The need to play soccer the Canadian Way!

 

Soccer Flag“How should Canadians play soccer” 

In our fifth in a series of 7 discussions on opportunities for soccer development in Manitoba and Canada, we will look at the need to have a Canadian style of play.

At the International level, the best football countries in the world have always possessed a unique ability to mould the style of soccer they play based on their country’s image and strengths. A country’s soccer fingerprint, soccer DNA, which is intimately associated with the country’s core values. A country’s soccer DNA drives the behaviours and performance of the players and leaves a clearly defined legacy.

From Brazil to Spain, from Argentina to Holland, from Italy to Germany, from Cameroon to France, or Spain or Romania: over the course of history, the greatest countries tend to wield such influence that they are able to shape the entire organization into a reflection of their country, values and vision. Considering that we need to ask ourselves, “How should Canadians play soccer?” or in other words, “What should be our Canadian way to play soccer?”

Before we answer that, first we need to find out what are the Canadian values as a society with regards to sports. Every society has values that are important to it and that set it apart from other societies. This statement holds true for the Canadian society. There are values that are important to Canadians that are not be fully shared by other societies. Canadians feel that these values are what make Canada an attractive place to live.

Canada has long been recognized for its peace-keeping role around the world. Canadians are seen as polite, sometimes too polite. We often say sorry or excuse me even when other people bump into us. Canadian values include freedom, respect for cultural differences and a commitment to social justice.

The best way to see Canadian values in sports is to take a look at hockey and by looking at that we see that we are:

  • Hard working,
  • Physically fit,
  • Tactically Intelligent,
  • Never give up attitude,
  • Creative,
  • Disciplined.

We need to bring these attributes to soccer. However, is that simple? How do we bring our hockey attributes to the soccer pitch?


What should be our “Canadian style” of soccer? What should be the “Canadian way” to play soccer?

Now that we have responded to what we stand for we need to find a way to incorporate who we are into our Canadian soccer style of play.

This way we implement a vision that matches our Canadian DNA and Canadian core values, in short a vision that suits our nation and our players.

Based on this we need to look at which style of play will suit us best?

A style of play is the way in which the particular system of play chosen by a team is used. Like playing systems, the choice and success of the style of play will depend upon the abilities of each player and the overall qualities of the team.

However, one must not forget other external factors which can play a part in choosing or adapting a particular style. Different teams often have totally contrasting styles, depending upon a country tradition or the personal philosophy of the coach. Examples of the different styles of play seen in soccer are listed below.

ATTACKING STYLE 

  • Direct Play
  • Slow build-up play
  • Counter-attacking play
  • Total Football

DEFENDING STYLE

  • Block defending
  • High pressure play
  • Low pressure play – (Parking the bus)

One could say that at the end of the day it is down to the coach to define the team’s playing style in order to make best use of the abilities and knowledge of the players at his disposal.

Or

We can be revolutionary in our thinking.


Solutions

The Need for a Canadian National Soccer Identity and Revolutionary thinking

As a country, we have to know what we want from our athletes. To have a lifetime of sport and to be healthy, to be athletes in the limits of social life or to be high-performance athletes? Let’s take a look at them one by one.

The sport of “beauty” or “athlete for life” is done without goals. Pleasure must come from participation in training. Let’s face it, in nature we are not all endowed with all the same physical and mental qualities, not everybody is born a predator with a competitive spirit or as strong as some others. Sports halls are filled not only with national champions, but are also filled with people in which satisfaction that comes from participation and camaraderie.

Sport performance (not to say small performance) is the limit in which the athlete can devote themselves to the sport. Some of us do not have the good fortune of having a social situation which allows us to spend our youth in the gym and the soccer field.

We go to work, to school, to kindergarten, and so on. The athlete must be aware that the level at which they enter in competitions is not high and the results will not be as expected.

High-performance sport instead is more demanding. We have to make sacrifices and satisfaction comes only from the results. We cannot resist or exist to long in high performance sport if we don’t have results that please us.

Our goal as a country should be to give athletes the chance to perform at their maximum potential. “Maximum Potential” means that all the four important parameters to be at the highest level.

The four important parameters are: 

  1. technique,
  2. tactics,
  3. physical conditioning,
  4. mental (psychological) conditioning.

In my opinion, the most important parameters are intelligence, character and attitude which are included in the mental (psychological) component.

There is not one without the other and the evolution in a sports contest is a mean between these parameters. Obviously, each parameter has a minimum threshold above which the athlete must pass, and you have to cope with them as soon as possible.

Then you start to work to maximize the capacity within the 4 parameters. If an athlete does not exceed the minimum limit for a parameter, the median for all parameters will tend towards 0. It’s like the multiplying by 0. For example if your technique, tactics and psyche are at level 10 and, if your conditioning fails at 1 minute into the match. The inevitable result will be 0.

CONCLUSION: The level at which an athlete performs in competition is strictly linked to the four parameters: technique, tactics, physical conditioning and psychologically.

EDUARDO’S ADVICE:

  1. Increase the minimum limit in each parameter, and then try to maximize them and customized (parameters) according to the qualities of each player.
  2. Help the player to understand that in order to be a high performance player they need to make sure they perform well in:
  • Possession (when you have the ball)
  • Defending (when you don’t have the ball)
  • Transition from defensive to offensive
  • Transition from offence to defence

The need for a new player development principle of play and curriculum, from 10 years old to international players, that will help us reach our maximum potential as a nation. 

The Beginning – The Canadian Way Video 

The video is an example of how the new “Canadian Philosophy and Player Development Curriculum” should work. A detailed framework, aims, objectives and contents that will be a tremendous value and hopefully help to raise the standards, performance and expectations of the Canadian players from 10 years old to the International senior level. The curriculum should also include approaches to teaching, learning and assessment, quality of relationships between coach and the player and the values embodied by the Canadian Soccer Association, but most importantly to introduce the same or similar philosophies and styles of play across the provinces at all levels .


Final Words

We need a Canadian team that plays “The Canadian Way” with wide-eyed intensity; harrying and chasing in midfield to restrict space and suffocate their opponents’ attacking instincts, a Canadian team that demands assertiveness , determination and commitment from his players, a team packed with fast  players, playing a combative style. A Canadian team that plays compact, ruthless on the counter, but keeping possession if necessary and impossible to break down. The core beliefs should be based on the Canadian values in the strength of the collective, continuous striving for self-improvement, fierce commitment to the cause and approaching the game like there is no tomorrow. We need players that adapt easily to any tactics. Canada needs a collective group of hard working players who always want the best for the team and country, who battles for every ball during every minute of each match with a winning attitude that nobody wants to lose.

We need a Canadian team with a great team spirit, like a family who embraces the multiculturalism that Canada is well known for.

Barcelona remains the ultimate template for long-term team development, but their successful era was achieved thanks to a consistent philosophy over a few decades. In Canada soccer, such long-term thinking is sorely lacking.

What we need in Canada is a template for long term development that includes our Canadian core values and does not change from year to year. We can add the trends in soccer but not change our template .

We do not need to copy the Tiki –Taka method of play, because it does not match our Canadian DNA. We need one that matches how Canadians play. One that matches who we are and what we stand for. One that matches our demographics and then and only then we can say we have a Canadian style of play.

While Canada’s high performance athletes strive for the podium at every opportunity, their world-class performances will instil a sense of pride in our country and the maple leaf from coast to coast to coast.

We need to rethink and rewrite everything from scratch. We should pay attention to developing youth soccer and the academies should receive funding to allow players to play for free. Give the players specialized coaching to develop their skills in a professional environment. The soccer reforms should not just be words on paper but administered to the letter as other countries did it before us and then and only then we will have a Canadian way a Canadian Style of soccer and play in the world cup every 4 years. 


WSA Blog Footnote

WSA is pleased to offer these blogs on topics and issues of interest to our soccer communities.

WSA individually trough Eduardo Badescu and collective knowledge, experience and perspective, locally and internationally, prompts us to offer these thoughts for the consideration of all interested parties.

Our blogs are put forward in the interest of the betterment of soccer, from the local to the national scene. We emphasize that they are offered in the spirit of service to our community at large.

We hope these views will inspire positive and constructive debate amongst all who love our beautiful game ,and should these ideas find resonance within any of the many clubs and associations,

We are eager to be involved in the proceeding developments.

The Need for Soccer Specific Stadiums in Canada

Developmental opportunities

In our fourth article in a series of seven discussions on opportunities for soccer development in Manitoba and Canada, we will look at the need for more Soccer Specific Stadiums including a Canadian National Soccer Centre. As is well-known Canada is a leading sports nation. How sport is practiced in Canada today is influenced by a number of factors, including our four seasons, our geographic and social diversity. For example, lacrosse, our national summer sport, has been played by Aboriginal people for close to a thousand years. Hockey, our national winter sport, was invented in Canada in the 1800s, and basketball was invented by Canadian Dr. James Naismith in 1891 to condition young athletes during the winter. Today, soccer is the most popular sport among Canadian children. Our sport system allows Canadians from all segments of society to get involved in sport activities at all levels and in all forms of participation. From childhood to adulthood, sport is part of a healthy, active lifestyle.

More and more as the game has developed over the years, so have the training-ground facilities where the players prepare for matches, and play the official games. Whether it is to fine-tune a player’s skills, study the opposition in detail, recover physically from a previous game’s exertions, or receive treatment for an injury, the standard of a club’s training ground is often a reflection of their overall well-being in the game.

We definitely need to build a CANADIAN NATIONAL SOCCER CENTRE (a complex exclusive for soccer) and Provincial Soccer Centres if we want to move in the right direction. It is embarrassing for a wealthy, sporting nation like Canada not to have one already. Our governing offices are in Ottawa while our so call technical facilities are in Toronto. We need a National facility to serve as the home base for Canada Soccer and its national teams.


What Does a Canadian National Soccer Centre Look Like?

It needs to address the key areas of training, recuperation and rehabilitation, media and education support services as well as food and lodging hospitality services.

Ideally the technical training needs would include 6 – 8 official professional outdoor soccer specific pitches, one in synthetic grass, one climate-controlled indoor field, one small-sized outdoor pitch and a futsal court. The actual complex should also contain sports medicine and nutrition labs a media conference room as well as 2-3 classrooms with fully integrated audio, video and network capabilities for player and coach education.

The centre should be used by the Canadian Soccer Federation to prepare for major international tournaments. Currently it is not uncommon for the various national teams to hold training camps in the USA or abroad. This becomes VERY expensive. Transportation of team members, staff and equipment for a camp usually lasting about a week seems like a poor use of funds that could and should be redirected more productively back into our soccer program. A modern, state of the art national training facility gives us the ability to hold these training camps domestically, more often and at a fraction of the cost in an equal if not superior environment.

The centre should also have a media and medical centres, gyms, sauna and steam rooms and a hydrotherapy pool, as well as on-site food and lodging hospitality services. There might be an opportunity for a restaurant and hotel partnership on-site or in very close proximity to the complex. Which leads into the next area for discussion: “Who would be the anchor tenant of such a complex?”


Canadian National Soccer Centre – Home of a National Soccer Academy

A good use for The Canadian National Soccer Centre will be to host a National Canadian Academy.

We need to have a national, year round soccer academy. In order for a player to be selected to the national academy:

  • he/she must be at least 14 years of age,
  • have Canadian citizenship,
  • be living and playing within Canada.

Registration for new players at the academy could begin in October the year before players enrol at the academy when prospective applicants are 13 years old and up. The first set of trials should be carried out on each Province. Each Province selects a set number of players who will travel to Canadian National centre to attend a tryout. After the tryouts, the academy director and officials will convene to select a maximum of 22 players with three or four of the 22 being goalkeepers. Academy ages should be U14, U15 and U16 boys and girls. Players who are selected to attend Canadian National Academy would live in residence and train at the centre during the school year. Youth development at the Canadian National Academy should incorporate many principles on football with their students,

THE CANADIAN STYLE of SOCCER …THE CANADIAN WAY!


The Need for Provincial Soccer Facilities

A smaller scale but similar soccer facility should be established in every province. It may not have to be entirely soccer specific, that is, the complex may be configured for the ability to be multi-sport friendly but the specific needs for a soccer excellence centre must be met. These “child“ facilities would include at least four high quality turf fields, one of which is covered, one natural grass pitch, a small-sided pitch and a futsal court. The centre should be open at least 5 days a week for a minimum of 8 hours per day and have a medical clinic. Perhaps once these goals and aspects are achieved it will be easier to have a Pro league, a U-23 league and Inter provincial youth leagues come to fruition.

Goals of these centres include:

  1. To give local, national and foreign players a place to meet, play and communicate with other players.
  2. To have a place to train your local amateur and/or professional team for international competitions.
  3. To build a better sporting image of the game.
  4. To support clubs and local private academies in developing soccer in their province

This may sound like a huge and financially unfeasible undertaking but the reality is most of the infrastructure already exists in many provinces. Take Manitoba for example, the University of Manitoba already meets just about all the requirements for a provincial soccer center of excellence. It has 2 high quality outdoor turf fields, three when you count Investors Group Stadium, one covered turf field and a natural grass pitch. With a simple addition to the Winnipeg Soccer Federation building, a futsal court, gym and medical services could quickly make the complex a leading provincial soccer complex in Canada.

Indoor Outdoor Facilities

Figure 1: University of Manitoba soccer complex


How Can We Make it Happen?

The Solution

We need a Public-Private Partnership (P3) approach to building and maintenance of sporting infrastructure in Canada. As the single largest investor in Canada’s amateur sport system, the Government of Canada plays an important role in this system. Through Sport Canada, it develops programs and policies to help the sport system meet the needs of Canadians. Provincial and Territorial governments, as well as the private and not-for-profit sectors, also provide programs and funding that support participation and excellence in sport. Thus, a collaborative effort between all three levels of government, the Canadian Soccer Association and the Provincial Member Associations are required to make this happen.

The common thread between the governments, institutions and organizations that are part of our sport system is the Canadian Sport Policy. The current Canadian Sport Policy, effective from 2012 to 2022, sets a direction for all governments, institutions and organizations to make sure sport has a positive impact on the lives of Canadians, our communities and our country.

Through five broad objectives, the Policy aims to increase the number and diversity of Canadians participating in sport:

  • Introduction to sport: Canadians have the fundamental skills, knowledge and attitudes to participate in organized and unorganized sport.
  • Recreational sport: Canadians have the opportunity to participate in sport for fun, health, social interaction and relaxation.
  • Competitive sport: Canadians have the opportunity to systematically improve and measure their performance against others in competition in a safe and ethical manner.
  • High performance sport: Canadians are systematically achieving world-class results at the highest levels of international competition through fair and ethical means.

Sport for development: Sport is used as a tool for social and economic development, and the promotion of positive values at home and abroad


 Final words

Each day we are dreaming about our goals. Each day we are moving forward, step closer to the success. Sometimes we are so focused on our objectives that we don’t have time to think why we desire success.

It’s important that the CSA invests in soccer specific stadiums.

We definitely need to build a CANADIAN NATIONAL SOCCER CENTRE (a complex exclusive for soccer) and Provincial Soccer Centres if we want to move in the right direction. Knowing that there is a purpose, a goal we want to achieve, it stimulates us to act. The more challenging goal, the stronger success feeling is related to it. This way, we can get a better motivation to achieve bigger goals and we get additional stimulus to improve, grow and learn to handle challenging goal. Our governing body needs to understand that this is another necessity if we want to progress and eventually succeed in soccer.

We need a National facility to serve as the home base for Canada Soccer and its national teams.


WSA Blog Footnote

WSA is pleased to offer these blogs on topics and issues of interest to our soccer communities.

WSA individually trough Eduardo Badescu and collective knowledge, experience and perspective, locally and internationally, prompts us to offer these thoughts for the consideration of all interested parties.

Our blogs are put forward in the interest of the betterment of soccer, from the local to the national scene. We emphasize that they are offered in the spirit of service to our community at large.

We hope these views will inspire positive and constructive debate amongst all who love our beautiful game ,and should these ideas find resonance within any of the many clubs and associations,

We are eager to be involved in the proceeding developments.