Tuesday, January 17, 2012
Guest Column - Frank Lakwijk
FOOTBALL ACADEMIES: LOGGING IN THE
Recently the PSSI has adopted a Youth Development Program.
Perhaps this will be the case but is it the solution for development of football quality in
In
Decisive factor in their development is the voluntary trainer who teaches them the first steps on their way to become a footballer. He has a trainer’s diploma or has played competitive football himself. In the
Professional football clubs have academies who scout the best talents from their region. They have an extensive network of tipsters and scouts. In many cases the small clubs tip their neighbouring professional club that they have an extraordinary talent who should be seen by the scouts. As a result of those qualified trainers at the lowest levels the academies can select players who are already prepared to a high level in their home clubs.
Of course, not all of the talents invited to the academies will reach the highest level. Most don’t reach the first team and will go back to their former local amateur club, adding quality to their squad. Some don’t reach the level of the national team but make a more than decent living from a professional club and add to the overall quality of the competition, pushing the top-end talents even further.
Take for example Irfan Bachdim. He played in the youth department of an amateur side together with the other kids from his neighbourhood. He appeared to be better than average and the scouts of
Why was Irfan in
Persema Malang had this year 77 new applications to choose from. All of them could juggle the ball brilliantly. With difficulty the trainers could find 4 possible talents, the rest was absolutely useless. They lacked even the most basic elements.
Logging the best from the forest is not a solution to lift
In my opinion the budget for Youth Development should be spent on develoment of the grassroots. Give every child the opportunity to learn the basic skills of football and then the best of them will be worthy of an academy. As long as there is no structure of youth development on local and village level, the best are still far from good. The PSSI would do better to start educating he educators: the well meaning people who take care of training of children of under ten years old. Only when scouts can select from many proven talents, an academy can be usefull.
Big part of the answer: youth development. I seriously hope the PSSI get their act together, but foreign clubs are doing working help the youth development side (as well of course as promoting their brands).
Last year I interviewed Paul Barratt at Jakarta's Liverpool Academy: http://www.thejakartapost.com/news/2011/12/01/paul-barratt-liverpool-s-man-jakarta.html
Liverpool appear to have some interesting plans - and not just for rich kids who can afford to attend their academy. They want to take football sessions to more rural areas, so kids from poor backgrounds get a chance too. Importantly, they are training Indonesian coaches. They are also on about setting up a national youth league - not sure if or when that will ever happen.
Barratt spoke of exactly the same problem this article highlights. Indonesian kids are half decent in terms of flashy tricks but don't have a clue when it comes to understanding how the game works - no tactical knowledge, no understanding of space etc. He also said that kids aren't coached early enough - you need to be getting in there around the age of 8 maximum.
Once this country starts imbuing kids with that kind of information, and once it opens its net in terms of which kids have access to those ideas, only then will the real gems be found.
Great article and thanks Antony for getting this out there.
Mark
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