Showing posts with label Scotland. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Scotland. Show all posts

Monday, 17 March 2014

Hello and belated welcome to this week's slightly later blog. There's been so much going behind the scenes that I found it difficult to come up with a topic for the blog. Thankfully some of the other committee members came up with some great ideas, which you'll be reading over the next few weeks, but this week's comes from Martin Jack (Jacky) who is Head Coach of the Giffnock SC Amateurs and expert in the world of business. Here's what Jacky has to say on similarities between the worlds of sport and business:


As volunteer coaches we all have a day job and a love of football which brings us together at Giffnock Soccer Centre come rain hail or shine. We’re encouraged to attend Scottish FA courses and our own CPD nights to make us better as coaches, improve the quality of coaching of the young people under our wing and take the club forward. However, we bring a great deal of experience from our day job too and if we can channel that into our coaching then we can all become better as a club.

I set up in business almost eight years ago and, as a small business, have had a fair share of ups and downs during that time. If anything, I’ve learned more from the bumps and bruises along the way than the successes, and managed to evolve the business to meet the challenges faced as a result.

I’ve also been a football coach for the past eighteen years with The Giffnock Soccer Centre, starting with boys when they were 6 years old until this season when we kicked off in the amateur leagues.

When you’re running a youth or amateur team you don’t have the luxury to buy in big name stars to fill in gaps in your squad. If you’re lucky some of the team will know some mates who are interested in coming along. As a coach you have to look at the talent you have and blend it into the 11 key positions that any team requires. 

Square peg
Goalkeepers are specialists and generally it’s difficult to transform an outfield player into a good goalkeeper and I’ve yet to experience a good goalkeeper I’d prefer to have somewhere out on the pitch.

In business there are some skill sets you just can’t ask either yourself, if you are a sole trader, or your staff to undertake because basically it’s counter productive to the objectives of the company. So in this instance businesses need to consider outsourcing the ‘goalie’ duties.

For the outfield positions you have defenders, midfielders and attackers. Some defenders can easily play in midfield, midfielders may be attack minded or defensive in nature and attackers are generally selfish buggers who want the glory of scoring the goals and won’t play anywhere else.

In business you may have to look at the balance of the workload ahead of you and blend the current team into the tasks required. These can change on a regular basis so you may have to use the substitutes or move people about. Whatever the solution, those performing the tasks need to feel comfortable. Stretched yes, but not to the point where they are scared to do something in case it’s wrong.

You may need to be more aggressive in your sales campaign and this is where you need some of the selfish mentality that goes with good forwards. They may not score every time but as long as they continue to knock on the door and make themselves available the goals will eventually come along.

The midfield is the engine room of the team offering one part creativity, one part energy. Maximising the opportunities available while making sure the defensive line is holding out. Without the creativity the chances won’t come along for the attackers; without the defensive cover the foundations of the team may well fall apart.

Without a good defence a team is nothing. If you don’t concede goals, chances are one of the opportunities created during the game will be taken and the team can go away with a winning bonus. But good defence isn’t just about the back three or four. It’s about the whole team defending right across the park. Knowing where they should be when they have lost possession, tracking the runs, making sure there are no gaps for the opposition to get into, keeping a clean sheet.

Good companies have staff who will defend their every action knowing it’s best for the long term objectives of the company. They know that everyone else want the company to succeed. They know they sometimes have to make sacrifices to guarantee the long term goals.

Giffnock Amateurs
From a business perspective that’s about doing your research, giving everybody the tools to work to their capability and knowing what the opposition is doing and counteracting any moves they make with your own. Also helps if the manager looks at the bigger picture ahead rather than worry about what went on a few minutes earlier. The past as they say is history. Learn from it quickly and move on.

As a football team we just don’t walk onto the park and play ninety minutes of kick ball.

We train hard before the start of the season. 
We play friendlies to iron out the cob-webs and to try out players in different positions, shape the team differently and find out who has the bottle for the matches ahead. 
All season long we train each week and coach players to make them that little bit better. We don't rely on the pre-season work several months earlier.
Small steps which when taken over the course of the season will add maybe 10% to each player’s performance.

There is so much sport can learn from business. However, there is also an awful lot that business can learn from sport, even at an amateur level too.

Friday, 20 December 2013

Exclusive Guillem Balague interview with Giffnock SC



Guillem Ballague, author/journalist/pundit for Sky Sports Spanish football, recently visited Glasgow as part of his UK tour talking to audiences about his new book 'Messi' and other football topics. Guillem very generously agreed to chat with me before the show and I asked him some questions about developing styles at clubs and growing players for the game.



George: Joe Habib asked: 'would it be possible or how would it be possible to implement a football model and youth system in Scotland similar to the Spanish set-up? Choosing players based on technique and skill rather than just strength and athleticism. Would this work in Scotland?Can Scotland learn to play like Spain, with an emphasis on technique over physique, and if, so how would it be possible?'

Guillem: Scotland, England and other countries, need to stop looking to abroad. Whatever you want to do, whatever style you want to play, it is all about the coaching; teaching the kids how to play with the ball. Although there is perhaps a culture of 'play it long' or 'be physical', this can change and it may take a generation or two but coaches must try to teach the kids to understand the game and the technique required to play the game.
In Spain, Barcelona pick small, technical players and Espanyol pick big, physical players- neither is right or wrong. Around about 10 - 12 years old is where the process of selection starts and there are differences and the important thing is: who is making the decisions on the players being picked.

George: Is it fair to say that Messi is a product of Barcelona, or could Messi have developed in to the player he is anywhere else in the world?

Guillem: Messi has one move and it would work everywhere- he is like a rock falling down a hill, he just picks up speed and goes past or through obstacles. He picks the ball up in the last third and runs at players towards the goal- Barcelona have not changed this, it's what he has always done, rather Messi has changed Barcelona. In Britain, he would have been a winger but perhaps coaches would have misunderstood his talents- it was Guardiola who recognised his talents and put Messi at the centre of the team. Barcelona is a team built around Messi's talents and not the other way around.

George: All the best teams: Milan, Liverpool, Barcelona have had an identifiable style with their success. Would you agree and how important is having a style/philosophy to being not only successful but hailed as a great side?

Guillem: I completely agree. However, you don't always get it right the first time, you have to make mistakes to learn, and what you need is a philosophy to work toward- that allows you to get players and coaches who fit your team.
With Barcelona it wasn't 'A-B-C: things all worked', they got it right, got it wrong and got it right again. What Barcelona did get right was having all the youth teams, right through to the first team, playing in the same way. They also got the best players around. When you get this right you end up winning.
But a philosophy is not something that you get today and it starts to work tomorrow, you will be tested when things go wrong and you have to stick with your philosophy, your plans. This is what Barcelona has done.

George: With that in mind: if you were to manage a team, how would they play?

Guillem: You have to want to be the protagonist, you want to entertain people. To do this, you have to build from the back. You need centre-backs who can pass and centre-midfielders who get into the opposition box. Although, I'd like my team to play with a bit more pace than certain years of Guardiola's team.

George: At my club I work with youngsters and wonder is it more important to emphasise learning or winning? And at what age should results start to matter?

Guillem: Results always matter. Even from five years old the result counts BUT it is not, cannot be, the most important thing. You need to strike a balance, which is difficult to do, but you have to look at it like this: are you a professional club who trains professional players or a club that wants to develop people?
Being a professional player is something completely different but as a young player you learn so many things, for example discipline and delivering your ambitions. Even at Barcelona, coaches want their teams to win.

George: Finally, with it being the festive season- what are your favourite memories of Xmas/New Year?

Guillem: I love the tradition, to be with my family and seeing the start of a new year. Although, I remember one year I was working in Liverpool and everyone goes out of the pub before coming back in at midnight- I thought this was crazy but good!


Guillem and his guest Albert Ferrer (ex-Barcelona) and Gab Marcotti were kind enough to sign a Giffnock SC shirt for us.
Photo: My Giffnock SC shirt signed by (left to right) Gabriele Marcotti, Albert Ferrer and Guillem Balague- fantastic night and fantastic bunch of guys. We'll get the shirt hung up in Norwood or Eastwood Park. Also, I'll have a blog with my Q&A with Guillem published early next week. #footballfootballfootball


What do you think of Guillem's thoughts? Sound off in the comments section!