Forres Area Soccer 7s

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WHY SIDELINE SCREAMING CAN STIFLE CHILDREN’S DEVELOPMENT

24th February 2016 By Forres Area Soccer 7s

This is an interesting article for all parents, coaches etc. Although an american article on soccer it helps you understand how shouting the wrong thing at a player can have an affect on their development.

 

Imagine you’re undertaking a fairly difficult task: assembling a piece of furniture with hieroglyphic
instructions, filling out An inland revenue tax Return on Jan 30th or standing on the highest rungs of a ladder painting the crown moulding in your living room with 14-foot ceilings. Think it would help if someone yelled at you during the process? Of course not.

Yet when a child tries to control a bouncing ball in a crowd of other kids, adults often believe it’s perfectly acceptable to scream “advice.” Adults who would never shout at children while they’re enjoying the playground, drawing in a coloring book, or rearranging their dollhouse, loudly instruct from the sidelines without hesitation.

When adults scream from the sidelines they’re not just invading the children’s playtime, they’re preventing children from learning the game of football in a natural manner. The shouting is detrimental to the children’s development as players and at worst can turn them off the sport entirely.

If parents want to help their children become better players, they can offer to kick the ball around with them in the backyard. But sideline instructions deny children a chance to make their own decisions, it stifles their creative instincts, and all too often the instructions are misguided.

When a player has the ball there are generally three options: dribble, pass or shoot. In the long-term, the great players are the ones who choose wisely most of the time. But if, when they’re first learning the sport, that decision is being made for them with a scream from the sideline, how can we expect them to develop the instincts they’ll need to make the split-second decisions that are so much a part of the game?

“We don’t want to turn the children into parrots waiting for someone to tell them what to do,” says John Ouellette, AYSO National Coach. “Soccer is a free-flowing game for children to enjoy and learn from playing. As an organization, we discourage sideline instruction not just from parents but also from coaches.”

During the first stage of development it is essential that the children are allowed to discover the game on their own terms. High-level coaches constantly complain that players come through the ranks dependent on instructions because they’ve been bossed around in the early stages — being told where to run and when to pass. They also cite a dearth of truly creative players — the ones with the ability to make the unpredictable moves — blaming the lack of freedom children are afforded during their early years.

Much of the sideline screaming comes from ignorance about the stages of development. While most parents would know that addition and subtraction must be mastered before algebra is introduced, at the game they often expect children to perform maneuvers they are simply not capable of.

AYSO Hall of Famer Sigi Schmid is a former youth coach who coached UCLA to an NCAA title before entering the MLS ranks and winning a crown with the Los Angeles Galaxy. He stresses that coaches and parents must appreciate how young players learn the game.
Schmid says, “The first thing is, ‘It’s me and the ball.’ The second is, ‘It’s me and the ball and where’s the opponent?’ Then it’s, ‘It’s me and the ball, and where’s the opponent, where’s my teammate?’ He’s taking on more information. That’s how he develops.”
The screams from the sideline interfere with this process — besides often being misguided and counterproductive. To take a few examples:
“PASS IT! PASS IT!” Discouraging dribbling in the early years is like telling toddlers to shut up when they’re learning to speak. Young players should be encouraged to dribble — because dribbling is the first step to mastering all ball skills — and there are far better ways to introduce a passing game when children are ready to comprehend teamwork. The passing game enters football at the later stages and one will notice that the children themselves will ask each other for the ball.

SPREAD OUT! Just because the first years of youth football look chaotic doesn’t mean the children aren’t learning. In fact, it’s perfectly fine that they all chase the ball in a swarm. Sooner or later they’ll figure out how to take advantage of time and space. They’ll comprehend positioning by exploring the field, not by being treated like chess pieces.
* SHOOT! SHOOT! SHOOT! This usually comes from an ear-piercing parent-coach chorus as a child dribbles toward the goal and I have little doubt that were it eliminated from the sidelines we’d see more goals in the youth game.
Even the youngest, most novice player knows they are supposed to shoot the ball to score. And can it possibly help a child perform the difficult task of striking the ball while running as fast as they can by being screamed at during the process?

Moreover, the “shoot” scream encourages players to pull the trigger earlier than they should. How do great players score on breakaways? They usually wait until they get close to the goalkeeper. It’s much harder for the keeper to save a shot from four yards away than from 15. There’s also the option of rounding the keeper, especially when a patient attacker forces the keeper to commit.

Shooting advice I often hear from high-level players is not to rush the shot — that players often have a little more time than they realize. As young players learn to cope with the high-pressure clear to young players which goal their team is aiming at. But what I’m talking about is the outrage that often greets a smart young player who retreats with the ball to move out of the bunch. Watch a game played by sophisticated players and you’ll find that they’re constantly moving the ball in all directions to find space and time.

Young players taking the ball away from the crowd are the clever ones. Will they sometimes put their team at risk? Maybe. But so what? Giving up a goal in a U-8 game isn’t nearly as important as allowing young players how to figure out how to keep possession.

“ATTACK THE BALL!” or “GO GET HIM!” is apparently meant to encourage a defending player to charge an opponent who has the ball at their feet. But in football, the defender wants to jockey into a good position to keep the attacker at bay. He wants to avoid over-committing and instead needs to figure out the right time to get a chance at the ball. It’s a matter of positioning and timing that players master by facing the situation over and over again — not by taking cues from the sideline.

Perhaps the inclination to scream instructions comes from a well-intentioned desire to help children “learn.” But when does screaming at children help educate them? When a child wanders toward a busy street, moves too close to a hot oven, or starts beating on little brother — OK, that might warrant a roar.

But does screaming at a child while you’re assisting him with math homework help? Very doubtful. And certainly children should be allowed to play football without getting yelled at. Then they’ll be able to pay attention to the best teacher of all: the game itself.
By Mike Woitalla

Source: http://www.grf-football.co.uk/

 

Filed Under: News

2016 Team Lists Revealed

21st February 2016 By Forres Area Soccer 7s

Development 4s – Junior Section – Sponsored by The Olive Tree Cafe 

Dylan Fraser
Keira Simpson
Luca Stuart
Lucas Hizzett
Erin Bryceland
Liam Riddoch
Isaac Simmons
Charlie Allan
Eva Exon
Tom Rhind
Owen Morrison
Murray Steele
Rhylee Evans
Lewis Dawson
Alex Mackay
Ben Fraser-Pulford
Leo Grant
Jack Cameron
Ben Fraser pulford
Bradley George
Lucas Hizzett
Ayden Boseley

Super 5s – Intermediate Section

Cluny Estate Agents

Ryan Curran
Ower Matheson
Ben Ross
Adam Rhind
Robbie Malone
Calvin Maccoll

Firthview Windows

Sandy Stewart
Ashton Bayliss
James Neary
Kyle Simpson
Sam McClatchey
Greg Curry
Jake Greenhorn

Credit Union

Mitchell Smith
Nico Giscombe
Matthew Saunders
Aydan Owen
Aiden Mcewan
Joe Miller
Austin de Oliveira

Tom Ross & Sons  Funeral Directors

Ciaran Oliver
Kenzi Brougj
Connor Finlayson
Leo Brailsford
Brodie Finlayson
Dylan Mcnally

Gardner Financial Services

Ethan Rushby
Jake Nicoll
Owen Royan
Hayden Windsor
Jack Gray
Grant Napier

Pedigreed Cars

Davie Lawrence
Ewan McRae
Diarmuid MacFarlane
Finn Ross
James Wilson
Luca Abbate

Lisas Barbers Shop

Finlay Wallace
Mya Cameron
Alec Shaw
Angus Mackintosh
Corin Milne
Abdul Bah
Cameron Hamer

Sinclair Taylor Building Services

Oscar Dawson
Ben Philip
Lewis Smith
Aidan McCairn
Alfie Gordon
Connor Bryceland

Costa Coffee (Forres)

Isaacc Douglas
Kaiden Falconer
Noah Murray
Victor Stoczkowski
Ben Butler
Tyler Smith

Macleans Highland Bakery

Ethan Lynch
Mackenzie Carter
Andrew Conti
Jack Hay
Ruairidh Innes
Archie Smith

 

Soccer 7s – Senior Section

 

Beaver Travel

Louie Martin-Goodall
Jamie Fraser
James McPartlin
Euan Dawson
Logan Coull
Eren Duff
Nathan Morrison
Eren Duff
Finlay Sharp
Kyle Esson
Jake Farquhar

GF Job Ltd

Matthew Hepburn
Aaron Walker
Logan de Oliveira
Liam Gordon
Donald Johnstone
Lewis Mcintosh
Jack Millar
Lachlan Innes
William Jack
Nathan Mcnally

Forres Dental Care

Conor Mckay
Kaiden Phillips
Joshua Williams
Josh Murray
Tommy Foster
Tom Barron
Jacob Mcarthur
Callum Machray
Adam Souter
Mathew Mcgillivray

Grigor & Young

Neo Hatch
Samson Janousek
Daniel Henderson
Scott Miller
Ben Shallicker
Toby clark
Aidan Matthews
Callum Ferrett
Maximilian Theman
Lennon Porter

 

Coaches will try to be in contact with you before Sunday, if you haven’t heard from a coach before Sunday, please arrive at the club for the following times:

Development 4s – 10:45 for 11:00 Start

Super 5s & Soccer 7s 12:15 for 12:30 Start

If your child is not showing on the above list and you think you have registered please contact Shaun Moat -Chairman via email: shaun.moat@forres-soccer7s.co.uk

If you wish to sign up your children, you still have time click here to complete our registration and payment process.

Filed Under: News Tagged With: 2016 Teams, Teams

New Club Shop

14th February 2016 By Forres Area Soccer 7s

You can now purchase your official club merchandise.  Adult hoodie

We have Hoodies (Adult & Kids), T-Shirts (Kids), Ski Hats (Adult and Kids),Water Bottles (2 Sizes), Gym Bag, Scarfs, Mugs and Adult Jackets.

Just click here to place your orders online.

Orders will be placed with our suppliers once a month and will be ready to collect in around 10 days, but we will drop you an email to say its ready to collect.

Filed Under: News

Soccer7s wants to help grow local business

29th January 2016 By Forres Area Soccer 7s

Forres Area Soccer 7s is launching an practical initiative to help grow local business.

The club is inviting local businesses to join its discount scheme, by offering discounts and offers to club staff, players members and/or their parents . The scheme is intended to enable businesses to increase footfall by reminding club members of the excellent variety of local traders operating in the Forres area.

How the scheme works

It is simple and free for local businesses to join. Discounts will be listed on the clubs website (www.forres-soccer7s.co.uk). Many types of business can participate in the scheme and different offers16011120920-proof or discounts could be given to cardholders, for example:

  • % reductions
  • Money off
  • 2 for 1
  • Discounted membership
  • Free trial
  • Seasonal offers

Participating businesses will be issued with promotional material. We also plan to post via social media regular updates of new offers .

How local businesses can take part

To take part, please email office@forres-soccer7s.co.uk

 

Filed Under: News Tagged With: Discount Scheme

Soccer 7s bag charity cash

25th January 2016 By Forres Area Soccer 7s

co-operative-foodFORRES Area Soccer Sevens is in the money after bagging a £500 windfall from a local supermarket.

The money was donated to the community group from the Co-op Community Fund which uses money through carrier bag charges and sales in the company’s food stores.

The Soccer 7s were shortlisted and the final three were voted on by Co-op members.

Shaun Moat, chairman of the Soccer 7s which meets every Sunday in Grant Park said: “ We are really pleased that local co-op members have voted for us and that we have come out top. The money will be used for further enhancement of the equipment we have purchased for this forthcoming season.”

Shaun Moat, chairman of Forres Soccer 7sThe new season begins on February 14.

Shaun added: “We are still accepting children to sign up. They just need to go to www.forres-soccer7s.co.uk but they need to be quick to reserve a place in this season’s teams.

In total the Co-op is distributing over £750,000.

John McNeill, Managing Director for The Co-operative Food in Scotland, said: “From defibrillators to day care centres and schools to scout groups, as a community retailer we want to enable members, colleagues, customers and communities across Scotland to make a difference locally. “The Co-op shares the aspiration of seeing a reduction in the number of single-use carrier bags in circulation. In addition, hundreds of local groups and organisations are set to receive a much needed funding boost – together, we are reducing, reusing, recycling and, reinvesting in our communities.”

 

Filed Under: News, Uncategorised

Seeking new coaches

21st January 2016 By Forres Area Soccer 7s

Paul Lynch will help new coaches become part of the S7s team.

Paul Lynch will help new coaches become part of the S7s team.

Forres Area Soccer 7s is appealing to energetic and enthusiastic people to come forward to join the club to help coach the youngsters.

In recent months, we have  lost a number of helpers due to their own children moving on. We need around 20 new coaches to ensure the sessions which take place every Sunday and once during the week, run smoothly.

Shaun Moat, chairman of the club explained: “Traditionally we have often had parents of children who attend the club becoming coaches and volunteering, but we have had quite a few children move on from the club due to their age and the parents have decided to go too.

“We would welcome help from anyone though, not just people whose children are involved. As long as they are enthusiastic, like kids and are happy to muck in twice a week. They don’t even need to have an interest in football. They just need to be able to get the kids excited about the sport. We have great training systems for coaches, so nobody would be left not being able to add value to the group.”

Forres Area Soccer 7s understand the importance of keeping kids active and creates a foundation for young players who wish to progress their footballing career and help provide a stepping stone to more advanced development.

The club caters for children from 4 to 12 years old.

After a winter break, the Soccer 7s will return at Grant Park on February 14 and membership for the club is booming.

“Coupled with the fact that we have lost coaches, we are also looking at a number of new youngsters starting in February,” explained Shaun, “so we need to make sure we can cater for all these active kids.”

To find out more about becoming a coach contact Paul Lynch Football Development Officer on 07446053780 or email paul.lynch@forres-soccer7s.co.uk

Filed Under: News

Merry Christmas and & Happy New Year

24th December 2015 By Forres Area Soccer 7s

On behalf of the club I want to wish all past and present players, parents, merry-christmas-text-art-pngvolunteers and sponsors a Merry Christmas and a Happy New Year.

At Soccer 7s HQ we are looking forward the rest during the festive period but will be busy again in the new year with final preparation for the new season starting again on 14th Feb 2016.

Christmas Wishes

The Board of Forres Area Soccer 7s

Filed Under: News

New Health & Safety Officer

20th December 2015 By Forres Area Soccer 7s

We are pleased to announce that our Club Secretary Grant Crawford hasnebosh logo passed his NEBOSH Occupational Health and Safety course.

Grant will now be appointed as our  Health and Safety Officer and is now looking at our  paperwork and processes to ensure we continue to operate at the highest standard possible.

 

Shaun Moat Chairman said ” Well Done to Grant as I know he has worked hard to pass this course. It is also great for the club that we have a qualified health and safety officer.”

Filed Under: News

Porridge and Rice

14th December 2015 By Forres Area Soccer 7s

Tomorrow (Tuesday 15th Dec) some more of the kit we donated to Porridge and Rice Taking Football to Africa and Beyond Appeal will be delivered to a charity Porridge and Rice.

They will deliver the items to schools in Nairobi, Kenya.

 Porridge & Rice Vision

To enable each child in the Nairobi slums to receive an education that provides the skills to break the cycle of poverty and deprivation by partnering with schools to remove barriers to education and supplying resources for education.

In the slums, unemployment levels are estimated at over 50% and many families live on as little as a few British Pounds a week. In addition, levels of health and education are low.

Handouts provide relief but not a long term solution. At Porridge and Rice, we believe that the long term solution to breaking the cycle of poverty and deprivation is education.

A good education provides children with the tools to build a better future for themselves and their communities. It enables children to become adults that can direct and shape their own lives rather than being trapped in poverty and dependent on charity.

Porridge and Rice partners with schools committed to providing their pupils with a good education. Porridge and Rice does not seek to take over and run schools but rather to partner with schools with committed, strong leadership to remove barriers to education like hunger and sickness, and provide resources needed to deliver education like chalk, desks and classrooms.

Porridge and Rice partners with schools that serve children from the Nairobi slums. They are not government funded schools, in fact, they are often referred to as informal schools because they are registered as self-help groups as opposed to Department of Education schools. They are run by dedicated individuals reaching out to those that would otherwise not receive an education. They obtain their funding by charging school fees.

 

The problem is that many parents struggle to pay the school fees with some failing completely or taking a long time. The result is that these schools never know from month to month how much money they will have and whether they can meet basic commitments such as teachers’ salaries and rent.

The individuals that run the schools themselves often struggle to meet their own personal expenses as the schools do not consistently generate enough income to pay the teachers let alone the head and deputy head.

Porridge and Rice currently partner with three schools,Excel Emmanuel, Glad Kids, and Lizpal and aims to add at least a school a year.

The broad aim of Porridge and Rice is to enable each of these schools to provide a quality education to each of its pupils, as already stated, by removing barriers to education and also by providing resources that facilitate education as explained in detail by Our Mission and Our Values.

To Find Out More : Click Here

 

Filed Under: News Tagged With: Charity

Sport Relief 2016

10th December 2015 By Forres Area Soccer 7s

Forres Area Soccer 7s will be the place to be to take part in Sport
Relief 2016 next March.

People in nearby towns and villages are being encouraged to make aIMG_7269 day of the event and head to the Moray town and those who sign up for the Soccer 7s event before the end of December will get 50 per cent off their entry.

The charity is associated with Comic Relief and the Soccer 7s with the help of the Forres Harriers will be running the event on March 20th.

Shaun Moat, chairman of the Soccer 7s said: “It’s great for us to be involved with this Sport Relief event. They put out a plea for help as there were no events in Moray so the board thought it would be great to get in on the action.”

He added: “We really want to make the best out of the event so we are contacting other sport groups to see if they want to have a stand or have ideas to make it a big day out for people. “The nearest events to us are in Aberdeen and Fortrose so we are hoping to attract people from a bit further afield.” Fifty per cent of the money raised at the events funds projects in the world’s poorest communities and the other 50 per cent is used in the UK.
The Soccer 7’s event which will take place in Grant Park is one of over 1,000 events taking place up and down the country.
But Shaun stressed you don’t need to be a fitness fanatic to take part.
“We are encouraging anyone at all to take part. There are different levels. For example, you can choose from one mile, three miles or six miles depending on your ability.
“However whilst the event is not until March, people should get registered now at www.sportrelief.com/events – so they can save money on their entry fee.”

Filed Under: News Tagged With: Fundraising

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Forres Area Soccer 7s are a charity operating in Scotland registered with the Office of the Scottish Charity Regulator under number SC046780
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