Wednesday, December 28, 2016
Best of Coaching Links This Week: Birth of the Flat Back Four, Importance of Reading & Guardiola's Debt
This will be the last message sent before the end of 2016 and the start of 2017. As I draw my conclusions over the past twelve months I have to say that it has not been a vintage year for Blueprint for Football. There were a number of interviews and articles of which I’m very proud but not as much as I would like.
I find that such a critical analysis at least once a year is essential in order to determine what needs to be done to get to where I want to be. I do it for Blueprint for Football but not only; I do it for every major area of my life as well. I think that you should too. (If you do, let me know)
On the plus side there is now a good rhythm to the weekly digest (subscribe here to receive it in your in-box each week), which is a major plus as I know that there are a number of coaches who check them out each week.
I’ve also got planned a number of new features and articles that will be kicked off in the New Year plus a great interview with a coach who I respect immensely, Todd Beane.
Although I don’t listen to the World Football Show on the BBC as much as I used to in the past, I still have a huge admiration for Tim Vickery who, in my mind, is the star of that show. My respect grows when I read articles like this one about the birth of the flat back four in, of all countries, Brazil.
http://uk.businessinsider.com/general-james-mattis-email-viral-2016-11?r=US&IR=T
I’m not a big fan of the military and I’m not sure I agree with all of this but this by General James Mattis on the importance of reading is excellent: “the problem with being too busy to read is that you learn by experience (or by your men’s experience), i.e. the hard way. By reading, you learn through others’ experiences, generally a better way to do business”
For whatever reason, Bayern Munich’s 3-0 trashing of previous league leaders RB Leipzig went by practically unnoticed. It shouldn’t be the case because it was a tactical masterclass by Carlo Ancelotti and his men, as this piece highlights.
This extract from a new book about Andres Iniesta speaks of Pep Guardiola and the debt that the coach owes the player for helping shape his tactics. Beautiful
AND FINALLY…
“There are no shortcuts to excellence” – Angela Duckworth
If you like this list of links, why not join Blueprint for Football Extra, the newsletter that delivers the links and more directly to your e-mail inbox every Monday night? Click here to join.
Wednesday, December 21, 2016
Best Coaching Link This Week: Liverpool's Academy, Scouting Overseas and Efficiency of Freekicks
The great Jonathan Wilson recently wrote a piece on how greed is ruining football, with his main focus being the restructuring of the Champions League, and how no one seems to be that bothered about it. At around the same time as this article came out, I was researching for a piece on the impact of the Bosman ruling and, in particular, on clubs’ desire to develop their own players. The conclusion that I reached is that the Bosman ruling has effectively stopped clubs from being able to develop their way to success.
Below the high profile, top level managers there is a group of coaches who dedicate their lives on investing in the future. Alex Inglethorpe, the head of Liverpool’s academy, is one such man and as Jurgen Klopp integrates more young players in the first team, his work is coming increasingly under focus.
Free kicks, when they are well taken, can be spectacular which is why they inevitably generate an air of excitement when a team gains one in a dangerous situation. Yet is this excitement and pressure to hit it directly at goal misplaced?
The latest of an interesting series about the role of scouts focuses on the work and thinking that goes into getting a player from overseas. Really insightful, I thought.
AND FINALLY…
“The man who fears losing has already lost” – George RR Martin
Want to hear what fellow coaches think about football, how they learn and build their philosophy? Check out our Blueprint According To... series of e-books here (and here for US readers)
Wednesday, December 14, 2016
Best Coaching Links This Week: Football IQ, Physical Literacy & More
Over the past years there has been an increasing realisation of the importance of intelligence in football. Defining and measuring a concept as nebulous as intelligence is difficult, however. Andres Iniesta might provide the key to changing that.
Keeping on the theme of the brain in football, here’s a piece by John Haime that talks about building and sustaining confidence in footballers.
Something that I plan to look into in greater detail during 2017 is physical literacy. If you have any thoughts, questions and ides, do feel free to share them.
In case you missed it, there’s been a lot of fuss in Scotland over Ian Cathro getting the job of Hearts manager because he never had a significant playing career. Given his experience in coaching, I can’t believe that people are actually talking about this but, still, it was encouraging to see Rangers manager Mark Warburton come out with is opinions.
AND FINALLY...
“Two things define you: your patience when you have nothing; and your attitude when you have everything" - Imam Ali
If you like this list of links, why not join Blueprint for Football Extra, the newsletter that delivers the links and more directly to your e-mail inbox every Monday night? Click here to join.
Monday, December 12, 2016
How The Bosman Ruling Broke Small Clubs
When Ajax lifted the Champions League trophy in 1995 it was hardly a surprise. Their previous successes in the competition marked them out as European royalty even though over twenty years had passed since they had last triumphed in the competition. What’s more, it was perfectly natural for a club coming from a weaker league to win.
In the ten years prior to Ajax’s success there had been winners coming from Romania (Steaua Bucharest), Portugal (Porto), Holland (PSV Eindhoven) and Yugoslavia (Red Star Belgrade). Such successes had become somewhat commonplace.
What made Ajax’s victory all the more remarkable is that it came with a team built around individuals who had progressed through the club’s youth system. Six out of the starting eleven had been at the club since they were children whilst the scorer of the wining goal – second half substitute Patrick Kluivert – was also an academy graduate.
Twelve months later Ajax were back in the final but this time missed out in a penalty shootout with Juventus. It was to be one of the final hurrahs of the smaller clubs. Since then the Champions League has practically always been the domain of Spanish, German, English and Italian clubs. Only once – 2004 with Porto - has it gone to teams not from one of those four countries and that was a freak year where the other finalist was also from a non-elite country (AS Monaco).
Indeed, if you were to exclude that 2003-2004 edition, there hasn’t even been a finalist that wasn’t from one of the top four countries.
That is a situation which is unlikely to change. Football has moved on and the free market forces in which the game operates has driven competition out. Three European leagues in particular dominate earnings – England, Spain and Germany – and they can attract the best players. More significantly they can strip others of their best talent making it all the more difficult from anyone outside this elite to break in.
Money, however, explains only part of it. Spanish and Italian clubs were, historically, much more financially powerful than others and always tended to attract the most exciting of players. Yet they never dominated the European Cup in such a manner.
Indeed the defining change for European football came in December of 1995 – the same year in which Ajax had claimed their title – and happened far away from any football pitch. The leading figure in this revolution was an unknown Belgian footballer who had brought a case in front of the European Court of Justice.
That is when the Bosman ruling was passed.
Ajax were one of the first to suffer from this ruling and also one of the clubs to suffer most severely. Within months the core of their young side was ripped out as three of their brightest talents – Patrick Kluivert, Clarence Seedorf and Edgar Davids – all moved to Italy on a free. They were the kind of players on whom Ajax would otherwise have expected to found a dynasty and had they stayed then the likelihood is that they would have won even more European titles.
Even if they had been sold they would have earned Ajax enough money to effectively rebuild their team. After all these were players who would go on to be among the best of their generation. Instead, they got nothing.
In time, clubs learned to adapt yet that meant a certain degree of self-immolation. Players were given longer contracts which meant a bigger commitment for clubs who were not necessarily always in a position to afford it. The risk was that these players wouldn’t turn out to be as good as had been hoped and end up being a drain on the club’s resources.
Yet that was a risk that clubs became used to. So much that now as soon as a players starts showing signs of fulfilling his potential then he’s immediately handed a new and better contract. As soon as that doesn’t get signed or a players starts getting closer to the end of his contract then the alarm bells start ringing. Often the end result is the same with the player getting sold at a fraction of his market value. Some money is better than no money. Everyone knows that, including the players, their agents and the clubs who are interested in them.
This makes it almost impossible for a club to slowly build a squad that is good enough to challenge. Unless someone ultra-rich comes in – as is happening with Paris St German – then it is virtually impossible to build.
Even a relatively big club like Borussia Dortmund is struggling. In 2013 they reached the Champions League final yet saw their biggest domestic rival take away two of their best talents – Mario Gotze and Robert Lewandowski - for what is a pittance. Although Dortmund have invested wisely it is still getting increasingly more difficult for them to challenge both domestically and continentally.
From one extreme the pendulum of power has shifted to another. Where once clubs used to be in a dominant position now it is the players who are in control. This is the legacy of the Bosman ruling.
That should not excuse the practices that clubs used to adopt – such as the one that forced Jean Marc Bosman to start his fight – nor should it blind anyone to the reality that clubs still show no sentimentality towards any player that is no longer considered as needed. Supporters aren’t much better, often calling for a player to be sold as soon as he starts to show any signs of decline or claiming that they should be ‘left to rot’ should any player indicate that perhaps they might want to move to a bigger club.
It is only right that players should try to do what is best for their career. That is what most people do in their day-to-day lives; looking for a better job when they realise that they have enough experience or knowledge to do so. What is different, however, is that players don’t work for a corporate institution but rather an entity that towards which thousands devote their thoughts, hopes and passion.
The Bosman Ruling stripped that element from the equation. It gave players the liberty to take charge of their career and forced clubs to look at their players as assets to be managed as such; allowing them to accumulate value to be disposed when this hits its peak.
It is the Bosman Ruling that helped pave the way for the creation of the current environment where the financially strong are those who hold all the power. There is still the possibility that a smaller club with a particularly intelligent recruitment policy can manage to achieve success – see Leicester last season – but that possibility is becoming increasingly slimmer.
The reality is that unless all the stars happen to align there is no way for such a club to slowly progress until it is in a position to force its way into a challenging position.
If you enjoyed this article subscribe to Blueprint for Football Extra, an e-mail newsletter where you receive weekly links to other great articles, exclusive content and previews to all our interviews. Join here.
In the ten years prior to Ajax’s success there had been winners coming from Romania (Steaua Bucharest), Portugal (Porto), Holland (PSV Eindhoven) and Yugoslavia (Red Star Belgrade). Such successes had become somewhat commonplace.
What made Ajax’s victory all the more remarkable is that it came with a team built around individuals who had progressed through the club’s youth system. Six out of the starting eleven had been at the club since they were children whilst the scorer of the wining goal – second half substitute Patrick Kluivert – was also an academy graduate.
Twelve months later Ajax were back in the final but this time missed out in a penalty shootout with Juventus. It was to be one of the final hurrahs of the smaller clubs. Since then the Champions League has practically always been the domain of Spanish, German, English and Italian clubs. Only once – 2004 with Porto - has it gone to teams not from one of those four countries and that was a freak year where the other finalist was also from a non-elite country (AS Monaco).
Indeed, if you were to exclude that 2003-2004 edition, there hasn’t even been a finalist that wasn’t from one of the top four countries.
That is a situation which is unlikely to change. Football has moved on and the free market forces in which the game operates has driven competition out. Three European leagues in particular dominate earnings – England, Spain and Germany – and they can attract the best players. More significantly they can strip others of their best talent making it all the more difficult from anyone outside this elite to break in.
Money, however, explains only part of it. Spanish and Italian clubs were, historically, much more financially powerful than others and always tended to attract the most exciting of players. Yet they never dominated the European Cup in such a manner.
Indeed the defining change for European football came in December of 1995 – the same year in which Ajax had claimed their title – and happened far away from any football pitch. The leading figure in this revolution was an unknown Belgian footballer who had brought a case in front of the European Court of Justice.
That is when the Bosman ruling was passed.
Ajax were one of the first to suffer from this ruling and also one of the clubs to suffer most severely. Within months the core of their young side was ripped out as three of their brightest talents – Patrick Kluivert, Clarence Seedorf and Edgar Davids – all moved to Italy on a free. They were the kind of players on whom Ajax would otherwise have expected to found a dynasty and had they stayed then the likelihood is that they would have won even more European titles.
Even if they had been sold they would have earned Ajax enough money to effectively rebuild their team. After all these were players who would go on to be among the best of their generation. Instead, they got nothing.
In time, clubs learned to adapt yet that meant a certain degree of self-immolation. Players were given longer contracts which meant a bigger commitment for clubs who were not necessarily always in a position to afford it. The risk was that these players wouldn’t turn out to be as good as had been hoped and end up being a drain on the club’s resources.
Yet that was a risk that clubs became used to. So much that now as soon as a players starts showing signs of fulfilling his potential then he’s immediately handed a new and better contract. As soon as that doesn’t get signed or a players starts getting closer to the end of his contract then the alarm bells start ringing. Often the end result is the same with the player getting sold at a fraction of his market value. Some money is better than no money. Everyone knows that, including the players, their agents and the clubs who are interested in them.
This makes it almost impossible for a club to slowly build a squad that is good enough to challenge. Unless someone ultra-rich comes in – as is happening with Paris St German – then it is virtually impossible to build.
Even a relatively big club like Borussia Dortmund is struggling. In 2013 they reached the Champions League final yet saw their biggest domestic rival take away two of their best talents – Mario Gotze and Robert Lewandowski - for what is a pittance. Although Dortmund have invested wisely it is still getting increasingly more difficult for them to challenge both domestically and continentally.
From one extreme the pendulum of power has shifted to another. Where once clubs used to be in a dominant position now it is the players who are in control. This is the legacy of the Bosman ruling.
That should not excuse the practices that clubs used to adopt – such as the one that forced Jean Marc Bosman to start his fight – nor should it blind anyone to the reality that clubs still show no sentimentality towards any player that is no longer considered as needed. Supporters aren’t much better, often calling for a player to be sold as soon as he starts to show any signs of decline or claiming that they should be ‘left to rot’ should any player indicate that perhaps they might want to move to a bigger club.
It is only right that players should try to do what is best for their career. That is what most people do in their day-to-day lives; looking for a better job when they realise that they have enough experience or knowledge to do so. What is different, however, is that players don’t work for a corporate institution but rather an entity that towards which thousands devote their thoughts, hopes and passion.
The Bosman Ruling stripped that element from the equation. It gave players the liberty to take charge of their career and forced clubs to look at their players as assets to be managed as such; allowing them to accumulate value to be disposed when this hits its peak.
It is the Bosman Ruling that helped pave the way for the creation of the current environment where the financially strong are those who hold all the power. There is still the possibility that a smaller club with a particularly intelligent recruitment policy can manage to achieve success – see Leicester last season – but that possibility is becoming increasingly slimmer.
The reality is that unless all the stars happen to align there is no way for such a club to slowly progress until it is in a position to force its way into a challenging position.
If you enjoyed this article subscribe to Blueprint for Football Extra, an e-mail newsletter where you receive weekly links to other great articles, exclusive content and previews to all our interviews. Join here.
Wednesday, December 7, 2016
Best Coaching Links This Week: Competition in Spain, Organising Excellence, Zidane's Charisma & More
The issue of the importance of winning in youth football is a hot topic and the consensus seems to be that too much focus on winning can be harmful. There are those, however, who do not fully agree and point to Spain to show a different attitude.
It might not be on par with being asked to play for your favourite team but getting a job on the technical staff of ‘their’ team will rank as a dream for many. Doug Kors got to do just that although the biggest takeaway from the story should be the value of always being prepared and ready to spot an opportunity.
How to Organise & Manage for the Emergence of Excellence in Sport?
Regardless of what happened in the classico (and this was written before), Zinedine Zidane has proven a lot of people wrong (including myself) by doing a great job so far with Real Madrid. A lot of that is down to his charisma.
AND FINALLY...
“I've learned that people will forget what you said, people will forget what you did, but people will never forget how you made them feel.” - Maya Angelou
If you like this list of links, why not join Blueprint for Football Extra, the newsletter that delivers the links and more directly to your e-mail inbox every Monday night? Click here to join.
It might not be on par with being asked to play for your favourite team but getting a job on the technical staff of ‘their’ team will rank as a dream for many. Doug Kors got to do just that although the biggest takeaway from the story should be the value of always being prepared and ready to spot an opportunity.
How to Organise & Manage for the Emergence of Excellence in Sport?
Regardless of what happened in the classico (and this was written before), Zinedine Zidane has proven a lot of people wrong (including myself) by doing a great job so far with Real Madrid. A lot of that is down to his charisma.
AND FINALLY...
“I've learned that people will forget what you said, people will forget what you did, but people will never forget how you made them feel.” - Maya Angelou
If you like this list of links, why not join Blueprint for Football Extra, the newsletter that delivers the links and more directly to your e-mail inbox every Monday night? Click here to join.