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fiqkemal
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fiqkemal
@fiq_kemal
Engineer & Data Analyst | Fan of Arsenal FC, Selangor FC and 𝓗𝓪𝓷𝓪 ♥️
Katılım Temmuz 2017
330 Takip Edilen1.1K Takipçiler
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find it interesting how he talked about the positioning of the 9 and 10, relative to the midfield unit, during pressing.
One of the issues in the first leg and they solved it tonight
🇳🇴 kimmoFC@kimmoFC
Rice post match He speaks so well. If he's not going into coaching, he'll work in media for sure. So humble, analytic and he explains so well. He's pratically doing the work for them. He could've spoken for an hour. What an ambassador for our club! 🫶 x.com/nilsensverre75…
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TRUE GRIT
As Arsenal's possession game sputters, the grind has become routine. A long look at situational play, the long-ball dilemma, the Zubi-Rice pivot, the cost of defending, the advanced data from @Gradient_Sports, and what can improve from here. Link in replies. 👊

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The Athletic published a rare inside look at how NFL scouts write their reports. There are direct parallels to football scouting, but NFL scouting departments have solved two bottlenecks that most football clubs still improvise around.
1. Transmission: watching players and writing down observations is the easy part. Transmitting those observations from scout to decision-maker is where scouting actually influences decisions. NFL scouting departments build shared internal shorthand - coded language programmed into the system so everyone reads the same way. Most football clubs rely on each scout's personal vocabulary. When language is ambiguous, insights die in translation.
2. Decisiveness: NFL reports are built around a one-liner – what you'd tell the GM about a player in a 30-second conversation. One sentence – who is the player and why should/shouldn't we sign him? The rest of the report exists in service of that line. Most football scouting reports I read describe players in varying levels of detail without ever committing to a decision. A scouting report is an argument, not a description.

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Anyone interested in Development should let this sink in from the Scottish Football Association’s 1yr Research Study which traveled the World looking at the best Programs and released their 133 Page document. The biggest take-away recommendation was, Football Starts at Home. Below are some highlights after studying 22 or the Worlds Best Players.
It seems to be unavoidable that, in order to become the best player in the world, 2-4yrs old seems to
be the ‘golden window’ for early engagement with the ball.
The world’s best players commented that the ‘ball was their favourite toy’ as a toddler – not that football was their favourite game (initially). Making the ball the favourite toy from the earliest age is the key trend in elite development.
Later, when these players started to play organised football, their early exposure meant they were seen as ‘more talented’ and thus excelled and fell in love with the game.
In Scotland, there is a grassroots assumption that by making children fall in love with the game, this will inspire them to practice further. However, this puts the process in the wrong order. A key takeaway from this research is that this fundamental phase in elite development happened within the house, and was inspired by a family member, usually a parent, and always before the child was involved in any kind of organised activity. This shows that waiting for the child to enter organised programmes is not enough, and the Scottish FA must stimulate a culture shift that encourages children to master the ball at an earlier age and stage. before the child was involved in any kind of organised activity. This shows that waiting for the
child to enter organised programmes is not enough, and the Scottish FA must stimulate a
culture shift that encourages children to master the ball at an earlier age and stage.e

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