11th July 2007: The day after I wrote this post David Nugent signed for Portsmouth for £ 6 million. I don’t think my post loses any of it’s validity. Let me know what you think.  

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Following on from my previous post about the lack of young English talent and our coaches inability to find and nurture talent one story in this summers transfer merry go round has me gripped. Will David Nugent, Englands next centre forward find a team in our top league that wants him?

Now I have to admit I haven’t seen a lot of Nugent, reports from a freind who supports QPR and has seen him in the flesh were not encouraging and he appears to lack the natural pace of an Henry, the ball skills of a Rooney or the physical strength of a Drogba. So what is the fuss about? Lots of goals for Preston and a couple of good under 21 performances do not a top four player make. I don’t have anything against Nugent, I’m sure he’s a hardworking, honest English centre forward. It’s what he represents that bothers me. He his one of the top ten English strikers playing at the moment yet Preston can’t give him away. I will not accept that he is the best that England can produce, all top English clubs, foreign owners or not need to understand the need to find quality young English players. This reliance on quick fix foreign imports will ultimately kill the game in this country. Kids need to believe it could be “them” to develop their love of football and as every premiership team swells its ranks with more “Carlos Kickaballs” so that dream will continue to die and they will move on to a sport where they believe their dreams can come true.

This is a campaign of national importance and I will attempt to flag this blog on at least one blog for every premiership club.

I will leave you with this thought how would you feel if your club spent £7 million on David Nugent? The future of English football.

Sir Trevor Brooking is trying manfully again to come up with a plan that improves the atrocious state of youth football in this country. He is obviously a good man with the best interests of the kids, the future professional players and the long term benefit of the England team at heart. Unfortunately he will face a wall of resistence from parents and coaches who were failed players themselves, desperate to win, teaching from the ridiculous FA coaches manual looking for the ultimate “box to box” player. It’s time this changed!

At grass roots level kids football from the age of 6 is competitive, don’t let anyone tell you otherwise. Parents turn up to see their kids WIN! Coaches want their teams to WIN! The kids who initially want to play a game with a ball eventually want to WIN! Now I understand winning is ultimately what the game is about but there are technical skills that need refining that cannot be learnt while under pressure to WIN! I’ll explain, go to a park on a Sunday morning and watch any youth game, within 5 minutes I guarantee you will see a child with the ball at his feet and a couple of options. He should get his head up and look to pass to team mate, basic possession of the football. What will happen is a coach or parent will yell out, the kid will panic and launch the ball as quickly as possible almost inevitably giving it away. No chance to learn, the die is cast and possession of the ball is lost. Fast forward to any England game where we are being outplayed by more technicaly gifted players and you can see these early lessons ingrained on the English psyche, even amongst the most talented of English players. 

This WIN at all costs mentality also brings the physically stronger players to the fore, not the most gifted. The stronger children wil be indentified as “the best”. If they can tackle and barge their way through a defence terrified of getting hurt then they will be picked out. I am certain that generations of technically skillfull players are ignored or simply give up as they are pushed and kicked by the more physically developed players who give a quick fix to the parents and coaches WIN mentality. Sir Trevor must stop all competitive “League” football for any child under the age of 12 to allow their skills to develop. Let them try and make twenty passes that keep possession and if it’s given away every time encourage them to try again. Then a revelation will come, the twenty first pass finds it’s target, they find a team mate and a move develops.  That is a result bigger than 3 points and another tat trophy at the end of a competitve season launching the ball forwards to the biggest, strongest, quickest centre forward who scores 30 goals against opposition not physically capable yet of stopping him. They will catch up in the end and nothing has been learnt.

This problem then feeds the professional “development  centres” and “Acadamies” with the biggest strongest players who don’t have the skill to progress being selected and inevitably failing to make the grade. From experience at 2 premiership clubs where my son has had trials the evidence is clear. I am not a bitter father, I don’t believe my boy could have made the grade whatever system was in place it is just the approach of these elite clubs youth coaches that is so disappointing. My sons chance came at 9 years old, when Wayne Rooney was making waves at international level and it was obvious that the clubs were looking for players in the Rooney mould, at 9 years old! Were they looking at technical abilty? Control, passing, being able to use both feet, balance? I don’t think so, they were looking for strength, athleticism and arrogance if you didn’t tick those boxes it was thanks but no thanks. Fair enough, that’s their choice but those players will continue to give the ball away, eventually to be caught up physically by more talented overseas players and then be discarded to the lower leagues before their 20th birthday. Leaving the England team in the state it is currently in.

The evidence is quite clear, more children play football in England than most other countries in the world. The Premiership has the lowest percentage of home players than any country in the world. Something is drastically wrong, which country buys up young English talent the way we buy up, French, Spainish, African young talent? There isn’t one because young English talent isn’t there I won’t accept the odd exception as evidence to the contrary. Arsene Wenger, Rafa Benitez and the like know their stuff, young English players aren’t good enough. I admire Martin Jols efforts at Tottenham with English youngsters, but if Darren Bent represents the best young English talent and £16 million then my argument is sealed. David Nugent is the future England centre forward but Preston can’t give him away to a Premiership club, especially not one of the big four. Nugent for Madrid, Barcelona, or Milan? I don’t think so and that is the best our system has thrown up.

I am absolutely certain that we have English Kakas, Ronaldos, Henrys driving trucks, stacking shelves or selling houses ignored by coaches because their technical development wasn’t encouraged, smothered by the stronger kids whose early physical development allowed coaches and parents an over inflated sense of their own achievement. 

Sir Trevor you have my support but this is a bigger job than even you know and I think it is something you won’t overcome. The parents, coaches and trophy makers for the under twelves won’t allow it. A WIN in a park on a Sunday morning at all costs while the potential talent freezes on the touchline is obviously worth more than allowing that potential talent a chance to flourish and the future of football in this country.

RIP English football, you never had a chance.