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NASL NEWSLETTER |
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February 7th, 2003
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"The solution to
adult problems tomorrow depends on large measure upon how our children
grow up today." Margaret Mead
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This is the
48th issue distributed to the new NASL list. The previous newsletters are now on-line at http://www.nasl.com/current_news.htm |
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Articles in this week's newsletter:
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- nasl is now
NASL.com
- Upcoming Soccer
Calendar - lots of new dates added.
- Alabama High School
Top Ten Power Rankings
- The Perfect Soccer
Cigar
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Need updated information on 2003
Soccer Camps
- ASA 2003 Membership Survey
-
Just 4 Kicks 5v5 Youth
Tournament (with guest WUSA Atlanta Beat) - February 14-16
- Coaching Articles, Tips and
Drills
- Referee Rates for Spring 2003
- Fastest Hat Trick
Ever
- The Logistics of
Small-Sided Games by Tom Turner
- Growing Referees
- Spring Team
Information
- New Team
- Soccer fan incident prompts reviews
- Soccer is a matter
of Life or Death?
- Aly Wagner comes of age
- Directions to
Fields - Updated for 2003 School Season
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nasl is now NASL.com |
The NASL website will no longer be reachable at
http://www.nasl-rcit.com
We now have a new easier to remember web address
of www.nasl.com so please bookmark the
new address. Thanks. |
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Soccer Calendar -
Dates to Remember |
More information on all
events below is available at the NASL website.
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Division III and Division IV players may be officially
rostered to Spring teams
as of February 1, 2003
- NASL first
Spring "Play" Date - the first weekend that games can be
played is February 8th.
- United States
Men's National Team vs. Argentina at the Orange Bowl in
Miami, Fla., at 10:55 a.m. CT live on ESPN2, Telemundo
- ASA State
League Scheduling Meeting - February 8th, 2003 at Soccer
Blast on Hwy 280. (Birmingham) in the meeting room.
Division I and II Girls will meet at 10:00 AM
Division I and II Boys will meet at 1:00 PM
Click
here for more information.
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Boys ODP -February 9th - '88 Boys at 10 AM
Montgomery YMCA fields - Morning training and 2PM match
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NASOA Referee meeting will be held at Whitesburg
Middle School on February 10th. The February 17th and February
24th meetings need to be moved due to a holiday and
parent/teacher conferences for the Huntsville City Schools.
Meeting location for the 17th and 24th is TBD.
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Just4Kicks Youth Soccer Tournament -
Feb 14-16, 2003
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Lakeshore Shootout High School Tournaments
- Birmingham
February 14th & 15th, 2003 (Boys)
February 21st & 22nd, 2003 (Girls)
Teams included are John Carroll, Indian Springs, Montgomery
Academy, Huntsville, Randolph, Vestavia, Shades Valley,
UMS-Wright, McGill-Toolen, Cullman, Oak Mountain,
Hewitt-Trussville, Hoover, Fairhope, Decatur, Spain Park, Ft.
Payne, Bayside Academy; Minor, Pleasant Grove, Trinity, Holy
Spirit, Thompson, Central Tuscaloosa, Auburn, Grissom, Bob Jones,
Gadsden, Pleasant Grove, Hillcrest, Sparkman, and Altamont.
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Submission of Registration forms and fees due
in AYSA office. These must be true, accurate number of new
member registrations and fees. Member cards will be issued to
clubs for Division III and Division IV members once forms and
fees are submitted. - February 15,
2003
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U.S. Women's National Team vs. Iceland in
Charleston, S.C. - Sunday, February 16, at Blackbaud Stadium.
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Boys ODP - February 23rd - '90 Boys at 12noon to 5
pm at Birmingham Fields TBA
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Boys ODP - February 23rd - '86 Boys at 12noon to
5pm at
Birmingham Fields TBA
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USSF "C"
License - February 24th - March 3rd, 2003 in
Birmingham - This course has been cancelled.
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Statewide
Division III and Division IV League play may begin
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March 1, 2003
- North
Alabama Middle School Tournament
- March 4th, 6th and 8th, 2003 -
Point Mallard Soccer Complex - Decatur, Alabama
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HHS JV Super Cup - Huntsville High School will be
holding a JV Tournament on March 14-15, 2003 at the John Hunt
Soccer Complex. Boys teams from Alabama and Tennessee and
Girls teams from Birmingham, Huntsville, Madison and Ft Payne
have already signed up. You may contact Jim Saunders
jim.saunders@gti-us.com
256-533-3466 for more info.
- ASA
State Spring League Begins - March 15th, 2003
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Valley Futbol Club
Skills Training Clinics - Contact
Dave Ghoja at 464-3652 or
dghoja@knology.net
- ASA
State Board Meeting - March 16th - The focus will
be on small sided soccer and is open to the ASA Membership.
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AHSAA North South All-Star Soccer Game deadline for
nominations is March 28th. Please tell your high
school coach. Use AHSAA Form #37.
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Huntsville Spring Classic Soccer Tournament
(4th
Annual)
- April 12-13, 2003 - Huntsville, AL - U9 thru U14 Boys &
Girls *U9 & U10 will play 8v8.
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AHSAA
High School Soccer Championships -
May 9th and 10th, 2003 at John Hunt Complex in Huntsville.
- Final date
for Statewide Division III and Division IV League play
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May 10, 2003
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"Spring"
Tide American Festival
- May 17, 2003
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USA Women's national Team vs. Canada
- Birmingham's Legion Field -
May 17, 2003 (Date is Tentative at this time)
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Alabama Soccer Association Annual General Membership Meeting
- May 17, 2003
- ASA
State Spring
League Ends - May 18, 2003
- Tryouts for
the Fall 2003 Season can begin May 27th and may run through
June 15th, 2003.
- Region III
Youth Regional Championships - Greensboro, N.C. - June 26th -
July 1st, 2003
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Alabama Sports Festival - Huntsville - June 26th - 29th,
2003 - Contact Darrell Harris (256) 773-0845 or Sheri & Randall Farley
(205) 631-9165
- Region III
ODP Girls Camps - Tuscaloosa, Alabama
1984/85 girls - July 3-8 and holdovers - July 9-11
1987/88 girls - July 10-15 and holdovers - July 16-18
1989 girls - July 17-22 and holdovers, July 23-25
- Region III
ODP Boys Camps - Tuscaloosa, Alabama
1/988/89 boys - July 5-10
1987 boys and holdovers - July 12-17
1986 boys are going to a tournament, not camp in our region.
- Division I Qualifying
Tournament - Montgomery - August 9-10th, 2003 - All teams who
want to play in Division I have to qualify - even 2002 State Champions.
- ASA State
League Fall Scheduling Meeting - August 16/17th, 2003
- Fall League
Begins - September 6th, 2003
- Fall League Ends
- October 26th, 2003
- Governor's
Cup - Montgomery - October 25-26, 2003
- Snicker's Cup
- Huntsville - November 1-2, 2003
- D II
Tournament - Location TBA - November 8-9, 2003
- Adult State
Cup - Mobile - November 15-16, 2003
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NIRSA Sports Club National Championship - Nov
20-22, 2003 Tuscaloosa
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ALABAMA
POWER
RANKINGS
NEW!
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Pre-season Top Ten High Schools for Spring 2003 |
Here they are - the pre-season Top Ten rankings for the high school
season. The first games are just a week away, but at this time
every team is still undefeated and in first place. I guess you could
also say that they're also actually tied for last place, but I'm an
optimist. Differing opinions are welcome - email me at
dsports@hiwaay.net with your's.
These
rankings are also published in Southern Soccer
Scene - the premier magazine about soccer in the South. You can
visit Southern Soccer Scene's Website at
http://www.southernsoccerscene.com/
If you would like to order Southern
Soccer Scene Magazine send an e-mail request with your home address to
Alabama@southernsoccerscene.com or subscribe at Southern Soccer
Scene's Website at
http://www.southernsoccerscene.com/ |
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Boys 6A
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McGill-Toolen
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Grissom
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Bob Jones
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Shades Valley
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John Carroll
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Vestavia Hills
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Hoover
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Daphne
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Mountain
Brook
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Austin
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Boys 5A
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Cullman
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Homewood
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Huntsville
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Athens
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Briarwood Christian
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Bradshaw
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Fairhope
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Fort Payne
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St. Paul's Episcopal
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Gadsden
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Boys 4A-1A
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Randolph School
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Altamont
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Jacksonville
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Trinity Presbyterian
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Indian Springs
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Mars Hill Bible
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Guntersville
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Montgomery Academy
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Catholic (Huntsville)
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Bayside Academy
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Girls 6A
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Oak Mountain
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Central (Tuscaloosa)
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Grissom
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Mountain Brook
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Bob Jones
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Vestavia Hills
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John Carroll
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Hoover
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McGill-Toolen
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Northview
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Girls 5A
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Briarwood Christian
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Huntsville
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Fort Payne
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Fairhope
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Homewood
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Bradshaw
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Lee-Huntsville
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St. Paul's Episcopal
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Cullman
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Athens
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Girls 4A-1A
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Trinity Presbyterian
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Montgomery Academy
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Randolph
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East Limestone
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Indian Springs
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UMS-Wright
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Guntersville
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Mars Hill
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Gulf Shores
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Bayside Academy
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The Perfect Soccer
Cigar |
I read that in Barcelona, Spain you can now buy a large
cigar that lasts for 90 minutes, the length of a soccer match, when
smoked normally. So, you can determine the approximate time left in the
match by seeing how much of your cigar is left. The only condition is
that you stop smoking at half and during any game stoppages.
With all we know about cancer and smoking it seems to
me that what the world really needs is a good five cents wristwatch. -
Ken Gamble
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Need updated information on 2003
Soccer Camps |
I am in the process of updating the website information on soccer camps.
If you are involved with a soccer camp please e-mail your updated
information for 2003 to
dsports@hiwaay.net.
http://www.nasl.com/camps.htm
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ASA 2003 Membership Survey |
Let the Alabama Soccer Association
membership and leaders know how you think ASA performed in 2002.
We have the Membership Survey on-line.
Please fill it out and mail in.
A survey form is available at
http://wwwnasl.com/forms/ASA2003MembershipSurvey.pdf
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Just 4 Kicks 5v5 Youth
Tournament (with guest WUSA Atlanta Beat) - February 14-16 |
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Inaugural
5v5 Youth Tournament |
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WITH SPECIAL GUESTS

The ATLANTA BEAT
FEBRUARY 14TH, 15TH
AND 16TH, 2003
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Boys and Girls
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U-9 to U-14
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Limited to
66 teams
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3 games
per team guaranteed
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Registration fee: $275.00 per team.
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Maximum 9 person roster.
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Contact Ricky Crawford 256-534-4939
or 256-990-1134
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e-mail
rickydc@mindspring.com
Opening
ceremonies will begin Friday 14th at 5p.m. with live music,
food and other activities. Games will start Saturday 15th at
7a.m.. Atlanta Beat will conduct a mini camp on Friday 14th
2003 from 7p.m. till 10 p.m. The cost per child is $55.00. There are
only 80 spots for this camp so be quick to register. Dinner with team
will be auctioned off prior to start of the tournament.
Register on-line @
www.just4kicks.info |
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Coaching Articles, Tips and
Drills |
I
have added a large number of articles on
every possible soccer coaching subject to the NASL website. Just last week I
added 2500 new pages. If you were to read a page a minute it would take 40
hours of reading. These are zipped for quick downloading. The
subjects added last week include: 1v2 Attackers, 1v2 Defenders, Attention
Deficit Disorder, Anti-Select, Attacking, Both Defense and Offense, Coaching
Licenses, Conditioning, Warm-ups, Dribbling, Flat Back Defense, Formations,
General Soccer Information, Glossary, Soccer Humor, Indoor Soccer, Injuries,
Nutrition, Keeper, Licensing, Motivation, Offside, Parents, Passing, Penalty
Kicks, Quotes, Receiving, Refereeing, Resources, Scouting, Set Pieces, Team
Defense, Tournaments, and Tryouts.
If you're interested in coaching, check
back often as I have thousand of more soccer coaching articles that will be
added in the next few months - many which were written by the very best coaches
in the soccer world and who have given us permission to post them on the NASL
website.
http://www.nasl.com/drills.htm
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Referee Rates for Spring 2003 |
The newest pay rates for referees for the Spring 2003
season are available on-line at
http://www.nasl.com/ref/referee_rates.htm
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Fastest Hat Trick
Ever |
During the Japan vs. Brunei match
on February 16th, 2000 the Japanese player Masashi Nakayama scored a
pure hat trick in the first three minutes and 15 seconds. Later in the
game teammate, Naohiro Takahara, also added his own hat trick - but he
needed 12 minutes. |
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The Logistics of
Small-Sided Games by Tom Turner |
As you may know from attending the ASA Planning Meeting
in January, Alabama (as well as all of the states of Region III)
is considering changes that will affect the primary manner in which
small-sided soccer is instituted at the local level. For more
information please read the "Position
Statement – Region III’s Best Opportunity for Region Wide Expansion of
Soccer".
The position statement is available at
http://www.nasl.com/forms/PositionStatementsOct02forRegionIII.pdf
Alabama State DOC Lance Williams has provided an
article on the subject by Tom Turner called "The Logistics of
Small-Sided Games". The first part of the article is below. There
is a link at the bottom to download the entire article.
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The small-sided games movement has evolved
worldwide in response to the steady demise of street soccer. As a
phenomenon, street soccer remains strong in only Latin America, Africa,
and in some parts of the Middle and Far East. In street soccer cultures,
children as young as five can be found playing with their peers and
older “friends” in ever-varying configurations of games. Two or three
players are enough to start the days’ play and, on occasion, the numbers
may swell to resemble small mob scenes. Goals are made from whatever is
available and play is always between two goals, the ball may be nothing
more than a bundle of rags, there are no scrimmage vests, no referees,
and no coaches. Rule disputes are settled by the players, and the
outcome of games is often decided by family meal times, evening curfews,
the availability of light, or some agreed upon number, such as “ten
halftime-twenty winner.” The severity of the bug bites in the summer
was, as I remember, reason to keep moving, not reason to quit! During
school days, arriving early meant more opportunities to play in
smaller-sided games before the sleepyheads arrived, and the lunch hour
game was interrupted only long enough to gobble down food before
resuming play.
In the 1980’s, with their street soccer cultures
disappearing or already extinct, progressive Western soccer federations
turned to small-sided games in an attempt to compensate for the loss of
skillful, imaginative players. Given the sheer volume of touches
experienced over time in street soccer play, the number of players on
the field was never an issue. But when “soccer time” became organized
and reduced to only two or three hours each week, it became necessary to
maximize ball contacts by reducing the number of players competing for
possession. In soccer, dribbling skills are essential, and the creative
dribbler was, and remains, the most prized talent.
Young children come into organized soccer at the
suggestion or urging of their parents, and “play” to a five or six
year-old is not complicated by the adult concept of “competition.”
Sadly, while all parents want their child to have a positive experience
in sport, for many, the specter of “win now” has become more important
than the process of learning and having fun. For many very good reasons
beyond the scope of this piece, children below the age of eight should
not be placed in competitive situations in which the outcome influences
their enjoyment and participation, and their right to learn and dream.
For these reasons, this article suggests ways to restructure community
youth soccer programs.
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The entire article
in MS Word form can be downloaded at
http://www.nasl.com/articles/logistics_of_small_sides_tom_turner.doc
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Growing Referees |
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NASL and
AYSA spend a lot of our time trying to spur the growth of soccer in
outlying rural areas of Alabama. We often overlook an important
part of that growth - new USSF referees. New teams need local
referees in order to host teams on their own fields. And sadly most of
the more rural areas have few refs available. And referees are
seldom willing to travel long distances at their own expense in order to
referee games when there are plenty of games available in their own
backyard. So it is imperative for rural area teams to encourage
parents and rec soccer referees to take the test to become certified.
Growth of soccer and growth of referees go hand in hand.
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Spring Team Information: |
If your North Alabama Soccer League affiliated team is playing this
spring (NASL, Rec-Plus, State, Premier, etc.) please check the list of
teams and team information on-line at
http://www.nasl.com/teams.htm and
confirm that the contact name(s) and information are correct and that
your team is highlighted. The teams participating this spring should be
highlighted.
Although I took down the information at the
scheduling meetings on Monday and Tuesday some of it was unclear as to
who was the coach and who was the manager and some information was
incomplete or illegible. Please look it over and send corrections to me
at dsports@hiwaay.net
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New Team: |
Scottsboro,
Alabama will be fielding a U12 girls' team this spring for the first
time ever and are starting from scratch. The NAU Scottsbopro Wildcates
U12G team has a set of gold colored
team uniforms but could use a second set and are willing to take an old
set of uniforms (any colors) if any club or team has any they are no
longer using.
It is very important that we help nurture the
clubs and teams in the outlying areas of North Alabama. In addition to
jerseys they can use goal keeper jerseys, balls, etc - any of the
equipment you need when you start a new club. Any help would be
appreciated. Contact Bruce Hoge
bhoge@scottsboro.org or 256-259-5805, 259-7868, 259-1116.
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Soccer fan incident prompts reviews |
By Laurie Cason
Times-Union sports writer |
They're just games.
Yet there are an increasing number of stories nationally about parents
who
treat them as much more.
High schools locally have had little experience with acts of parental
rage
at athletic events and, as a result, few real guidelines exist to help
the
schools deal with what can be a volatile situation.
Now, however, a late January incident at Orange Park High School has
many
area schools taking a closer look at what they would do if a parent
crossed
that line on their own turf. In the Orange Park incident, Tim Enright
entered the soccer field to check on his son, who had been injured in a
skirmish for the ball. Angry that a more severe penalty was not levied
on
the opposing player, Enright confronted the referee.
The game between two nationally ranked teams -- Orange Park was No.3 and
Nease No.22 -- was ended with 13:25 remaining in the second half. Nease
was
credited with the 2-0 win, and Enright was banned from attending all
extracurricular activities involving Orange Park for at least one year
and
possibly through his son's graduation.
"When you turn your kids loose to play sports, you have to kind of
divorce
yourself from that situation," Fletcher girls soccer coach Mike Levine
said.
"Our society today is way too emotionally tied into what's happening on
the
field. Ultimately, it's still a game, but people lose sight of that."
Levine, who has coached soccer at the recreational, club and high school
levels since 1984, can't recall when another game was ended prematurely
as a
result of a parent entering the field of play. Neither can coach Scott
Marabell, who has headed the baseball program at Wolfson for nine years,
nor
Dan Disch, the 15-year veteran football coach at White.
Mandarin football coach Richard Burnoski attributes the infrequency of
such
incidents to the lessening role parents play in their children's
athletics
activities at the high school level.
"Once the kids get into high school, parents have less input into the
program," Burnoski said. "In the youth leagues, parents have so much
more
control and involvement. They get real emotional about their kids. If
you've
ever been to the young kids' soccer games, it's really bad."
But the lack of parental interference at the high school level may
change if
improper behavior patterns of parents transfer, unmoderated, from youth
sports to scholastic sports as the child grows up.
"In all of our society, we see this erosion of civility," said Fred Engh,
the founder of the National Alliance for Youth Sports (NAYS), which
leads
the effort to develop community-based programs aimed at encouraging
parents
to display good sportsmanship. "Now, you have sideline rage, road rage
...
The behavior of parents [at their children's sporting events] became an
issue probably within the last five years.
"It's the parent that begins this process. The ugly parent doesn't push
his
child in sports, he shoves them. And that parent's behavior will follow
the
child as he advances to middle school and then to high school."
If that happens, school administrators may find their current policies
--
which only loosely address such situations -- put to a tougher test.
Under Florida High School Activities Association (FHSAA) guidelines, the
host school is responsible for the control of spectators. The FHSAA
recommends -- but doesn't require -- uniformed security personnel be at
events for that purpose. No specific requirements are mandated, leaving
school administrators to use their own judgment about how control is
best
maintained.
Football is the most strictly and visibly monitored of all high school
sports, largely due to the greater number of spectators. Area schools
routinely have uniformed security personnel on hand. Not every school
administrator, however, correlates attendance to an increased risk for
spectator violence.
"I don't know how many people were in the stands at Orange Park, but
there
probably wasn't more than 100 people," St. Augustine athletic director
Jeff
Holland said. "Does that mean that with a smaller crowd there wouldn't
have
been a problem? I don't think so. If we have 5,000 people in attendance
or
50, the main thing is to have the game go smoothly."
Many school administrators and coaches believe the sport itself as well
as
the proximity of spectator seating to the field of play can dictate the
likelihood of interference. Soccer, baseball and basketball were singled
out
by those interviewed as sports where problems are most apt to occur.
"It's a minor problem in all of [the sports], but soccer and baseball
parents and fans are very, very passionate about their sport," Fletcher
athletic director Joe Reynolds said. "You also have a lot going on in
basketball because of how close the fans are [to the game]."
While incidents reported at local high schools remain relatively few,
Nease
athletic director Glenn Aspinwall said national organizations for school
athletics personnel have begun to address the issue. At a recent seminar
sponsored by one association, Aspinwall attended a session designed to
teach
administrators how to defend themselves from physical attacks by parents
or
spectators. In that presentation, Aspinwall said, soccer was singled out
as
sport where unruly fan behavior was likely.
With that in mind, Aspinwall, whose Nease team was the opponent at the
incident at Orange Park, reviewed his school's procedures after that
game
with principal Bob Schiavone. Those procedures specify that at least one
school administrator will be at all athletic contests and uniformed
security
will be present for the most well-attended events. Aspinwall and
Schiavone
concluded these procedures, in place without any known exceptions at all
local high schools, are adequate to address any crowd behavior that can
reasonably be foreseen.
That viewpoint is shared by the vast majority of athletics
administrators at
area high schools. None of the coaches or athletic directors contacted
expressed concern that what they see as isolated acts of spectator
violence
should result in tighter security measures in all situations.
"I think the plan we have now is a good one and we're going to stick
with
it," Holland said. "If there's somebody in the stands who wants to come
out
of the stands, there's opportunity for them to do that -- I don't care
how
good your plan is. [Uniformed security] is more a way to control things
after they've been done than a way to prevent them from happening."
Staff writer Laurie Cason can be reached at
(904) 359-4491.
This story can be found on Jacksonville.com at
http://www.jacksonville.com/tu-online/stories/020403/hig_11653258.shtml
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Soccer is a matter
of Life or Death? Actually in many parts of the world it's more
important than that. |
On the 13th of February 2000 a man died in the Intensive Care in Kenya.
The doctor wanted to watch the finale of the Africa Cup before operating
his patient. But the final game between Cameroon - Nigeria took more
then 120 minutes and went to penalty kicks before there was a winner. In
the mean time the patient died.
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Aly Wagner comes of age |
Will she change the face of US women's socccer?
“I think that it’s only a matter of time before she is the WUSA Player
of the Year.
Down the line I’m sure that she will eventually come under
consideration for best player at a World Cup or Olympic games” --
Jerry Smith, Santa Clara head coach.
by Llew Llewellyn
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This article is
on-line at the CyberSoccerNews website at
http://www.cybersoccernews.com/
Thanks to CyberSoccerNews for allowing us to reprint it
in the NASL newsletter.
February 5, 2003 (CSA) -- In what Spirit general
manager Dave Presher called “one of the worst kept secrets in history,”
San Diego left no doubt and took Santa Clara and U.S. national team
midfielder Aly Wagner as the first overall pick in Sunday’s WUSA draft.
So highly does the Spirit think of the 22-year-old
Wagner that they executed the biggest trade in WUSA’s short history,
swapping the second overall 2003 draft pick, two starting players, and a
reserve to the New York Power in return for an aging defender, a rookie,
and the advancement of a single place in the draft.
Wagner has been touted as the biggest midfield talent
yet to emerge from the American women’s soccer scene, a true “number
ten.“ Her teammates and coaches all praise her in terms that haven’t
been heard around U.S. soccer circles since the emergence of Claudio
Reyna and Tab Ramos.
“The attacking midfielder, men or women, is a key
position that is very difficult to develop because it takes a variety of
creativity, skill, vision and a real instinct for creating and scoring
goals,” said Presher a few days after watching Wagner play Japan at
Torero Stadium, the home of the Spirit. “In the American professional
game, including MLS, foreign players fill that position. [We took] the
opportunity to pick what we see as the best American player ever in that
position.
“If we have that player in place, then it suddenly
makes all the players around her much better. We thought it was
important for us to find that player, and they are very difficult to
find. There are just a handful of them in the world.”
April Heinrichs, head coach for the U.S. Women’s National
Team, sees Wagner as a player that could fill different roles on the
team.
“Aly is a young player that we are still developing in a lot
of roles and you may see her in a couple of different slots on the
team,” Heinrichs said. “If we want to pigeonhole her, she’s the creative
attacking center mid and she has the ability to spray the ball around
the park and serve the ball with texture on every pass. The players love
receiving balls from Aly Wagner.”
Indeed they do. Wagner’s comfort level on the ball
allows her the luxury to think about where to send the ball when she
receives it, rather than how to handle it.
“She is technical enough to no longer be concerned
about the ball. Ninety-nine percent of the players I have coached in the
last 20 years spend so much time thinking about the ball that they are
not thinking about the game,” said Wagner’s college and U.S. U-21 coach
Jerry Smith. “Aly rarely thinks about the ball.
“There is not a ball that doesn’t come to her where she
is wondering how to collect it, manipulate it and do something with it.
She is so comfortable on the ball that she never thinks about it, she
just thinks about the game and that puts her a step ahead of most
players.”
U.S. standout defender Brandi Chastain has known Aly
for the past decade and has nothing but praise for the young player.
“I think that her greatest quality, besides her passion
for the game, is that she sees it all on a more complex level,” Chastain
said. ”Her balls have texture. They don’t just go straight with whatever
surface. She chooses the surface, the bend, or pace.
“That’s special.”
So, who is Alyson Kay Wagner?
Mom and the Mercury
Wagner starting playing in her hometown of San Jose at
the age of five with the Central Valley Mercury of the Central Santa
Clara Valley Youth Soccer League. Initially under the guidance of her
mother Vicky Wagner, Aly was following in the footsteps of her two
brothers Jeff and Jered, and her sister Sam, who later went on to play
soccer at UC Berkeley.
In a remarkable streak, Aly was to stay with the
Mercury for 14 years with her mother, and later her father Dennis, who
had coached Sam Wagner and the Central Valley Express to the U-17 girls
national championship in 1995. The Mercury became one of the top youth
teams in the country, winning the U.S. Youth Soccer National
Championships for an unprecedented three years running between 1996-98.
“I had spent a couple of years coaching her older
sister, and when she turned old enough to play, her dad took Sam, and I
stayed with Aly and finished up with her when she was 18,” said Vicky
Wagner sitting in the lobby of a San Diego hotel the day before the U.S.
game against Japan, while a table away Aly and her father intently
watched a NFL playoff game on a nearby big-screen TV.
“For the first year she played coed, then started
playing all girls and we were pretty successful,” Vicky Wagner said. “At
that age you always have one or two players on the team, someone who can
play defense and someone who can move the ball, and you are successful.
“In the last game of her U-7 season, we had a playoff
game, which when I look back now was ridiculous. The league had two
undefeated teams, which happened to meet at the end of the season, and
they battled each other to a 7-7 tie and Aly scored all seven goals. A
prime example of what U-7 soccer should not be.
“Her two best friends in soccer were on the other
team, and their father came to me and said that it was ridiculous and
why didn’t we join forces and get the girls together on a single team.
They started playing together as eight-year-olds, and by the time we
were U-10s, we were able to have competitive teams, which meant that you
could have tryouts.
“We had a pretty solid team at that point and by
the time we were U-12, we had a sudden influx of talent because we had
been pretty successful. We spent a great deal of time on skill. Just
skills, skills, skills.”
In a flash of insight, Vicky Wagner had hit upon
a method of creating competition within her team. Realizing that ball
control was an essential part of the game of soccer, she encouraged her
players to concentrate on ball juggling and instituted the “juggling
ladder” as a way for her young players to pit their control skills
against each other.
The ladder consisted of a yardstick and wooden
clothespins marked with players names. After a basic order was
established, every practice would begin with juggling challenges, with a
lower player challenging a higher ranked player up the ladder. They
would juggle against each other three times, and if a lower ranked
player beat the higher ranked one, then their clothespin was moved above
the challenged player.
“The girls competed against each other every
practice and that became a real focal point of something that they could
do at home,” Vicky Wagner said. “We would send them home in the summer
when they weren’t on teams with juggle challenges. They would have to
juggle with tennis balls, left foot, right foot.
“I came up with the idea and they had to tell me
where they were when they came back. They spent a good deal of time just
touching the ball. I guess that made them a little bit special.”
The girls could juggle the ball with 100 touches by age
8 or 9, and Aly could do 1,500 touches by age 10. The idea of being
comfortable on the ball was to pay huge dividends down the road.
“That was an awesome thing that turned juggling into a
competitive event,” said Aly. “I loved it and always wanted to be at the
top of the juggling ladder. It spurred me on even more to be a better
juggler.
“Then she hired the trainer, which was a huge thing for
us.”
After coaching the Mercury for several years, Vicky
Wagner realized at the U-12 age group that the team was improving so
rapidly that it was time to find someone who would be able to take the
team to another level. She contacted Santa Clara University head coach
Jerry Smith and wife Brandi Chastain.
“Aly’s mom was coaching her youth team and it came to
the point that she needed someone with more soccer experience to work
with her,” remembered Smith. “She approached Brandi and I about doing
that, but neither of us could afford as much time as it would require to
coach a youth team, but I had an assistant coach, Philippe Blin, and I
introduced the two of them.”
At that point, Vicky Wagner’s role changed from trainer
to manager.
“Philippe became the trainer because at that point I
didn’t have the ability to take them to the level they needed to go,“
Vicky Wagner said. “My job was to keep everything running smoothly and
keep a lot of really talented kids and their parents happy.”
Blin’s approach to coaching 11-year-old girls was
to treat them the same way he treated the young women he coached at
Santa Clara University, where he was instrumental in leading them
through their national championships.
“He came from a college program and early on he
started to train us the way that college teams train, [although]
obviously not at the same level,” Aly Wagner said. “But it gave us a
glimpse into the future and we all became better players because of it.”
According to Vicky Wagner, Blin’s expectation
level was high.
“Philippe was a wonderful trainer and he brought
them to a level early on that most teams would never reach, “she said.
“Practices were very business-like and you had to perform. There was a
lot of competition on the team.”
The Wagner-led Mercury had become the team to
join in the San Jose area. They took numerous local, area and state
titles and produced an astonishing number of players who went on to
become top-flight college players and vital members of both WUSA and
U.S. women’s teams.
“The team attracted incredibly talented players,”
remembered Vicky Wagner. “Danielle Slaton [first overall pick in the
2002 WUSA draft], Anna Krause who plays for the San Diego Spirit, and
Krista and Breana Boling who were stars in their own right at UCLA.
“Shaelyn Fernandes, who was the goalie at USC and
who is about to marry [2002 Heisman Trophy Winner] Carson Palmer. We had
Marcia Wallis, who went to Stanford, and Katy MacBain at Texas.
Christina Jacobs played for San Diego State. I think we had 13-14 girls
who ended up at Division 1 schools.
When the Mercury took their third national title,
Aly was forced to sit out the final game after suffering an ACL injury
while practicing with the U.S. U-20 national team. The injury -- her
second ACL surgery -- not only required her to miss the U-18 title
match, but also had repercussions in her freshman year as a college
player.
To read the rest of the article including the
college years and recent professional draft go to:
http://www.cybersoccernews.com/uswomen/030205wagnerpt2.shtml
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Directions to
Fields - Updated for 2003 School Season |
Tom
Coatoam with NASOA has provided us with an updated list of directions to
all the high school and middle school soccer fields in North Alabama.
It is posted on-line at
http://www.nasl.com/hs/hs_directions.htm
Our thanks go out to Tom and NASOA
for their help. |
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NASL
NEWSLETTER:
You
may sign up for the NASL e-mail list and also provide changes (including
removing your name from the list) to your
current e-mail address and phone numbers by using this form at
http://www.nasl.com/Email.htm
This is our means of keeping the local soccer community up-to-date on
events and items of interest. If
you have something to contribute please e-mail me at dsports@hiwaay.net
All of the above information and more is on-line at http://www.nasl.com
Thanks
for being involved in soccer in Alabama.
Ken Gamble - NASL Secretary
"Next Goal Wins!" |
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