The Lad hasn't played a game since mid December. Some little matter of Christmas got in the way for
a while and then we had the coldest snap in years, accompanied by snow, snow, and more snow. He
almost got a game last weekend, but the thaw didn't come quite soon enough for our hosts; a bottom
of the table side who probably want their players to forget how horrible it was getting beaten week
in week out just so they can get them back on the pitch.
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Glad I had the brains to take an umbrella with me for the lad's Sunday morning game. Just after a
small shower, I noted quite confidently that we'd seen the last of the rain. Should have kept my
big gob shut. I haven't seen rain like that since I went fishing on the Amazon. Anyway, I was as
smug as a Belgian chocolate maker a few minutes later.
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I couldn't have wished for any more this morning. Chelsea top of the league. Arsenal defeated at
home. The world was a good place to be. Add to that, the joys of an 'Indian summer', and just a
short hop up the motorway for the lad's morning match. Life was good.
Only problem was most of his team mates had been out at a 'house party' the night before.
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I read a fascinating article recently on an American website. It asked a very simple question, but
one that I had not thought of asking.
Basically, it split young players into two distinct groups. On the one hand you have the child who
validates his performance by how many goals he scores, or how many players he beats.
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This is the kind of image that comes to mind when I think of 'youth football' and
I can't wait for Sunday to see if the boy can help his team win against one of their local rivals.
Don't you just love the sight of some grass and a few white poles!!! Put some nets up, add twenty
two goal hungry youngsters, an overweight ref in an undersized uniform, and two linesman who
couldn't agree the offside rules if you paid them, plus a few excitable parents and you've got
everything you need for a good old game of football.
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The dreaded day arrives.
First round of the County Cup.
The day when your lad's third division outfit get to face a first division side from the toughest
league in the county. There is only one way this is going to go. This isn't the same as the FA Cup.
Your son does not play for Barnsley, and he hasn't drawn a game against a bunch of overpaid
dilettantes who must have thought the industrial revolution was a heavy metal band from the
sixties.
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What does your kid get from playing youth football?
It's common knowledge that sports can help kids develop important skills that they can transfer to
other parts of life.
Through sport, young football players can understand the importance of being fit, and learn how to
behave in a competitive environment.
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What is it with Sky tv. Don't they know there's a whole world out there trying to lead a normal
life away from the TV.
Saturday is meant for football, watching football. At a football ground, a proper one, with stands
and everything.
Sunday is for football too. But a different type. Hackney marshes, council pitches, local club
pitches.
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When you've got a premiership team (Stoke City) using a throw in as their main offensive weapon it
does make you realise why English football has struggled on the international stage, and why we
rely so heavily on foreign players in the premiership. Take away the foreign players and what are
we really left with.
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What a lovely day we had today. The sun was out. The pitch was in good nick. The players looked
ready. Three points in the bag. Alright so maybe you're just a deluded Stoke City fan. But for us
football dad's, the feeling is just the same.
Hope springs eternal. Well, every Sunday morning. Until kick off, that is.
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Admit it, every weekend you walk out onto a football pitch feeling just a little like this could be
the day it all comes together. This is the day that all the hard work pays dividends. You've got
the players, you've done the drills, your boys or girls look in the mood. So what is the best
outcome you can hope for?
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A boy or girl gets offered a place at an 'academy setup' linked to a aspiring non-league side.
Parents are over the moon. Kids are thinking their professional career is only a whisper away. And
as all the local youth sides have their best players taken from them to create this new 'uber'
academy team, so resentments simmer and jealousy grows daily.
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Has anyone had the misfortune to watch the BBC 2 series, supposedly a comedy, titled The Cup.
Stereotypical characters, on the nose dialogue, and cliche after cliche about the world of youth
football? Having spent weekend after weekend following my son's team, I am yet to come across one
moron, let alone a whole team's worth, determined to do one thing, and one thing only - ruin their
son's (or daughters) love of football.
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