Well well Ron you have opened up a big pet hate thing for me here )))Yep. So simple to move without the ball, no technical skill required, just a footballing brain - yet it's a problem for many teams/players. We also seem to lack in technical ability compared to the top. I don't know what training is carried out with youngsters in England but technical training is very high in France. In the U13, for example, they have skill tests and they have to do 50 keepy uppies with each foot (my grandson can do over 200 with either foot) and also walk about 20 metres keeping the ball off the ground. They also have to keep the ball in the air just heading it 30 times. Every training session involves pass and move. It's quite impressive But it's the same from 6 years and upwards except to a lesser extent (eg in the U11s they had to do 20 keepy uppies with each foot and 10 headers). The footwork is incredible, in one on ones; it's like the ball is glued to their feet. I won't go into the ****ing nutmegging - humiliating
I played football from leaving school at championship level as it is now in England for 10 years until i got injured and had to retire. I then went in to coaching. I coached in Turkey, Germany, and US, I despair at the coaching in UK, it is poor beyond belief ( though i have not seen any the last few years so maybe its changing) The Turks were clever as about 20 years ago they sent a lot of their coaches around europe to catch up, it worked as they got a 3rd place at the WC and uefa cup win, their teams got a lot stronger in europe overall.
Germany was excellent, i was at Leverkusen, they keep it so obvious and simple based around not too many core skills. US always take the science to the next level so that was very good too.
The UK, terrible. We have boys clubs with teams from 8-16 years with the coaches usually being a parent with a level 1 cert, he knows very little about football and probably couldnt play in his day either out of sunday league. The focus these coaches have is winning the league, not developing the kids ability. Get the ball to the fastest strongest lad is usually the theory. The coaching consists of a few flashy drills he has seen on youtube or learnt on a course, he has no idea why it will benefit his players/team but it looks good to the parents watching. A good hard tackle is cheered (spanish coaches would be horrified by this) , a 3-0 win simply as they had a bigger/ stronger team is cheered when in fact the team learnt nothing of use in terms of development. Very little work goes on learning to play on the half turn, learning step overs or lollipops for 1 on 1 use, playing football tennis for touch, keepy ups!!! You dont use them in a game so are banned forgetting the football must be your friend.
The pro academies here mould young pros into a drilled styled of football that is why England players tend to be tactically rigid, unlike in say Holland where you enhance how to play using core skills you obviously have if your at that level of 1 and 2 touch, playing in tight spaces, playing on the half turn.
I refuse to coach here as its a results based culture not a development one. I had to stop watching youth football a few years back as it was infuriating for me.



