developingskill
developingskill
Developing Skill
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developingskill · 4 years ago
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Milan
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developingskill · 4 years ago
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Same game?
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developingskill · 4 years ago
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Small sided.
Big business.
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developingskill · 5 years ago
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Credit - https://www.behance.net/gallery/107443979/Maradona?tracking_source=search_projects_recommended%7Cmaradona
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developingskill · 5 years ago
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Timing is arriving at just the right moment.
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developingskill · 5 years ago
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“Out of nowhere the mind comes forth”
– Zen koan
In football control has a number of meanings. One team dictating the flow of a match through their play or tactical plan. A player reigning in their emotions. Most commonly control will refer to the quality of a players first touch or ability to keep the ball close whilst dribbling and/or changing direction. Their exquisite close control.
For how long does a player have full control of the ball? A two season study of Ligue 1 in France indicated that the average player has between 40 and 50 possessions per 90 minutes, with approximately 2 touches per possession. At which moment does the player have full control? They clearly don’t have any control before the ball has arrived, but how much control do they have after they have touched the ball? Do they have any?
A ball has been passed to you. With your first touch you push the ball out in front ready to play a pass. At this moment, who has control of the ball?
Many things can happen to the ball in the time between your first touch and your second touch. To give yourself the best chance of being able to carry out the next action of the ball that point of contact needs to be carried out as you desire. What one might describe as a good first touch. Or Zidane like control. The next moment of full control should then be touch number two, unless touch number one was not good enough, then touch number two will either be uncontrolled (a stretch or a tackle) or not happen at all. Each touch exerts control. The orientation of the touch increasing the chances of being able to command the action of the ball until the moment where the individual task of attempting to retain control of the ball passes to another.
In the moment between touches who has full control of the ball? Does anyone? Where does the ball go?
“Shuzan held up his staff and waved it before the monks.
If you call this a staff,” he said, “you deny it’s eternal life. If you do not call this a staff you deny its present fact. Tell me just what do you propose to call it?””
– Zen koan
The football does not wish to be under your control. It wishes to obey Newton’s first law, like any other object in motion. An object at rest stays at rest and object in motion stays in motion with the same speed and in the same direction unless acted upon by an unbalanced force. Even at rest forces are acting upon on objects, the most obvious and important being gravity. When our ball is in motion it does not want our fleshy bodies to get in the way, it wants to continue upon it’s path until there is no more momentum. Perhaps our moment of control can be of sufficient quality to remove all motion? It depends on how good we are. Until then the ball exists in the great void of space time, belonging to no one but the forces of physics.
The better we are at the game the less conscious we are of the existence of the void. If we are Zidane we do not notice any void. The quality of our touch is such that the moment between touches is insignificant. For a rapid dribbler like Neymar the void has no fear because of the quality and rapidity of the controlling touches. However, for a young child learning the game the void is very real. Their touch is not in an advanced stage whether receiving the ball or dribbling the ball. When the ball comes to them they are negotiating with the void over whether or not touch number one will display sufficient control as to enable touch number two. There becomes an anxiety between touches especially as the factors around them increase. Opponents. Length of grass. Slow feet. Whether or not the ball will just be swallowed by the void, never to be seen by seven year old feet again. Through practice our seven year old may become Zidane and master negotiations with the void, but the void will always be there.
Our ball is not ours. Yet it also is. We do not have control. Yet we do. How can we have control of anything when Einstein states that time passes more quickly for my head than it does for my feet? And I am not a tall man. Perhaps the football is not ours at all, but Schrodinger’s. The most famous quantum physics theory of Erwin Schrodinger is that of his cat. The theory states that if you were to place a cat inside a box and seal the box, the cat is both dead or alive until it is observed. We have Schrodinger’s football. In the moment between touch one and touch two the ball is both under control and not under control.
“A puzzled monk once said to Fuketsu: “You say truth can be expressed without speaking and without keeping silent. How can this be?”
Fuketsu answered, “In Southern China in spring, when I was a lad, ah! How birds sang amongst the blossoms.””
– Zen Koan
Full article here - 
http://www.pger.net/football/2017/05/15/lose-control/
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developingskill · 5 years ago
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Great Ones
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developingskill · 5 years ago
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developingskill · 5 years ago
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There’s a new team coming to town.
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developingskill · 5 years ago
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Feedback
(From the work of Daniel Coyle)
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developingskill · 5 years ago
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Jude cool. 😎
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Photo provided by TransferMarkt.us
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developingskill · 5 years ago
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And the award for Most Jacked Soccer Dad goes to…Hugh Jackman. 🧡⚽
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developingskill · 5 years ago
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Create, create, create.
It’s natural to want to see every project become the biggest best thing it can be - but you have to go with your gut. At the end of the day that tiny project, the quick one, sometimes begins to take form and evolve into something a whole lot bigger and more awesome. Tengushee’s Halloween live show has done exactly this - so we’ve pumped all our resources into planning and creating things for the 31st… it’s going to be an experience.
This is a great example of the Shikantaza philosophy of create, create, create in action. All we needed to do was create just the beginning - the seed. From there it grew almost unaided. It shone through the other projects. It came to life.
Not every random seed will grow into a tree. Some will be plants, and yes, some will be nothing. But some will become mighty oaks. 
You have just got to keep planting them…
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developingskill · 5 years ago
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Geometry and the football ecosystem
We must question what we know. Or that which we think we know.
Or better still admit that we really know next to nothing.
Only then can we reconsider what we do and consider why we do it, and whether we can (or should) do it better?
Disciplines often seek to borrow from each other. Sport, business and education cross pollinate with regularity, but sport is as much about structures as it is psychological relationships. What might it learn from physics, engineering, or biology?
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Football creates it’s own geometry. The movement of internal organisms structuring and restricting with fluidity and rapidity. This movement creates an on field ecosystem.
The overall system breaks into subsystems. Dyads and triads. Diamonds facing off against squares in a quest for subsystem dominance.  The squares may face triangles as the numerical superiority ebbs and flows.
The game is so fluid and dynamic that in reality only at restarts can a set shape be definitively demanded and deployed.
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Dense honeycomb shapes begin to form. Nature prefers the hexagon, the strongest structures in nature will feature hexagonal combinations. The formats of football create a geometry based on temporarily fixed points. Nature doesn’t have to worry about whether it is in or out of possession.
When a team has possession is when the gaps are created and the team in possession becomes vulnerable to counter attacks due to the spaces within its own structure. Spaces that the team has created for itself. A shape often not dictated by the game, not self organised and not natural. A shape created by the coach.
By adopting natures hexagon a team may be able to make itself more secure.
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Using natural geometry may help us to solve the issue of dominating territory and possession, being impactful in attack, while not leaving ourselves open to counter attacks.
Search far and wide, you never know where solutions will appear.
Read the full article here
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developingskill · 5 years ago
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Laurie Cunningham
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developingskill · 5 years ago
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Football. The Future.
I have been told so many times that there is “no need to reinvent the wheel” that it has become my life’s ambition to do just that.
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Without change there can be no progress and too often people fight tooth and nail for relatively minor change when what is really needed is sweeping, dramatic change.
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Why fight so hard for something that will make so little difference? If you are going to fight, fight for the new wheel.
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Football is set in it’s ways. The game has changed in a very small way during the last 150 years. Football simulations have changed far more dramatically in a mere 30 years.
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While the classic 11v11 game possibly doesn’t need change for adults, it certainly does for children. New formats to afford greater opportunities are needed and have been suggested.
2v2.
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3v3.
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Even the 11v11 game can be looked into. When young adults play a different version of the game and declare it to be more exciting then the great footballing edifice may not be as stable as imagined.
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Change to progress.
Think. Then think some more.
Read the full article here
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developingskill · 5 years ago
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PSG Classics
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