View Full Version : Debate - Future of Youth Development in Irish Football
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Stuttgart88
09/07/2014, 8:04 PM
Tour de France spoiler alert.
I couldn't help thinking of this thread and whole debate today when I saw Froome pull out of the Tour after only a few stages. Team SKY is perceived as one of the slickest, smoothest, best organised and most methodically planned outfits in any sport. I have some doubts but anyway, I think the perception is largely correct. But after only 4 days the Tour favourite is out and unless Richie Porte can step up (he is a super climber) their Tour is goosed earlier than England's World Cup. Now, if Rooney, or Gerrard for that matter, was 3 inches taller I reckon England would have made the last 16. That's not to say England's football architecture and plumbing isn't all wrong.
But let's not overlook just how capricious sport can be. All the analysis in the world can't explain the role tiny things can do. If David Silva had taken a routine chance to make it 2-0 Holland may have been heading for the exit early.
My point is that planning and organisation is probably a necessary but certainly an insufficient ingredient in determining success. Planning, organisation, structures, governance etc can improve your chances but raw luck is often the essential factor. As osarusan(?) said above many doubt that Belgium's success is really down to their NGB. Even those who laud the NGB's role openly accept that raw luck was a factor in this generation coming together.
paul_oshea
09/07/2014, 8:38 PM
4 words never used in the whole GB affair.
how did you construct all that during the world cup semi finale
Stuttgart88
09/07/2014, 8:49 PM
Most of it was written during the anthems.
DannyInvincible
09/07/2014, 11:38 PM
Tour de France spoiler alert.
I couldn't help thinking of this thread and whole debate today when I saw Froome pull out of the Tour after only a few stages. Team SKY is perceived as one of the slickest, smoothest, best organised and most methodically planned outfits in any sport. I have some doubts but anyway, I think the perception is largely correct. But after only 4 days the Tour favourite is out and unless Richie Porte can step up (he is a super climber) their Tour is goosed earlier than England's World Cup. Now, if Rooney, or Gerrard for that matter, was 3 inches taller I reckon England would have made the last 16. That's not to say England's football architecture and plumbing isn't all wrong.
But let's not overlook just how capricious sport can be. All the analysis in the world can't explain the role tiny things can do. If David Silva had taken a routine chance to make it 2-0 Holland may have been heading for the exit early.
My point is that planning and organisation is probably a necessary but certainly an insufficient ingredient in determining success. Planning, organisation, structures, governance etc can improve your chances but raw luck is often the essential factor. As osarusan(?) said above many doubt that Belgium's success is really down to their NGB. Even those who laud the NGB's role openly accept that raw luck was a factor in this generation coming together.
I'm a disciple of causality and I believe "luck" to be what happens when preparation meets opportunity. One may not strictly be able to personally control the rising of an opportunity - although that's not to say opportunity cannot be manufactured or influenced either - but preparation is essential if one is going to be able to take full advantage of an opportunity. Preparation will provide you with the necessary basis or grounding from which you can springboard, if you will. The better prepared will, by and large, rise to the top. It's no surprise Germany made it to the World Cup final after trouncing Brazil. They were prepared - ruthless, clinical and consummately professional - and were able to take advantage of being presented with a bunch of headless chickens in their semi-final.
BonnieShels
10/07/2014, 12:39 AM
Fail to prepare; prepare to fail.
We have the right man in charge (of laying out cones at national team training).
To be honest, Keane as FAI CEO would be the real dream.
paul_oshea
13/07/2014, 12:45 PM
Very good debate about the problems in brazillian football going on right now mentioned in various mediums, very similar to what has been spoken about the problems in ireland.
BonnieShels
13/07/2014, 6:21 PM
But they might actually change things.
Stuttgart88
15/07/2014, 4:25 PM
I'm away at he moment but this article contains links to two reports from the German Bundesliga about Germany's state of affairs.
http://thescore.thejournal.ie/germany-structure-world-cup-academy-1572618-Jul2014/?utm_source=email
I'd be interested in reading them. Of course if anyone here can do a summary...:)
gastric
20/07/2014, 11:51 PM
I felt myself doing a lot of reflection after reading this article. Showing my age now, but Brady was such a class player. saw him live twice, once at Highbury and at Lansdowne Road and he had a real ability to control a game and determine the pace of the game too. However, I don't believe he deserved to go to Euro 88 as the pace of the game had passed him by. But I digress!
What shocked me was just how parasitic youth system is. Taking kids is one thing, rejecting them at 14 is another. I would love to know if studies have been done on rejection at such a young age after been built up by clubs initially. I did not realise that players of such young age were being treated this way which shows my innocence. It also highlights for me that if ever we do create an Irish youth system it should be about creating well-rounded individuals, not just footballers who are one dimensional.
http://www.irishtimes.com/sport/soccer/training-for-retirement-1.1870933?page=3
Stuttgart88
25/07/2014, 3:05 PM
14 year old from Tallaght invited to trial with Atletico Madrid
http://www.thecoachdiary.com/coerver-coaching-irish-academy-player-on-trial-at-athletico-madrid/
A successful outcome from the Coerver guys apparently.
liamoo11
25/07/2014, 6:14 PM
That s two years ago. Did he sign for anyone?
paul_oshea
25/07/2014, 7:15 PM
has stutts been reading old news all thus time like it's some radical new development?
are these coaching sessions still happening?
Stuttgart88
25/07/2014, 9:00 PM
Sorry, I saw it on thecoachdiary.com this afternoon. On the homepage too, so I presumed it was current. Don't know what happened.
BonnieShels
26/07/2014, 12:16 AM
Remember this?
http://www.bbc.co.uk/sport/0/cricket/16698328
I do.
What is interesting, 10 years ago I had next to no interest in cricket. Watching a Shane Warne bowl in the 2005 Ashes series made me go "Wha?". Became instantly hooked. Moving to Australia later in the year helped it.
Anyway, in the intervening period since then the Ireland cricket team as we all know here, have become the leading associate nation in world cricket. The goal is to have a first class series in Ireland (getting there) and test cricket by 2020. There was also the attempt top stem the tide of our best players going to England by signing players centrally.
Now this roadmap was all encompassing with measurable goals.
Cricket has gone from no where 15 years ago to a sport that is really growing in popularity and the public awareness.
Now... what I fail to see is that in the last 15 years Irish soccer has gotten progressively more mediocre with no real measurable goals and zero joined up thinking. Irish soccer is being left behind in professionalism from the other 4 of the top 5 sports.
Reading that article again for the first time since it was published 2 and a half years ago makes me feel frustrated for Irish soccer. We're going no where in fact we're going backwards and I honestly can't see where the change and improvement is going to come from.
tetsujin1979
26/07/2014, 5:38 PM
FAI extend emerging talent programs to include promising ten year olds: http://www.thescore.ie/fai-emerging-talent-programme-1590884-Jul2014/
Crosby87
26/07/2014, 10:27 PM
Can you trust a promise from a ten year old tets?
Stuttgart88
07/08/2014, 4:10 PM
Copenhagen CEO calls for champions league for smaller countries. Super idea in my opinion.
http://www.sportal.com.au/football/champions-league/copenhagens-ceo-calls-for-champions-league-for-smaller-nations/19psowlntr95c1ea9al5sjltlv
paul_oshea
07/08/2014, 4:30 PM
I wonder who put you onto that without any acknowledgement either.
I think its a good idea in theory, but how would you share the money out, you can't expect UEFA to give money from a superior competition to an inferior one that teams dont participate in.
Also, if there was some incentive for the "bigger" teams from smaller nations to enter like guaranteed winning gets you group stage in the following years CL.
Stuttgart88
07/08/2014, 5:37 PM
I saw it before you texted me Paul :)
The CL subsidises other areas of European football and could continue doing so. I haven't seen the CL TV revenue broken down by country but my guess is that big countries contribute the most anyway, and non-European countries (e.g., Asia) would still pay handsomely.
It's not unfeasible that these lesser countries, if they pool resources, could strike an attractive TV deal from their own territories with a revenue sharing agreement among themselves, and with UEFA. Additional local sponsors would be attracted too, and I'd imagine not necessarily by diminishing ad revenues for the main CL.
I'd say it's more than a zero sum game. Any cost to the CL proper would be outweighed by gains to the lower competitions.
It'd all be down to the power politics. In principle the European Club Association is representative of a very wide group of football clubs, not just the old G14. This would test the big clubs' solidarity commitment!
I don't know how it would play out at UEFA level though. On one hand they'd be seen to being more inclusive of the non-elite. A stronger non-elite would strengthen UEFA. However, on the other they would be virtually ring fencing the elite which might strengthen their hand?
DannyInvincible
09/08/2014, 1:41 AM
"Brady says lack of young Irish talent emerging ‘scary’": http://www.irishexaminer.com/sport/brady-says-lack-of-young-irish-talent-emerging-scary-278843.html
“If the players are not there, what can you do? I’ve told [FAI chief executive] John Delaney this years ago, it’s scary.
“There are simply no Irish players coming through. The last Irish player Arsenal signed was Anthony Stokes. I really, really hope I’m wrong, but I don’t see anything coming through from Ireland. And it scares me,” he says in an extensive interview on his time at Arsenal, to be published in tomorrow’s Irish Examiner.
“It’s already evident in Irish sides, and affects what Martin O’Neill is trying to do, and what [Giovanni] Trapattoni was trying to do. When I was with Giovanni, the media was always bleating about ‘look at him, look at him, why isn’t he playing?’. But who has come through? Seamus Coleman is one of the very few who has come up to standard.”
In the interview, Brady offers a revealing insight into the changing world of youth development, where money dictates everything. A starlet from his own club in Dublin, St Kevin’s Boys, was Robbie Brady, whom Arsenal lost out on to Manchester United.
“He came to Arsenal at one stage, then it became a bit of an auction with Man United and we backed out of it. It became a bit rich for us.”
And Brady admitted that, at clubs like Arsenal, making the breakthrough is getting more difficult.
“You always want talented players at your club, but if you’d asked me when he was 16 whether Robbie Brady would play for Arsenal’s first team, I’d have said maybe not. However, he’s done really well and is making his living in the Premier League, but at the time, Arsenal decided it wasn’t worth going to the levels I knew we would have to go to.”
tetsujin1979
21/08/2014, 10:01 AM
Stephen Hunt was on Off The Ball on NewsTalk last night talking about the amount of money young players are on in England now, and whether or not that affects their drive to succeed: http://media.newstalk.ie/listen_back/newstalk/22_Wednesday_part1.mp3?uniqueID=828663
DannyInvincible
29/08/2014, 6:02 PM
Wasn't sure where to post this piece exactly, but I think it should fit in here OK.
'Why are there so few Irish players in the Premier League?': http://www.theguardian.com/football/these-football-times/2014/aug/29/ireland-irish-players-premier-league
...
In the 2007-08 season, Irish players made up 6% of footballers in the Premier League, the second most represented nationality after England. In the 2013-14 season, Irish players accounted for 4.7% of top flight participants, down to the fourth most represented nationality. Observers might argue this is not a particularly alarming drop, but Irish football is clearly in a state of decline.
The national team is currently ranked 70th in the world. The numbers following the career paths of Giles and co, departing Ireland as teenagers to make it in Britain, are ever dwindling and their career paths have been stemmed. Last season Celtic’s Anthony Stokes was the only Irish representative in the Champions League group stage, and the three best Irish performers in the Premier League were Seamus Coleman and James McCarthy of Everton, and Hull City’s Shane Long, now of Southampton.
The paths taken by these three players are at the heart of Irish football’s woes; they are successful, or play for Republic of Ireland, by accident, not design. McCarthy is a Glaswegian of Irish descent who chose to represent the country of his grandfather’s birth. The Irish diaspora may be large and the team have long used it as a means of finding players, but it is no longer a reliable model. McCarthy is the exception to the rule and, as the playing pools for England and Scotland continue to dwindle, Ireland will be fortunate if a player of such quality falls into their lap again.
Coleman and Long are also cases of accident rather than design. They come from rural, Gaelic Games strongholds in Donegal and Tipperary. Neither are football academy graduates and both played for provincial football teams before moving to England as adults. Long was 18 when Reading signed him for a nominal fee; Coleman was 20 when David Moyes took him to Everton for £60,000 in 2009. Despite their undoubted raw talent and admirable work ethic, the transfers would have been considered low-risk transactions for the English clubs.
Coleman and Long moved to England around the age when many of their Irish contemporaries would be returning home, or dropping down the divisions, having failed to make a breakthrough at the top clubs. These players would have taken the path treaded by Giles, Brady and O’Shea, moving to England as a teenager, entering the youth team and hoping to progress to the reserves and then the first team. However, for the vast majority of Irish football emigrants, the path is now blocked.
Liverpool manager Brendan Rodgers was in Dublin for a friendly with the Irish side Shamrock Rovers last May. The Northern Irishman was quizzed on the declining number of Irish prospects at English clubs and gave little hope for optimism. “It’s a lot more difficult now,” Rodgers said. “A lot of the Irish lads start their apprenticeship at 16, but even then it’s too late as boys across the water are beginning at the age of eight and by the time they’re 16, they’ve been trained technically, tactically, physically and mentally and then they’re ready to step into full-time football.”
Rodgers paints a bleak picture for young Irish footballers. The lucky few who manage to get to English club academies, the players deemed to be the best prospects, are already significantly stunted due to the greater accelerated development of their new team-mates. If they survive and then thrive enough to make the first team of a top flight club, it will be something akin to a footballing miracle, another case of accident trumping design.
The current situation facing Irish football is either to improve the exported product or focus on being self-sufficient by developing a viable outlet for talent to thrive at home. Ireland is a small country – the Republic has a population of just over 4.5m – and thus the talent pool is comparatively shallow. However, unlike bigger countries, Ireland’s population is largely centralised and therefore the condition is ripe to introduce a centralised development plan. Uruguay, a country that mirrors Ireland in this sense, albeit with a stronger footballing identity, has done so in recent years. There is a clear, cohesive structure and development plan from youth to senior football, when the best players will be exported. Irish football by comparison is fractured.
Another argument offered for Ireland’s woes has been the challenge of other popular team sports, such as Gaelic games and rugby. However, football is the number one participation sport. The Dublin District Schoolboys League is the largest league of its kind in Europe, with over 200 clubs and 16,000 players competing. One would imagine there has to be another Liam Brady in there somewhere.
So if the interest and participation remains high, the onus falls on the coaches to mould and educate the talent. However, it is strikingly obvious that, like in England, there are not enough coaches. In 2013, Ireland had 45 Uefa Pro licences, 183 holders of the A licence and 488 with the B licence. These qualifications are markedly more expensive to obtain in Ireland and England than in Germany and Spain. There are still many coaches at all levels without such qualifications who devote their time and effort admirably.
That said, there are also too many coaches who favour physicality over creativity, who instruct their teams to hoof the ball to the big lad and who place an emphasis players minimising their mistakes above expressing themselves. Physical prowess is valued over technical or cognitive development. The Irish culture of exporting talent also leads to many coaches seeking the short path, hoping they can be the one to get their player a dream move to a club in England.
The dangers of developing players for export, just like the migrant experience, are not unique to the Irish. At the World Cup it was startling to see Brazil, a footballing giant with a population of 200m, with so few creative, dynamic players in their midfield. To develop such a player takes time, patience and technical coaching. Instead Brazil had Hulk.
Scouts from elite teams will still visit Brazil, hoping to find the next great prospect, but the same cannot be said of Ireland. After a few months in his new role, Ireland manager Martin O’Neill was disparaging about the lack of young players to select, saying: “In the back of my mind, I thought ‘there must be five, six, seven young lads playing who will maybe break through’. But at this minute, I haven’t spotted it.”
These players could materialise if Ireland had a cohesive structure with a clear playing philosophy and a greater number of coaches to properly implement it. This would involve patience, foresight and, of course, money spent on grassroots football; three attributes few would associate with the Football Association of Ireland. John Delaney, the chief executive, has an annual salary that is more than the prize money awarded to the winners of the domestic top flight. The association has had a raft of redundancies in recent years and their primary objective is reducing their debt by 2020.
Essentially the organisation, like Ireland as a country, is run akin to a multinational corporation, where the financial bottom line is what counts. The Irish government’s sustained policy of economic austerity, an offshoot of years of neo-liberalist subjugation and mismanagement, has fuelled mass migration and further widened a wealth gap that was the largest in the developed world even during the boom years.
This is a place where the needs of the grassroots are diminished by the wants of those at the top the pyramid. The prospect of self-sufficiency, conjecture or even a sustained reflection on the many social problems is just not feasible. In such a scenario, the chance of the next Giles, Brady or Keane breaking through at an elite English club is about as remote as the migrant staying the night at the lodgings that allowed “No Blacks, No Dogs, No Irish”.
bennocelt
29/08/2014, 6:44 PM
So going by that then England must be producing really talented footballers?
ArdeeBhoy
29/08/2014, 8:58 PM
Yes, ha ha.
Charlie Darwin
29/08/2014, 10:00 PM
Bit of a weird article. Starts off rabbiting on with trite emigration imagery and finishes rabbiting on about neoliberalism, with a brief superficial mention of football in the middle. Not sure the question is the right one either. We should be asking why more Irish players aren't playing in the Champions League and Europa League, a better metric of where we are.
Stuttgart88
29/08/2014, 10:04 PM
Nothing wrong with a rant against neoliberalism.
ArdeeBhoy
29/08/2014, 10:08 PM
Also they forget the 'cyclical' factor, as in groups of good players come and go sometimes, more by accident than design.
Charlie Darwin
29/08/2014, 10:09 PM
Be that as it may, it's a bit weird as a postscript on an article lamenting the lack of Irishmen playing a role in sport's most brazen example of unchecked, unbridled, globalised capitalism.
DannyInvincible
29/08/2014, 11:47 PM
Also they forget the 'cyclical' factor, as in groups of good players come and go sometimes, more by accident than design.
Is that actually the case though? The likes of Germany and Spain are consistently good through design. England get a slagging, but they'll invariably have enough talent to qualify for the finals. It's exceptionally rare that they fail to make it. I'm not even sure there is such a factor, but if there is, there is no cycle that would ever, through accident, allow us to successfully and consistently compete with or better the aforementioned teams or teams with design plans in place. We have no design plan, so we now see where a reliance on accident gets us; we have less players playing at the top level and being able to compete for places in teams featuring players from countries that have better developmental and youth coaching infrastructures in place. Worryingly, we're becoming less competitive as other countries reach or surpass our limited level of relying on the production of top-class players overwhelmingly through chance.
ArdeeBhoy
30/08/2014, 6:38 AM
Well, exactly...
Supreme feet
30/08/2014, 9:38 PM
Didn't our U-19s get to a European semi-final recently enough? Didn't the same core of players beat Italy 4-2 away at U-21 level, and beat Holland shortly afterwards?
I think the problem with our young players comes from hitting the glass ceiling at EPL clubs, who have too much at stake to risk blooding young players. Same thing happened with most of Brian Kerr's 'golden generation' in the late 90s. Technical ability was not the issue - we had a lot of players who lost years of development playing reserve-team football, realising they could earn a good wage in the lower leagues, and not pushing themselves to become as good as they could be. Then consider the injuries, illnesses and booze-related factors that curtailed many a promising career. The 19-23 phase seems to be the stumbling block for most of our young players who go to England.
Stuttgart88
31/08/2014, 8:32 PM
SFAI guy gets seat on FAI Board, first time in years SFAI has been represented.
http://www.irishexaminer.com/sport/soccer/schools-chief-voted-on-to-fai-board-284102.html
Is SFAI part of the problem or part of the solution? Either way it surprised me that such an important part of the game had no Board representation.
Stuttgart88
31/08/2014, 8:39 PM
Then consider the injuries, illnesses and booze-related factors that curtailed many a promising career. The 19-23 phase seems to be the stumbling block for most of our young players who go to England.
The FAI made Terry Conroy redundant. He was the Welfare officer for UK based Irish kids playing professional football. I think his salary was part-paid by the Department if Foreign Affairs. They should have had ten of him, not none of him.
Stuttgart88
01/09/2014, 7:41 AM
Dan McD with an inspirational rallying call.
http://www.independent.ie/sport/soccer/european-championships/daniel-mcdonnell-the-great-euros-distraction-30551246.html
TheOneWhoKnocks
07/09/2014, 11:05 AM
Drug lords are investing more money in youth sports clubs than the government.
http://www.independent.ie/irish-news/news/drugs-cartel-boss-christy-kinahan-turns-robin-hood-by-funding-inner-city-sports-clubs-30567371.html (http://www.independent.ie/irish-news/news/drugs-cartel-boss-christy-kinahan-turns-robin-hood-by-funding-inner-city-sports-clubs-30567371.html)
However, the amateur sports club boss, who spoke on grounds of anonymity, told the Sunday Independent: "The Government haven't bought so much as a ping-pong ball for any of the clubs I know. I don't think there's a club in Dublin that got a penny. The politicians were all talk when they set up CAB, that the money would go to inner-city kids to keep them away from crime and drugs. No surprises, that was all ****e.
"Everyone around here knows Christy [Kinahan] has put up money for [named club]. They've the best of gear. And I could run off a dozen clubs who have got money the same way.
"The Government say they are going to divert drug money into the communities and not a penny comes down, not a ****ing penny."
DannyInvincible
07/09/2014, 1:14 PM
Drug lords are investing more money in youth sports clubs than the government.
And sure why not accept such donations with open arms? It's cleaner than the money you'd get from the government! :p
Charlie Darwin
07/09/2014, 1:21 PM
I love the subtext of the interview. "If the government continue to refuse to put drug money into inner-city sports schemes, we're just going to have put our own drug money in. Either way, somebody's got to dip into their drug money pot!" Ah, community spirit.
Stuttgart88
17/09/2014, 2:29 PM
A couple of articles on thescore.ie caught my attention this afternoon.
Cricket Ireland has received a multi-million sponsorship award from an Indian / Irish family business to develop an academy. Nice for Irish cricket!
Greg Dyke at the FA announces his intention to make it much harder for non-EU players to get permission to play in England, claiming too much foreign mediocrity is clogging up domestic players' pathways. Of particular note was his intention to ban the loaning out of non-EU players abroad or into the Football League.
I think that's a fair move, if workable, and would benefit us, at least at the margins.
I look forward to hearing the ideas generated by the FAI Commission. Oh, wait, there isn't one.
paul_oshea
17/09/2014, 2:49 PM
That "Indian/Irish" family are one of the richest in the world and part of the wider Tata group. Irish by chance as much as design...
Stuttgart88
23/09/2014, 11:54 AM
Quinton Fortune on the state of affairs in South African football.
http://www.theguardian.com/football/2014/sep/23/south-africa-2010-world-cup-what-happened
I could just as easily have pasted this into the Euro 2020 in Dublin thread in context of the legacy.
Some excellent stuff here from Miguel Delaney:
http://migueldelaney.com/2014/10/08/the-kids-arent-alright-the-real-problem-with-irish-football-part-one/
http://migueldelaney.com/2014/10/08/the-real-problem-with-irish-football-part-two-why-arguments-about-populations-dont-add-up/
"Between ages of 6 and 16, European players get 14 times more touches on ball than Irish players."
For all the endless debate about managers and who exactly should be in the team- this stuff is massively more important than that.
Stuttgart88
09/10/2014, 2:00 PM
Very good article, someone actually bothering to go into the field to interview and properly research some of the points made before on foot.ie.
Dokter seems to come out of Miguel's interviews quite well.
I presume yer man Kinsella is the father of the young fella just gone over to Everton, and if so, was his move to comply with underage players needing to be accompanied for family moving for work reasons?
It's great that Miguell put some meat on the bone, but in a way it's not that much news to readers here, that there does seem to be a growing number of clued-in constituents but the whole structure is too fragmented and political. The anecdotes and quotes were very telling though. Interesting that JD and the FAI seem aware of the need to change things but they are only doing so in a softly softly manner. That's what I took out of it on first read anyway.
BonnieShels
14/10/2014, 11:46 AM
Given the fact that Iceland are doing something, even if it is on the basis of what geysir has said in the Opponent watch thread, been as a result of enterprising individuals; it's high time we just accepted that this needs to be the beginning now. We are falling so far behind it is embarrassing. The more we delay the longer it will take to get back to where we were.
Charlie Darwin
15/10/2014, 6:57 PM
Very good article, someone actually bothering to go into the field to interview and properly research some of the points made before on foot.ie.
Dokter seems to come out of Miguel's interviews quite well.
I presume yer man Kinsella is the father of the young fella just gone over to Everton, and if so, was his move to comply with underage players needing to be accompanied for family moving for work reasons?
It's great that Miguell put some meat on the bone, but in a way it's not that much news to readers here, that there does seem to be a growing number of clued-in constituents but the whole structure is too fragmented and political. The anecdotes and quotes were very telling though. Interesting that JD and the FAI seem aware of the need to change things but they are only doing so in a softly softly manner. That's what I took out of it on first read anyway.
It is Tom Kinsella's dad, yeah, ex-Bohs and Athlone player and former Shamrock Rovers physio.
Miguel Delaney is a very good journalist and very interested in stats, etc. so looking forward to the article.
Stuttgart88
19/10/2014, 7:38 PM
Anyone got any thoughts on this?
http://www.thescore.ie/futsal-ireland-interview-cant-understand-fai-arent-listening-1730462-Oct2014/
geysir
19/10/2014, 10:49 PM
That was a well thought out article by Miguel, he put a lot of work into it and the final product is a very good overview of the crux of the matter. I know John Delaney is being paid a relative fortune but he is being made a scapegoat by some critics for all the ills in Irish football, if he was a maintaining cause of this dysfunction then yes he would deserve all the criticism, but from what I can gather he's shipping far too much criticism and the expectations of what he's supposed to be fixing are way too high. The heftier issues are elsewhere and this criticism of Delaney is glossing over and deflecting from where the problems are.
When Ireland u19s played Norway and Sweden recently in friendlies, our team of mainly English club based players faced two intl teams composed of mainly local league based players, local based players with the established clubs in their leagues and probably most of them started their serious football with that club around the age of 15 or 16. One difference now is that those teams from Norway and Sweden are a level better than us, even though our players are at supposedly better resourced clubs in England.
So not only is Irish football structure disjointed but the coaching at English clubs are also failing us :)
Given the fact that Iceland are doing something, even if it is on the basis of what geysir has said in the Opponent watch thread, been as a result of enterprising individuals; it's high time we just accepted that this needs to be the beginning now. We are falling so far behind it is embarrassing. The more we delay the longer it will take to get back to where we were.
Just to clarify one point, it began with individual ex pros starting up modern coaching schools in 2000 but the Icelandic FA integrated it all with the league clubs. Those individual coaching enterprises became defunct the following season, as all was incorporated into the league club coaching network. So instead of a kid joining Eidur Gudjonsson's school of modern excellence, they signed on with their local league club.
Communism has a few plusses.
BonnieShels
19/10/2014, 11:42 PM
That's even better.
Imagine the FA of a nation thinking it a good idea to join things up...
bennocelt
20/10/2014, 6:26 AM
That was a well thought out article by Miguel, he put a lot of work into it and the final product is a very good overview of the crux of the matter. I know John Delaney is being paid a relative fortune but he is being made a scapegoat by some critics for all the ills in Irish football, if he was a maintaining cause of this dysfunction then yes he would deserve all the criticism, but from what I can gather he's shipping far too much criticism and the expectations of what he's supposed to be fixing are way too high. The heftier issues are elsewhere and this criticism of Delaney is glossing over and deflecting from where the problems are.
When Ireland u19s played Norway and Sweden recently in friendlies, our team of mainly English club based players faced two intl teams composed of mainly local league based players, local based players with the established clubs in their leagues and probably most of them started their serious football with that club around the age of 15 or 16. One difference now is that those teams from Norway and Sweden are a level better than us, even though our players are at supposedly better resourced clubs in England.
So not only is Irish football structure disjointed but the coaching at English clubs are also failing us :)
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As head of the FAI, he should have to take the criticism, but apart from LOI fans who is giving him a hard time? Not the mainstream media anyway, with the movies n magazine specials, and the ole ole brigade love him to bits! :D
tetsujin1979
28/11/2014, 9:43 AM
interesting interview with Stephen Bradley here: http://www.independent.ie/sport/soccer/league-of-ireland/bradley-warns-emerging-stars-of-pitfalls-that-lie-ahead-30781087.html
Just been appointed a scout for Arsenal in Ireland, and will be the PFAI’s coach for a FIFPRO tournament in January. I wasn't aware of the details of why he didn't make it in England.
frenchman
02/12/2014, 9:27 AM
I wasn't really sure where to put this ,but not being able to start a new thread I think that this is the best one .....
I was wondering why the FAI don't invest in elite LOI players and then cash-in on the transfer fee. Of the current international team/generation (mcclean,doyle,n.hunt,long,fahey,coleman,forde) only mcclean went for a half reasonable fee. the main problem is purely the fact that their contracts are either out to they are paid so little that it costs very little to buy them out. Added to that the fact that any Irish club (I think) would jump a the change to sell their best player for 250 000.
So my solution is , the FAI choose the best 20 - 25 LOI players (I consider that each premier division club has two or three players who could potentially ''make it'' abroad) and they buy 50% of their rights (south American style à la Hulk and Tevez) and then they would get 50% of the transfer , which would legally have to be more as the foreign clubs would be buying them out of a bigger contract.
If you take 25 players x 52 weeks x 250E = 300 000 per year. Long and Doyle have already been sold on for over 12million so with a better negociation power,sell-on % could easily be input into the sales.
Does something like this not happen in the MLS? their contracts are owned by the US federation I think...
any ideas?
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