalkeepers again, and one of the changes US soccer needs to do is improving the education of American goalkeepers (or something we did well in the past will become something we were passed by as the rest of the world evolves).
Great post Timbuck. Let me give you a story for you all. Our B2008 Blue team for the last 2 years has been getting its ass handed to them 6,8,10-zip. This year we have been beating all those teams by 4,5,6 zip. These kids have been drilled the Barca possession way for the past 3 seasons by an American coach that grew up here in SoCal, that didn't grow up playing possession but saw the writing on the wall 10 years ago that that was the wave of the future. 2 years ago ( he happens to be our DOC and we got a slew of coaches teaching the same thing) he got the parents (the whole f'ing key) to buy in and realize that we are going to get our asses handed to us for a few years but you just wait cause right now just doesn't matter as long as we get the foundation right. Now we have to shut the jets off typically at half and knock the ball around in the second half. Last week we were playing a team from the inland empire and this exact scenario played out. The other coach was actually doing a fantastic job trying to get his team to play he just wasn't there yet. After the game he asked our coach how the hell did you get those kids to play like that. He told them the story. He also told that coach he was doing a great job. As folks were walking out to the parking lot a parent from the other team started berating that coach because they lost and that he was a horrible coach. One of our parents overheard the conversation went over to that other coach and said "Coach you could coach our kids anytime cause you're trying to do it right". I think this sums up the situation in the US pretty damn good.