James Askwith

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James Askwith

James Askwith

@james_askwith

This has changed so often I’m not sure what to put anymore.

Newcastle upon Tyne 가입일 Kasım 2009
753 팔로잉471 팔로워
James Askwith
James Askwith@james_askwith·
@ToonPolls I think he’s a very good coach of players but he doesn’t give off the passion the fans crave and that they can get behind. He’s almost too polished and reserved. Look at Arteta, Pep, Klopp etc. Real leaders that people will follow!
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James Askwith
James Askwith@james_askwith·
@ToonPolls I think slightly different. I think the fans need to see a genuine leader that they can get behind. In this case it was Amanda and Mehrdad. In the past it’s been Benitez, Hughton, Robson and Keegan with Shearer as well. I don’t think Howe is a natural leader that the fans need
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Toon Polls
Toon Polls@ToonPolls·
I genuinely think the disconnect that seems to exist between the club and certain sections of the fanbase started when Amanda and Mehrdad left in 2024. They were excellent in their role as figureheads that fans really warmed to. Alll of the significant appointments since haven’t been able to replicate that relationship with fans. At a club like ours, that’s a missed opportunity in my view. #NUFC
Toon Polls tweet media
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The Away Fans
The Away Fans@theawayfans·
Harry Kane is 32 years old, married to his childhood sweetheart, has four children, runs his own mental health foundation, and donates regularly to armed forces and mental health charities. He doesn't drink, doesn't smoke, and has spent his entire career in the spotlight without a single scandal attached to his name. On the pitch, the numbers are extraordinary. His country's all-time top scorer. His boyhood club's all-time top scorer. Six Golden Boots, four in the Premier League, one at a World Cup. Figures that the vast majority of strikers will never get close to. And yet he remains one of the most written-off and underappreciated players of his generation. A man who has devoted everything to club and country, never once put a foot wrong off the pitch, and embodies every quality you could want from a professional footballer. If you're looking for a role model, it doesn't get much cleaner than this. The fact it even needs pointing out says everything.
The Away Fans tweet media
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Frank Bruno MBE 🇬🇧
Frank Bruno MBE 🇬🇧@frankbrunoboxer·
Morning Happy St Georges Day despite all the negative issues going on in our country I still love this country. I have travelled the World and yes for a quick fix there are some amazing and far better places. But to live, rain snow & sun and more important the people you cannot beat good old England!
Frank Bruno MBE 🇬🇧 tweet media
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Bernardo Faria
Bernardo Faria@BernardoFariaJJ·
Beginners are the heart of every Jiu-Jitsu school. Many times I see schools that don’t have a good beginners or fundamentals program. Then someone starts Jiu-Jitsu and on the first day they’re already sparring and doing everything. Of course, there’s a very high chance they’re going to quit. It’s just too hard. They don’t know anything yet, and they’re thrown into sparring. Then they get hurt, and that’s it. Many years ago, 20 or 30 years ago, that’s how Jiu-Jitsu was. Someone would start and it was almost like fresh meat for the lions. Everyone would jump on that person and try to spar with them. And of course, most of them would quit. One of the reasons Jiu-Jitsu is growing so much today is because many schools now offer beginners classes and fundamentals classes. There’s a place for that new person. No sparring, a controlled environment, an easier way to learn. Then, step by step, they can progress and start sparring when they’re ready. I just wanted to share this because it’s very important for our entire community to understand: Beginners are the heart of every Jiu-Jitsu school. If you don’t have a good beginners program, it’s going to be very hard to grow Jiu-Jitsu overall. What are your thoughts?
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Jay Bates
Jay Bates@_Batesy_·
Shock another post about Managers job needing eufa B qual 🙈 wtf does this matter? 10 years now into management, said would do me B never did as aboustley no need for it. However clubs think they better with someone qualified. Rather have an ex playe all day!! Proper rant 🤯
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James Askwith
James Askwith@james_askwith·
@coach_kevin_m This season I’ve had to give a few of the better players a bit more game time to try and balance the results against giving every player the same amount of time. The players have been absolutely fine with it and enjoyed the season a lot more. However, the parents haven’t.
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James Askwith
James Askwith@james_askwith·
@coach_kevin_m I don’t think coaches are confused. I experienced it myself last season with my now under 9’s. I tried to make it about them enjoying the game but they were getting smashed every week and leaving the pitch in tears. There was no enjoyment for them.
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Kevin Middleton
Kevin Middleton@coach_kevin_m·
Interesting share! At the end of the day, the odds of your child making it to a professional level are akin to being struck by lightning in your lifetime. Most kids play football for fun, fitness, or social reasons. So, why are we (adults) trying to professionalise the entire industry? There aren't more suddenly professional teams or leagues... so the above odds will remain.... so why do we need more professional players? or even more professional coaches or analysts? We need to move the conversation from what will help make pros or what will help kids get ahead, to what will keep them involved in football lifelong. Cos what we are doing as an industry at the moment? It ain't working.
The Sporting Resource@TheS_Resource

"If your child could only study one subject at school you'd worry about their development and the missed opportunities for them to learn new skills. So why for some sports and coaches is early specialisation perceived as acceptable?" Dr Martin Toms. A question worth exploring, it's all in the comments 👇

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James Askwith
James Askwith@james_askwith·
@coach_kevin_m The only way to fix what you’re saying is to scrap competition entirely and that includes end of season awards.
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James Askwith
James Askwith@james_askwith·
@coach_kevin_m A classic example in my local area is Wallsend Boys Club. They hoover up the local talent as everyone knows their kids has a better chance of ending up at an academy if they play there. Every other club trying to compete with them struggle.
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James Askwith
James Askwith@james_askwith·
@TheS_Resource I can only speak for football but I my opinion, this is driven by the professional game. The constant desire to find the next big talent results in clubs getting kids in at an ever younger age. This then flows down to grassroots as they fight to keep up.
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The Sporting Resource
The Sporting Resource@TheS_Resource·
From almost the moment children set foot in organised sport, we begin measuring them against each other who is quickest, who is strongest, who looks the part at seven years old and while we rarely say it out loud in those terms, the message reaches children with remarkable clarity through the teams they're picked for, the positions (roles) they're given, and the amount of time they spend actually playing rather than watching from the sideline. The culture of comparison in youth sport didn't arrive fully formed overnight, it grew gradually from a system that was designed to find the best rather than develop the most, and which borrowed its logic from adult sport without ever seriously asking whether those same principles made any sense when applied to children who are still working out who they are, what they enjoy, and whether they belong in this environment at all and the longer that system runs unchallenged, the more it normalises the idea that some children are worth more investment than others before they've had a realistic chance to prove otherwise. The children who are told early, not always with words, but consistently through action that they don't quite measure up don't tend to fight back against that verdict, they tend to accept it, quietly withdraw from the sport, and carry with them for years the belief that they simply weren't good enough, when the more honest truth is that they were never given the conditions to find out.
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James Askwith
James Askwith@james_askwith·
@coach_kevin_m Any advice for improving proposition? I’ve got a bunch of players who are constantly flat footed. I’m working on drills for them to improve but not sure how long I should be running these same drills.
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James Askwith
James Askwith@james_askwith·
@D_The_Husband @topjibrone Stick with it. As new white belt myself, I couldn’t care whether I win or lose as long as I walk away having picked up something new each session. Even if I don’t pick up something new, I’m happy as long as I feel like I’m improving in some way.
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D@D_The_Husband·
@topjibrone I agree. What does that look like, for example, what would you say to a new white belt that keeps getting his ass kicked and wants to quit
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D@D_The_Husband·
What specifically should a new white belt focus on in their first year? And people say 'survival' but what does that actually mean to you?
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James Askwith
James Askwith@james_askwith·
@coach_kevin_m We run 3 team at our age group and the team I run is the lowest level. However, there’s still a huge difference in ability even in my team. I’ve got the risk of the better players wanting to leave to play at a higher level. What’s your recommendation?
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Kevin Middleton
Kevin Middleton@coach_kevin_m·
Had a few teams like that. If you have enough coaches, split them into two groups. You do the same exercises/games but flex it depending on where the groups are at (make it harder/easier for each group). But it's their team so, for me, coaches need to ensure that they don't kill the enthusiasm for football for any of them. That will just leads to them quitting. Or leaving. It's a tough one to manage
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Kevin Middleton
Kevin Middleton@coach_kevin_m·
70% of players quit sport by age 13. Not because they stopped loving the game. Because someone made them stop loving it. 9 out of 10 kids say the primary reason they play sports is to have fun. And winning? Ranked only 48th in importance. I sometimes feel that the entire architecture of youth football is built around the thing kids rank 48th
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Kevin Middleton
Kevin Middleton@coach_kevin_m·
I can't remember who said this, so I cannot credit the person directly, but they said something like.... Imagine watching the World Cup or Champions League Final and begging your mum to sign you up to football, as it looks so much fun and then standing in lines and getting a 15-minute game at the end
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Rob Porter
Rob Porter@CoachRobPorter·
This has got to be the question that gets asked the most during grassroots sessions! Players love to play the game, so we should give them game time! There are lots of ways to get your topic outcomes out while playing SSG'S, and players love it, so it's a win win situation!
Rob Porter tweet media
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