Tuesday 30 December 2008

U9 Leopards

First match of the New Year is on Sunday 4th v Redgate Black KO TBA at Redgate School.

Please let me know asap if you can play or not by adding a comment below.

Saturday 20 December 2008

Comments

To leave a 'comment', all you have to do is click on 'comment' below the posting, type your comment in the text box then choose 'anonymous' identity in the right hand drop down menu. Select publish and your done!

Friday 19 December 2008


Wishing you all a Very Happy Christmas and a Peaceful New Year
Paul & Paul

FJSC U9s v SPort T Blue

Game cancelled, 3 points to us!

Sunday 14 December 2008

U9s Training

Range 5pm Wednesday 17 December

Redgate in the Black

FJSCu9 1 v 3 Redgate Black


After the original match was rearranged due to an allgedly frozen pitch (enquiry ongoing as the ref today said he didn't cancell!) we paid the price for too long in cloud cuckoo land.

Otherwise we should have dominated after a fantastic strike from Joel Styche that left the watching Liverpool Scout drooling.

Joe Gallen was immense again with non-stop powerful running (sorry I forgot to change goalies again!)

Jack Lofthouse made a promising league debut showing some nice touches and good set ups.

Cameron and Ben Mc were as strong as ever at the back, with Robert and Shaun making several dangerous runs.

Steven Dolan was as energetic as ever, was unlucky not to score and also made some dangerous weaving runs.

Ben G was little troubled in goal really, and when he came out got stuck in and passed the ball nicely before retiring through injury.

A result that flattered RB, and still may yet be overturned if Redgate's subdifusion is proven, and I only make an issue of it on a matter of principal rather than league position!

Formby at Finch Farm


Thanks for the turn out at Everton Academy that saw us take on two very good U8 sides.


Their constant running, passing and shooting ability was a pleasure to watch and we can learn some valuable lessons all round. A great experience, and one that is likely to be repeated.


Debutant Ryan Magilton was cool under great pressure, always looking to pick out the pass.


Fellow first timer Jack Lofthouse made himself some great scoring opportunities, and was unlucky not to put the ball away.


Joe Gallen was Man of the Match, but all the boys did themselves proud with 100% effort on a wet and windy night.

Friday 12 December 2008

Practice makes Perfect





"We are what we repeatedly do. Excellence then is not an act, but a habit" Aristotle

Thursday 11 December 2008

U9s v Redgate Black

Sunday14 Dec @ Redgate School 11.30 for 12 KO.

Confirm availability by adding a comment.

Sunday 7 December 2008

U14s Training


Next training session will be at Deansgate Lane on Saturday 20 December, 2.00pm.

Please let me know if you can't make it by leaving a comment!

Friday 5 December 2008

U9s and U14s Matches PPd



Due to the recent rainfall, this week-ends games on Sefton Pitches are all off, and will include inter-club!

Thursday 4 December 2008

Team USA!


If you're a visitor from the USA, please leave a comment with your contact details and remarks, we'd love to hear from you!

Tuesday 2 December 2008

Club Ethos - Quality

From on-line tributes for Jim Rourke;

alan pigott from shenzhen,china
08:04:26 22 March 2006

you picked me for a team when i was crap..thankyou jim

U9s - 'We have a way of educating players, it’s not about winning’


From The Times
November 28, 2007



http://www.timesonline.co.uk/tol/sport/football/article2957535.ece

Streets ahead: traditionally, Brazilian youngsters learnt to play football in the favelas but today each youth player is given a specific technical programme to follow. The absence of a league system for youngsters makes fun and development the key goals for players used to training for four hours a day (Andre Camara)


Bloody kids. Having planted Steve McClaren in the vegetable plot and beaten his preening players with their Burberry manbags, the finger of blame is being pointed at the youth of today. But if the vista is a mishmash of pushy parents and glum-faced children, there is a blueprint for a happier future across the North Sea. The future’s bright, the future’s Oranje.

The Dutch have long been seen as world leaders when it comes to youth development. “We have special eyes,” Peter Jeltema, the head of youth coaching at FC Groningen, said. They have to. “There are far better players in England and Spain, so we have to be creative and invest in our children.”

This is no empty platitude. In the mid-1980s, the father of total football, Rinus Michels, penned his thoughts on youth football. One key belief was that kids’ football should not replicate the adult game. Another was that it should be enjoyable, with everyone involved and lots of chances to score. Now, across the Netherlands, his ideas are used. At the age of 5, games are four-a-side. At 9 they progress to seven-a-side on half-sized pitches. Finally, at 13, they play 11-a-side on regulation pitches. “If you have kids playing football then give them a ball,” Rob de Leede, of the KNVB, the Dutch FA, said. “We don’t want people doing drills and waiting for 15 minutes for their turn.”

The concept is to nurture rather than neuter on the back of sad dads living out managerial fantasies. Every game ends with a penalty shoot-out. Good idea, that.

The Michels model was revised by Louis van Gaal, now reportedly coveting the job of England head coach, in 2001. He spoke of the pyramid structure and getting the amateur and professional games working together. Academies were rated on a four-star basis, a youth coaching diploma was introduced, clubs were licensed depending on the number of development teams they had. “Fewer children now play football in the streets,” the Masterplan For Youth Football stated. “It has therefore become a major priority of the KNVB and the clubs to take a greater responsibility for youth development.”

That it has done this is reflected at the top end by successive victories in the European Under-21 Championship and at the bottom by a man with a clipboard in North Brabant. He is watching a game at OJC Rosmalen, an amateur club with 71 teams, and is noting down the length of time each child plays. There are no substitutes because they are seen as pointless at this age. It is about enthusing the kids, rather than leaving the worst players on the sidelines. If it sounds a little right-on for the touchline tyrants, it is worth noting the dropout rate in England is huge by comparison. “We have the biggest dropout rate in mid-teens in Europe,” Paul Cooper, of the England-based dutchUK football school, said. “That’s because the kids’ game here is for adults.”

Cooper set up the dutchUK school with Bert-Jan Heijmans, who had moved to the North East after playing and coaching in the Netherlands. He cites the structure of Dutch football as the key to its success. He says there are 2,200 independent leagues in England, whereas the KNVB coordinates everything. “Here we have the FA, the Premiership, the Football League, county FAs, kids’ leagues, it’s all over the place,” he said.

The land is flat but the people are rounded in the Netherlands. Clubs do not throw kids on the scrapheap if they do not make the grade. If Groningen decide a youth player is not good enough, the club are duty-bound by their agreement with the KNVB to find him an amateur one. The whole ethos is on caring for the children. “We have a way of educating players,” Jeltema said. “It’s not all about winning.” The land is flat and so are the pitches. “In Groningen we have 18 artificial pitches,” Jeltema said. “It means we can play football all year.”

One of the key differences between England and the Netherlands is historic. In the Netherlands, there is very little schools sport and, as a result, their clubs are well developed. It means each age group has several teams selected according to ability. “I went to a club and saw a boy playing in the under-6 team,” Cooper said. “His dad was in the seconds and his grandad was in the tenth team. They have true community clubs.”

They also have an age group and technical co-ordinator and more qualified coaches, with parents having little influence. Then there is a much finer line between the professional and amateur games, something welcomed in the Van Gaal Masterplan. “A player can go from non-league and become a professional,” Arnold Muhren, a former Holland international and later an Ajax youth coach, said.

Perhaps the key strand of the Masterplan is enjoyment. Gordon Strachan is one who believes they have got that right. “People say kids are getting too much football but that’s not right,” the Celtic manager said. “They’re getting too much pressurised football.”

The KNVB document on the Michels-inspired 4 v 4, now practised at Manchester United, is illuminating. One of the roles of the youth coach is “constructing basic game forms to compensate the negative influences of modern society”. It defines skills under the acronym TIC — Technical (motorical, physical) characteristic, Insight (awareness), Communication. The emphasis is on small games to improve all the above by giving players lots of touches and repetition. TIC is a variation on Ajax’s famed TIPS system, standing for Technique, Insight, Personality and Speed.

It is not rocket science, but the idea that winning is not everything is anathema to the English. Holland’s under-21 titles came under the stewardship of Foppe de Haan, who revealed that the English strengths of passion and desire remain much envied. “We cannot teach them to be killers,” he once said of Dutch fledgelings. Maybe not, but neither do they kill them off. Smile

Monday 1 December 2008

pps

Michael Davis EAT MY SHORTS!!

U14s PS.


Thanks to Paul Elliot for comming along to offer his support despite his trampolining tragedy!

Here's to a speedy recovery, and please obtain the consent of the management before partaking in any further hazardous exploits!