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Showing posts with label coach. Show all posts
Showing posts with label coach. Show all posts

Thursday, December 1, 2011

Philosophy pays off


"It is, more and more, an exciting time for me. It's started with Welbeck and Cleverley because, when I came in, they were 10 or 11. Now they've featured in the first team team and, just underneath, there's more."
Rene Meulensteen

30/11/2011 15:17, Report by Adam Marshall


Rene Meulensteen feels United are reaping the benefits of developing youngsters from an early-age and bringing them through the system.

The first-team coach implemented his philosophy at Carrington, developing the famed Coerver method after working with his fellow countryman Will in the 1990s. Teaching schoolboys good habits allows them the flexibility to play in different positions and the fruits of the hard work are starting to become clear for all to see.

"I worked with Will myself and I was very fortunate to do that," he stated. "That provided the background, the basis of the philosophy which I've taken on board and expanded it so it has become my philosophy, engrained with all the other important aspects.

"I'm just a very strong believer in it because the best players out there in the world - past and present - have given us that information. If you go back in time to George Best, Johan Cruyff and Diego Maradona up to all of the best players now - Lionel Messi, Cristiano Ronaldo, Wayne Rooney - they've got the ability to take players on and beat them. It's not only important for the team, it's very exciting for the game itself."

Educating the youngsters is providing a massive benefit for United when they are asked to fulfil various roles later in their career. The in-built confidence in possession and comfort with the ball is vitally important to Meulensteen's programme.

"In the beginning, the kids are young and just respond to the environment you create for them," he explained. "They don't know what is good or bad, they just enjoy it or hate it but they will do it.

"If I had kids climbing the fence up and down all day, they don't know whey they're doing it. "But, when they get to 18-20, they realise it's no good and they should've worked on their skills.

"When they've gone through that, it has become second nature and that's why skill development is so important in the early age groups because it can become second nature by 16, 17 and 18. If a player is going to be a defender, midfielder or attacker, they also know it's no problem because they think if I'm under pressure, I've got the skills to deal with it and that is the big difference."

The progress of Danny Welbeck and Tom Cleverley into the first-team this season is providing evidence that the system is set to produce players of international calibre for Sir Alex Ferguson.

"It is, more and more, an exciting time for me," enthused Meulensteen. "It's started with Welbeck and Cleverley because, when I came in, they were 10 or 11. Now they've featured in the first team team and, just underneath, there's the likes of Larnell Cole, Jesse Lingard, Ryan Tunnicliffe, Tom Thorpe, Ezekiel Fryers and the Keanes.

"They've all been on the skills journey and are now coming back to Reserves training and working with the first team and they see the same coach, sending the same messages. They say: 'Do you remember?' and it's a case of: 'Yes, so now you can tell why we did it. It should make you a player who can make a difference for us'."

For Michael Keane, Cole and Lingard in particular, patience was preached because of their slower physical development and that is beginning to pay off. "Exactly," asserted Meulensteen. "Height is no problem. It's all about quick feet and a quick brain. You see Barcelona showing us that every week."

source : Manutd

Friday, November 18, 2011

Butt targets management

16/11/2011 15:35, Report by Adam Marshall



"My ultimate aim is to be a manager. That's what I want to do, whenever that happens, but I don't want to just jump into a job, take it on and not be able to do it. I want to slowly get there and be ready for it."
- Nicky Butt
Nicky Butt with Sir Alex




Former Manchester United midfielder Nicky Butt has revealed he is keen to move into management after calling time on his playing career.
The 36-year-old was was most recently with Hong Kong outfit South China but returned to England earlier this year and is currently taking his coaching badges. After hanging up his boots, the ex-England international is determined to learn from the best at Carrington as he looks to make his mark in the coaching world.
"I've started my badges now and am getting the hours in," Butt explained to ManUtd.com. "I'll get assessed in the next five or six months.
"I go to Carrington a lot and just watch, I don't really take any of the sessions. I watch what the coaches are doing and how they speak to the kids. Ask any player and the knowledge is in their head. The difficult part is getting the point across and doing it clearly. That is what I've got to learn.
"I've been fortunate to play for a lot of coaches who are great at projecting their voice and getting the point across. Steve McClaren, Carlos Queiroz, Brian Kidd and Eric Harrison... all were great coaches."
Showing the same attitude that made him such an influence on the pitch, Butt is clearly serious about his intention to remain in the game.
"I know for a fact management is what I want to do," he asserted. "Whether I'll be good at it is another thing. We'll see. There were rumours about Oldham [in summer 2010] and someone asked if I would be interested but I never was as it was too soon for me. I wanted to have a year away from it, spend time with my family and go away with the kids in the school holidays. It's been great but I think I feel now I'm ready to do something.
"The thing is you don't know what you want to be until you try it. After I quit football, I thought I'd try TV but I didn't like it. If I didn't try it, I would never have known. Gary Neville, I felt, was obviously certain to go straight into management but instead he's working as a pundit on Sky Sports and he's got a three-year deal there. So you never know what's around the corner for you. You've got to be prepared to get as much as knowledge as you can, with football or whatever it is you want to do, and see what comes of it."
As well as learning to be a coach, Butt is keeping busy in other aspects of his life.
"I'm still doing some of the ambassador work for United, going to places all around the world with the club's commercial partners," he told us.
"I'm also working for MUTV, spending a lot of time with my family and learning to ski - I was not able to do that before when I was a player.
"There are a lot of things I'm able to do now but my ultimate aim is to be a manager. That's what I want to do, whenever that happens, but I don't want to just jump into a job, take it on and not be able to do it. I want to slowly get there and be ready for it."


source: Manutd

Monday, November 14, 2011

McIlroy: Best XI is tough task

14/11/2011 10:49, Report by Adam Marshall

"It's so hard to look at all the different eras because, in every one, there's been great players. It's one of the hardest things I've ever done."
- Sammy McIlroy
Sammy McIlroy
Sammy McIlroy may have managed at international level but he admits picking United's all-time best XI was one of the "hardest things I've ever done."

The former Reds midfielder, who played for and managed Northern Ireland as well as taking charge of several league clubs, was on a legends' panel for Manchester United's Greatest Ever XI, the official 4-disc DVD set out today.

"It's so hard to compare players from all the different eras, because there have been great players throughout Manchester United's history," McIlroy told ManUtd.com.

"I made my debut in 1971 and it's hard enough just choosing between all the players I was lucky enough to play with - Bryan Robson, Lou Macari, Alex Stepney, George Best, Jimmy Greenhoff, Willie Morgan, Brian Kidd... I could go on and on and on. Picking just the one team is so difficult but that's a measure of Manchester United as a club - the biggest in the world with so many fantastic players."

McIlroy accepts the final line-up showcased on the DVD will have been influenced by the age of the fans voting on ManUtd.com earlier this year.

"You hear young kids say Cristiano Ronaldo was better than George Best or that Eric Cantona was better than Denis Law," said McIlroy. "Football is all about opinion. I'm sure the fans could pick numerous teams and they'd still be great sides."

ManUtd.com will review the XI, position by position, as this week unfolds.

source : Manutd

Friday, October 28, 2011

Robbo visits Africa

28/10/2011 15:43, Report by Sarah Kester



United legend and club ambassador Bryan Robson has been in Africa this week for the closing stages of the 'Airtel Rising Stars' football clinics in Gabon and Tanzania.
The visit has helped to raise awareness of the programme, which was devised by club sponsors Airtel and aims to develop young talent in Africa through an Under-17 boys/girls football competition across the continent.

Bryan began his visit in Gabon before heading to Tanzania, where he met those players fortunate enough to have made it to the finals of the tournament. The former club skipper took part in training sessions with the young finalists organised by Manchester United Soccer Schools.

The tournament has been a huge success, attracting 36,000 participants across 15 countries. With another tournament planned for next year, the club hope even more players will have the opportunity to 'learn to play the United way'.

source : manutd

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