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Georgia Soccer - Youth

Georgia Soccer - Youth. PARENT EDUCATION PROGRAM. Careful !! - Children at Play. Our Generation Had more unsupervised free time Made our own rules Ownership/power to decide what to play/how long Our Children Constantly supervised/shielded Monitored by overbearing adults

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Georgia Soccer - Youth

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  1. Georgia Soccer - Youth PARENT EDUCATION PROGRAM

  2. Careful !! - Children at Play • Our Generation • Had more unsupervised free time • Made our own rules • Ownership/power to decide what to play/how long • Our Children • Constantly supervised/shielded • Monitored by overbearing adults • Evaluated to adult standards • Fast tracked to achieve goals • Losing their autonomy/creativity opportunities

  3. YOUTH SPORT HIJACKED BY ADULTS • WHOSE NEEDS ARE CONSIDERED? • WHOSE EXPECTATIONS ARE MET? • WHOSE AGENDAS ARE FULFILLED? • WHY PARENTS FIND IT HARD TO VIEW YOUTH SPORT AS JUST ANOTHER LEISURE ACTIVITY? (the return on investment syndrome)

  4. THE CYCLE OFUNDER-DEVELOPMENT

  5. Underdevelopment effects • Players leave soccer between ages of 10-13 because… • It was no longer fun • I was no longer interested • I was tired of playing and practicing • My coach was a poor teacher • Soccer conflicted with other activities

  6. Impact Philosophy We want each child to reach his or her maximum potential. Individual development is more important than team performance.

  7. HOW CHILDREN DEVELOPThis presentation will cover: • Cognitive development • Understanding players’ needs • Phases of commitment • Trainable components • Optimum practice to game ratio • State of flow for max creativity • Player Evaluation / Playing up • Responsibilities of the soccer parent

  8. COGNITIVEDEVELOPMENT(Piaget) • SENSORY – MOTOR (birth to age 2) • PRE-OPERATIONAL (from 2-8 years) • Egocentric – Imagination – Non logical thinking • CONCRETE OPERATIONAL (8-11) • Logical thinking related to concrete objects • Less egocentric – more cooperative - rules • FORMAL OPERATIONAL (11 and up) • Logical thinking related to abstract objects • Time and space – Thinking in advance - rules

  9. Characteristics of Children • U-12 Players • Golden age – sponges • Great variances in physical maturity • Increased ability to sustain complex skill • Begin to think in abstract terms • More time with friends. Less with parents. • Peer pressure. In crowd. Self evaluation. • Adult logic/values start to imprint • Questions everything, including sport participation

  10. Characteristics of Children • U-12 Players – implications • Great time for skill acquisition & cognitive • Challenge them according to their ability • Beware adult expectations • Adult actions influence their Self image • Playing time • Criticism, perceived favoritism • Attentiveness. Motivation. Inspiration • Can turn off sport at this stage • Too early for cardiovascular & strength

  11. Characteristics of Children • U-14 & U-16 Players • Varying stages of puberty • Display independence and are self-critical • Differences in mental development • Aware of praise, status, and recognition • A time of self-discovery • Self image • Motivation • Trying to fit in

  12. Characteristics of Children • U-14/U-16 Players - implications • Will quit soccer if it’s not fun or fulfilling • Will be reluctant to open up to parents • Competition is highlight of sport • Might compensate for lower skill with aggression • Playing motivation is either social or goal-oriented. Motivation must be compatible with adults in charge (coach, parents) • Will migrate to appropriate level/position

  13. Phases of Soccer Development • Phase 1 – Introduction to soccer (romance) • Phase 2 – Commitment to soccer (refine skill) • Phase 3 – Commitment to excellence (perfect skill) • Phase 4 – Commitment to winning (fitness, tactics)

  14. TRAINABLE COMPONENTS • TECHNICAL • Ability to control the ball. Touches • TACTICAL • Ability to solve soccer problems (cognitive) • FITNESS • Endurance, speed, strength, agility • PSYCHOLOGICAL • Enjoyment, coping with anxiety, confidence

  15. TRAINABLE COMPONENTS • PRACTICES FAR MORE IMPORTANT FOR SKILL DEVELOPMENT THAN GAMES (MANY MORE TOUCHES) • YOUTH SOCCER’S BIGGEST PROBLEMS: • OVER COACHING BY PARENTS AND COACHES • MISGUIDED EMPHASIS ON GAMES • WHY TEAM DEVELOPMENT CAN STIFLE INDIVIDUAL DEVELOPMENT • TOURNAMENTITIS

  16. PRACTICES VS GAMES(*R = REC, S = SELECT)

  17. FLOW STATE MODEL(Dr. Mihaly Csikszentmihalyi) • Activity or task matches ability • Do not treat training like medicine • Achievement = happiness (artists, athletes) • Finished product less important than process • If not in state of flow, other behavioral states: • Distracted, bored, frustrated, anxious, defensive, mischievous, undisciplined

  18. Player Evaluation -What parents should ask the coach • U-10/U-12 • Is he/she having fun? • Is he/she learning skills? • Is he/she socially adapted to team? • Too early for analysis of strengths/weakness

  19. Player Evaluation -What parents should ask the coach • U-14/U-16 • Is burn-out a concern? • Is he/she Improving? • Is he/she having fun? • Is he/she respectful? • Is he/she making friends? • Is he/she showing independence/responsibility? • How is he/she coping with competition? • Does he/she have soccer potential? • What are his/her strengths and weaknesses?

  20. Playing Up • Whose wishes? • Key Considerations: • Age (might need to return later to own age) • Maturity (physical, mental, social) • Leadership development opportunities • Survival skills vs expanding skills

  21. Playing up • Recommended only if: • Player is 12 years old or older • He/she really craves the challenge • Can handle the physical demands • Is an impact player with the older team NO SCIENTIFIC OR RESEARCH STUDY SUPPORTS THE NOTION THAT EARLY SPECIALIZATION OR EARLY CHALLENGE IMPROVES POTENTIAL OF PLAYERS. IN FACT, RESEARCH HAS SHOWN THAT THIS IS A ‘MYTH’ THAT DESTROYED THE POTENTIAL OF MANY CHILDREN PUSHED TOO SOON TOO HARD.

  22. Responsibility of the Soccer Parent • Understand the role of sports • Understand the odds • Be a role model • Evaluate the club and coaches • Understand pursuit of excellence

  23. Role of the Soccer Parent Understand the role of sports • Develop a healthy lifestyle (Sport = Leisure) • Develop sport skills • Develop life skills • Social skills • Positive self-image • Values character and coping skills • Mission of youth organizations

  24. Role of the Soccer Parent • Understand the odds • Academy/Select no guarantee of success • Only 6% high school soccer players to NCAA • Only small percentage get athletic scholarship • Only 2% of NCAA soccer players to pro • Only 0.08% high school to pro • Need to prepare your child for disappointment. Not build up his/her hopes unrealistically. • College coaches only interested in U-16+ • ‘Exposure’ over-rated

  25. Role of the Soccer Parent • Be a role model • Listen to your child (likes/dislikes) • Sideline behavior – NO COACHING!!! • Dealing with game results (unconditional love) • Don’t compare or be critical • Focus on positives • Be supportive (towards child, coach, club) • Shield from abuse, NOT from life lessons • It’s your child’s game. Not your game.

  26. Role of the Soccer Parent • Evaluate the club and its coaches • Consistent with mission statement • Club coaches • No lines/lectures/laps • Certification level • Philosophy of coach, motivation skills • Ethical issues • Best interest of the individual players • Recruiting • Playing time • Zero tolerance for abuse

  27. Role of the Soccer Parent • Understand pursuit of excellence Intrinsic motivation (if you need to push….) Know the opportunities Academy - Select soccer – ODP Know the two best coaches in the world: Watching professional soccer Playing pick up games How to reach potential Touches on the ball Self training Learning from the pros Practice to game ratio Perishable vs transferable skills Focus on process. Where is he/she at 18?

  28. If we take care in the beginning, the end will take care of itself

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