What lessons can we learn from their youth development?

England’s youth development has long been seen as lagging behind the rest of the top European countries. It seems as if every nation goes through a rut with their youth set-ups at some point, so what exactly can we learn from those successful nations, who have managed to turn their failing youth set-ups around?

There are many improvements that could be made to the English youth set-up by implementing some of the positive aspects employed by other nations. Other European country’s have coordinated national coaching systems which put them miles ahead of the UK. Nations like Spain and France have over ten times of the amount of qualified coaches with the UEFA pro-license than the UK has, which is obviously going to have an impact on youth development on a wide scale.

In Europe young players are given a fair shot, and clubs seem to get the transition right between the youth and senior team. European players tend to make their first team debut around age 21-22, but in England young players are often not given the chance, or they are judged upon Carling Cup and substitute appearances. Young players are given no time to mature, as instant results are demanded from fans and the media, and this lack of patience seems to be inherent in our footballing philosophy in this country. We need to get the important transition between the ages of 18-21 right, or we risk losing huge amounts of talent in the system.

In other countries many smaller and lower league teams have proper world class academies. In the UK very few, outside of the likes of Leeds, Watford and Southampton from the lower tiers could claim to be genuinely world class. There is significantly less money thrown at the grass-roots in the UK, and that obviously is going to have a negative effect, compared to nations who are spending much larger amounts developing youth prospects.

If we look at other countries like Germany and Spain, they also tend to have more of a collective mentality. Clubs, instead of focusing on themselves, focus together on a common goal, to invest in the future of the national team. In Holland, clubs all train the same way focusing on technique and tactics, in a country wide method of education. Young players also have much more contact time than their English counterparts. They also have exceptional facilities and clubs are the beacons of their local community. In Holland there is also much more emphasis on fun in the game, something which seems to have been lost somewhere along the way in the English game, where winning takes preference.

All nations go through a rut at some point, but it is important to make changes to enable youth development to progress. About a decade ago Germany looked into how they could improve the game in their country. They put in place a strong structure between governing bodies-something distinctly lacking from the British game-and made significant changes to the game. There was a huge investment in German football, as well as improvements in stadia and facilities. It became a requirement for all Bundesliga, and Bundesliga 2 clubs to have youth academies which met certain strict criteria. The youth game in Germany now focuses on small sided games, prioritizing touch and technique and individual skills-just about the antithesis of the way the game is taught in the UK. In the UK players have been trained in a way that favours the physical, with power, size and strength dominating the English youth set-up, whilst technical play is simply neglected. Germany now have a thriving domestic league, with the core of its players coming from the German youth system, the changes and serious financial investment in the youth game, have clearly had a positive effect.

In some European nations there is also a tendency for youth academies to play in the lower leagues. In Spain, Barcelona and Real Madrid’s youth academies, or B teams, are filled with youngsters who play against senior teams at a much higher level than reserve team football. It is a highly competitive method of development, and is a great way for young footballers to gain experience, as well as improve their level and understanding of the game. When they are ready they then progress to the first team, and it is not such a big jump for a young player. They play against tough, experienced opponents in front of big crowds, and deal with media pressure on a regular basis, this helps them to adjust better to the game at the highest level. English players play fewer competitive games, in front of sparse crowds, and rarely get the chance to impress, especially at the big clubs. A system like the Spanish one is unlikely to be given the go-ahead by the FA, and it does pose problems with regard to wiping out the identity of lower league football in this country. However, it would certainly improve standards of young footballers, and make the transition to senior football easier for them. Spanish football was in a rut before its recent glorious period, and it has taken them 20 years for the changes they made to their youth system to pay off. By making changes they have ensured that youngsters have adopted a style of play to suit their level of skill and technique, and this fits in with the nations footballing philosophy as a whole.

In other successful European nations players tend to play on smaller pitches at younger ages, which seems to be very beneficial. In the UK children move to full size pitches far too early, which puts the emphasis on an athletic based game, favouring the physically gifted over the technically gifted smaller players. Under 11’s playing 11 a side on a full size pitch, with full size goals is frankly ridiculous, the players get little time on the ball, and it is often discouraging for a lot of youngsters. In Spain, Italy and France, they don’t move to full size pitches until around the age of 14, and by learning the game on a smaller scale players acquire the skills which have put them at the forefront of world football.

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It is the whole structure and philosophy that needs to be overhauled if we are to improve youth standards in this country. We need to change our whole attitude to football from the grass-roots up, with a system of education that improves on our technical deficiencies, teaching these skills at an early age. Our desperation for results and immediate investment-in mostly foreign players-has forced spending on youth development down the priority list and this needs to change if we are to see improvements in this country. It is difficult to say that what works in one country will work in another, but clearly there are some changes and positives that we can take from other countries, which would do nothing to further harm the state that English youth football is already in.

Do you think we should take on board some of the methods of other nations? Let me know your thoughts by commenting below or following me on Twitter @LaurenRutter for more comment and debate.

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The Top TEN Footballing Hissy Fits

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To celebrate the launch of the game our next article looks at the top 10 footballers tantrums

Footballers are a strange breed of person. They appear more prone to irrational behaviour than most. Like a whole sub-species of under-developed children with a penchant for petulance; spats, fallings-out and strikes are now common place in the modern day game. Following on from the fall-out of Carlos Tevez’s apparent refusal to come off the bench against Bayern Munich in the last set of Champions League fixtures, here are my top 10 footballing tantrums.

Click on Temuri Ketsbaia below to unveil the top 10

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Take up our exclusive offer with Goaldash below to be in with a chance – what have you got to lose?

Kenny looking to pip Arsene to £11m deal

Kenny Dalglish is desperate to complete the signing of at least one more player before the closing of the transfer window next week, and it is Wolves striker Kevin Doyle who is reported to be top of his wish list.

Doyle joined Wolves back in 2009, and his highly successful spell with the club at caught the attention of a number of top European sides. Dalglish is reported to be keen on luring the centre forward to Anfield before his rivals can make an offer, and is preparing to launch an offer of around £11m in the coming days for the Irishman.

In just 60 league appearances at Wolves, Doyle has bagged himself 14 league goals and put in numerous man of the match performances at Molineux. Manager Mick McCarthy has expressed his intention to keep Doyle at the club despite a reported array of interest from the likes of Liverpool, Arsenal and even Juventus. McCarthy claimed that allowing Doyle to leave the club would be devastating for the players and fans, and could severely harm their chances of remaining in the top flight of English football, after narrowly escaping the drop back in May.

However, as we all know by now, money does talk in football and Dalglish will be hoping to blow his competitors out of the water with an offer exceeding £10m. The Liverpool boss will also be hoping this kind of fee will be enough to persuade the Wolves manager to part ways with one of his key players. Doyle has proved his ability in the Premier League and would undoubtedly relish the opportunity to play for a club like Liverpool.

With Carroll still to prove his worth to the Anfield faithful, first team opportunities on Merseyside are not necessarily out of the question. Thankfully the transfer window closes in just over a week, and so any ‘saga’ that might have developed a month or so ago will surely not now. Saying that, a lot can change in a week.

Article courtesy of Thomas Kenny from the Transfer Tavern

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Slowly becoming a scratched record at Arsenal?

Take a look at the Arsenal team of 2011 and their record over the last 6 years. Not too bad for an average Premier League club – pretty good in fact, yet for a team who were dubbed the ‘unbeatables’ in their 2004-2005 campaign, failure to win a trophy in the last six seasons is quite simply not good enough.

Whilst Arsenal can point to a lack of funds in comparison with Chelsea, United and now Manchester City, along with a completely different ethos and transfer policy, the time for excuses about being in ‘transition’ have to stop. Wenger, at Arsenals AGM, called for more time, and passionately declared that despite the summer departures, the current team at Arsenal can fulfil their potential, if given the time to do so.

The problem however is that Wenger has been asking for more ‘time’ for several trophyless years now, and it must be asked if that question will soon become too familiar with fans who have ardently believed in Wenger and his team for so long, placing playing attractive football with flair above winning games 1 – 0 and a scrappy result. Obviously this has cost them multiple games in the past and although at times they are memorising to watch, the tag of a poor man’s Barcelona is not an unfair one.

Yes Arsenal can attack and play with style, but they have been lacking in grit and determination – a backbone to their team has been missing and although Fabregas cannot be called anything less than a brilliant player, a captain he is not. A major lack of leadership on the field has been something that has blighted Arsenal for several seasons now and whether Robin Van Persie is the man to fill this void remains to be seen.

Anyone with a footballing brain can make the statement that should Van Persie have been fit for the majority of his time at Arsenal things could have been very different for the Gunners. This season Van Persie has been their talisman and nothing short of world class, rescuing the team on numerous occasions and having a phenomenal goal to game ration of 2.38. However should Arsenal fail to make it into the top four and thus the Champions League this season, they may well have to add the Dutchman to their list of high profile departures.

Another point Arsenal supporters will make when looking back at last season in particular is that if they had beaten Birmingham in the Carling Cup final, their season could have turned out vastly different. Again whilst a valid point, much like pointing to departures, injuries and suspensions, football cannot be a game of what if’s. Arsenal’s main issue is that they have not got a good enough defence and Song does not look to be a massively convincing holding midfielder.

It cannot be ignored that losing Fabregas, Nasri and Clichy was a huge blow, as is the fact Van Persie and Vermaelen struggle to stay fit for an entire season. Players such as Jenkinson who got mauled at Old Trafford do display some quality, but to throw them in at the deep end and expose them so harshly is not what Wenger would ideally like to do.

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Arsenal clearly have quality within the ranks, not just in experienced players like Van Persie but also the young guns such as Ramsey and Wilshire. The supporters are right in sticking by both the manager and the club, with Wenger bringing through some serious talent during his lengthy tenure at the helm, and is right in saying that the team have masses of potential to fulfil.

Yet Arsenal sit third in the goals conceded chart with 18 goals shipped in from 9 games, and for a team that feels they belong in the top four, this is simply not good enough. Yes they have scored 15 goals in the same amount of games, but Arsenal’s problem has never been failure to attack. Wenger needs to stop with the excuses and finally instil some defensive stability into the team – otherwise a top four finish may well be beyond them and ‘in Arsene we trust’ may well not be the case anymore.

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David Moyes still ambitious after ten years

Everton manager David Moyes has been the boss at Goodison Park for ten years, and has admitted that his ambition to succeed is still as strong as when he joined the club.

The Scottish coach has been a hard-working servant at the Merseyside team, but has confessed that this season has been difficult due to a lack of financial backing.

“My ambition is as strong as ever, but this has been the toughest year. We weren’t able to do any business in the summer while teams around us were able to buy,” he told The Telegraph.

“But I was never promised anything when I took the job. You don’t moan about it. You work with the goods you’ve got. We had a good January and it’s galvanised us a bit.”

Moyes also admitted that loan signing Royston Drenthe has started to improve, and that the Dutch winger has become more of an important players at the Toffees after he scored against QPR at the weekend.

“It’s taken Roy time to settle. Coming from Real Madrid you think he will understand what we do here, but he didn’t straight away.

“He’s beginning to do a bit better and can still do much better. But he has that ability to score a goal, to create a chance. We’re beginning to trust him much more now,” the Scottish coach concluded.

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By Gareth McKnight

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Should Tottenham blow the roof off?

Tottenham Hotspur is a well-run football club. The solidity of their finances is a source of pride for the supporters. They hold a position at the business end of the Premiership and have done so without racking up mountains of debt. However, they may have reached a fork in the road. In order to continue progressing, or even to keep up with the clubs around them, they may be forced to seriously loosen their rigid wage structure.

The question of whether Spurs should discard their current successful system is a balancing act between footballing ambition and financial risk.

Abandoning the wage structure would allow Spurs to compete with the top clubs for the best players. There are suggestions that they have already considered this. The club’s top earners Modric, Bale and King are on around £70,000 a week, however no serious attempts could have been made to sign Sergio Aguero in January without leaping towards the £100,000 per week marker. £70,000 won’t bag you a star in their prime nowadays. When Spurs become linked with a world-class player, the first question raised is will the club be able to meet his wage demands.

The wage structure is also becoming restrictive in the retention of the best players. £70,000 a week will keep your players happy for a while if you get them young but it won’t keep them forever.

If Tottenham loosen the structure, they’ll be able to attract a higher calibre of player capable of bringing them more seriously into the crush at the top of the table. They can satisfy the ambitions of the club’s best players and their seemingly insatiable appetite for more money. There is a genuine risk that without this increased spending, the team may stagnate or even go backwards as players are lured away. It would be a great shame if the 2011 Champions League run is the pinnacle of this Tottenham side’s achievements.

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The cons of abandoning Levy’s safe and working business model can be seen throughout English football. Spurs would be faced with a rapidly escalating wage bill. The arrival of a couple of £100,000 a week stars would undoubtedly have a knock on effect on the wages of others at the club whether through highest earning clauses or renegotiated contracts. Nobody wants to see a situation like that at Newcastle 2 years ago, a squad bulging with £50,000 plus a week earners, with no love for the club, heading for relegation.

Without the guarantee of Champions league football, it is a huge and reckless gamble to drastically up the club’s spending. The top English clubs are in eye-watering amounts of debt and Spurs have done fantastically well thus far to compete without being sucked in. The club is safe and could even maybe spend a little more without pushing itself into a position of boom or bust. Daniel Levy has run Spurs incredibly carefully up until now, it would be foolish of him to risk everything for short term success.

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So what should Tottenham do? Is this the most competitive they can be without plunging into an abyss of debt? I believe that Spurs should continue to keep it tight, keep buying young players if they have too, but keep getting the best they can afford. Spurs can get stars without breaking the bank, it just takes a lot longer. Levy runs a tight ship and I still believe he can take it forward without sinking it.

It’s a great shame that £70,000 a week can’t get you the players you need but it’s good to see Tottenham attempting to climb the right way.

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Jol planning raid on White Hart Lane

Martin Jol is set to raid his former club Tottenham for Peter Crouch, the Metro understands.

The Fulham boss wants to strengthen his frontline and has earmarked Crouch as the man to wear the number nine shirt at Craven Cottage.

He already has Bobby Zamora and Andrew Johnson battling for a starting spot but is keen to add more competition up front.

Jol wasn’t pleased with his team’s reliance on the long ball up to Zamora in Saturday’s 0-0 draw against Aston Vila and is also reluctant to play Clint Dempsey up front.

The Dutchman said: “I feel there is more to come from Zamora and Johnson but – we played too many long balls to Bobby.

“I’d like to add a few things going forward. We saw on Saturday (against Aston Villa) if we swap our No.9 I have to put Clint Dempsey there and I don’t want to do that.”

“That’s why we will try to do something in the transfer window.”

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Crouch is surplus to requirements at White Hart Lane with boss Harry Redknapp keen to move him on to make room for a new striker.

He’s also been linked with a move to Stoke but a chance to stay in London is likely to appeal more to the England forward.

The Premier League Fantasy Football Weekend Picks

Another weekend of Premier League action means more important games with Liverpool taking on Spurs and Manchester United’s trip to West London. However, these won’t be the only highlights of the weekend. For example, Newcastle fans will get a first glimpse at Demba Ba and Papiss Demba Cissé in action after Senegal were knocked out of the African Nations Cup.

Who though should lead the line for your side this weekend?

The Captaincy Debate

Let’s start with the aforementioned Demba Ba. He was in scintillating form prior to his departure to Africa. After a poor tournament for Senegal, the Newcastle forward will be looking to add to his tally of 15 goals in the Premier League. The Magpies face Aston Villa on Sunday and given the fact the Villains haven’t been watertight at the back, Ba isn’t a bad bet to bag a brace at the weekend.

However, Norwich striker Steve Morison is worth consideration. The ex-Millwall man has helped to fire the Canaries into the top half with eight goals so far this season. He’s done brilliantly to make the transition from the Championship to the Premier League appear so smooth. Bolton Wanderers visit Norfolk this weekend. Owen Coyle’s team have improved immeasurably over the last few weeks but they will need to be wary of Morison’s presence on Saturday.

Another player to take into account is the mercurial talent that is Gareth Bale. He has deservedly filled many column inches this season with some stunning performances. His latest came at White Hart Lane on Tuesday evening as he netted a double against lowly Wigan. The Welshman faces a tougher test on Monday night as Spurs travel to Anfield. Bale produced a fine performance in the North West just under a fortnight ago against league leaders Manchester City. There’s every chance he’ll raise his game again.

With Blackburn Rovers coming to the Emirates, it would be foolish to rule out Robin van Persie from scoring during the Gunners’ Saturday lunchtime clash. The Dutchman could count himself unfortunate not to net against Bolton on Wednesday evening as he was first denied by the post before a cute chip bounced off the crossbar. Arsenal’s finest will be hoping for better luck on Saturday against one of the Premier League’s bottom three.

The Captain: Robin van Persie – Unlucky on Wednesday, it’s hard to look past van Persie as skipper due to Blackburn’s attitude to defending this season.

The Vice Captain: Demba Ba – Returning from the African Cup of Nations, expect a strong performance from Newcastle’s best forward.

Long Term Look

Luis Antonio Valencia might not strike you as a particularly cheap outlet in Fantasy Football – playing for Manchester United generally helps to add a few million onto your price. However, in comparison to other pricey midfield options, the Ecuadorian winger is certainly value for money.

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Valencia played a pivotal role in United’s victory at the Emirates two weeks ago and he’s been in excellent form since the beginning of December, picking up nine assists and two goals as Manchester United’s title ambitions have rekindled. With a tough run of games still to come, Valencia could be a shrewd addition to your side at £8.1 million.

For more on the Premier League, follow @arhindtutt on Twitter

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Hillsborough papers forthcoming

Home Secretary Theresa May has stated that she will do everything in her power to release the official papers detailing the true story of what happened at the Hillsborough disaster, as the families of the bereaved get closer to the truth.

96 Liverpool fans lost their lives in the stadium tragedy back in April 1989, and calls have increased for the Government to come clean on the true cause of the disaster.

Claims have indicated that the fans were to blame for the stadium collapse, but the police are expected to come under scrutiny after being cleared of any wrongdoing at the time.

With David Cameron yesterday also admitting the papers would be released to the families in the near future, May has backed up the prime minister.

“As Home Secretary, I will do everything in my power to ensure that the families and the public get the truth,” she stated in the House of Commons.

“No government papers will be withheld from the panel, no attempts to suppress publication will be made, no stone will be left unturned.

“The principle underlying the process is that of maximum possible disclosure and disclosure to the families first and then to the wider public.

“The Government’s position has absolutely nothing to do with attempting to suppress the release of these papers or to somehow hide the truth. And I am sorry that the way the Government responded to the Freedom of Information Act request, causing anxiety among the families and concern on Merseyside and beyond,” she concluded.

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By Gareth McKnight

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Allegri warns Arsenal they need to spend

AC Milan boss Massimiliano Allegri has stated that Arsenal will not win trophies unless they start to spend more in the transfer market to sign ‘big players’.

The Scudetto holders beat the Gunners 4-0 in the first leg of their Champions League last 16 tie at the San Siro a fortnight ago, and ahead of the rematch at the Emirates Stadium the Italian coach has told Arsene Wenger to have an active summer recruiting new faces.

“For me it’s impossible to win the title or Champions League without signing big players,” the tactician told The Sun.

“You will never do it without big players. That goes for Arsenal, Milan or any big club. You must buy big.

“I have a strong team but in that I have three big players, bringing experience, character, technical ability and leadership. You need leaders.

“For me in every team there are two leaders. One technical and tactical leader and one with character.

“In Milan our technical leader is Zlatan Ibrahimovic. In terms of character, until last year, it was Rino Gattuso. Now Mark Van Bommel or Thiago Silva,” he concluded.

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By Gareth McKnight

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