1 / 19

The Dutch way to stay in FIFA top “3”

The Dutch way to stay in FIFA top “3”. From interview and information provided by: Johan van Geijn KNVB Manager, International Projects. The KNVB. The KNVB is the governing body in the Netherlands

bena
Download Presentation

The Dutch way to stay in FIFA top “3”

An Image/Link below is provided (as is) to download presentation Download Policy: Content on the Website is provided to you AS IS for your information and personal use and may not be sold / licensed / shared on other websites without getting consent from its author. Content is provided to you AS IS for your information and personal use only. Download presentation by click this link. While downloading, if for some reason you are not able to download a presentation, the publisher may have deleted the file from their server. During download, if you can't get a presentation, the file might be deleted by the publisher.

E N D

Presentation Transcript


  1. The Dutch way to stay in FIFA top “3” From interview and information provided by: Johan van Geijn KNVB Manager, International Projects

  2. The KNVB • The KNVB is the governing body in the Netherlands • They have a professional arm and an amateur arm. • The professional side has two divisions, the Premier Division with 18 clubs and the first division with 20 clubs. It is not possible for a professional club to get demoted to the Amateur league unless they lose their licence due to financial difficulties etc. • An Amateur club can then apply to become a professional club. It is not a first past the post promotion system like in England.

  3. The Netherlands • Population 16 million • Football is the number 1 sport • 38 professional clubs • 3,000 amateur clubs • 1.1 million players • 480,000 are youth players • National office is in Zeist • 6 District offices

  4. The Netherlands 2005/2006 • FIFA ranking 3rd • 1st in World Cup Qualification group in 2006 • 3rd - Under 17 World Championship in Peru • Quarter final – World Championship in the Netherlands • Under 21 European Champions

  5. International Success The National Team • 1974 – Runner up World Cup Germany • 1978 – Runner up World Cup Argentina • 1988 – European Champion Germany • 1994 – Quarter final World Cup USA • 1996 – Quarter final Euro 96 England • 1998 – 4th World Cup France • 2000 – Semi finalist Euro 00 Holland/Belgium • 2004 – Semi finalist Euro 04 Portugal • 2006 – Round of 16 World Cup Germany

  6. International SuccessClub Teams • Feyenoord: - European Cup winners 1970, 1974, 2003 - World Club Champions 1970 • Ajax: - European Cup winners 1971, 1972, 1973, 1987, 1992, 1995 • PSV: - European Cup winners 1978, 1988 - Semi final Champions League 2005

  7. Success attributed to: • The best players • Excellent coaches • (some) Good players developing to become good coaches

  8. World Class Players • Johan Cruyff (European player of the century) • Marco van Basten (2006: coach of the National team) • Frank Rijkaard (2006: coach of FC Barcelona) • Johan Neeskans (2006: assistant coach - FC Barcelona) • Ronald Koeman (2006: coach of PSV – Eindhoven) • Ruud Gullit • Dennis Bergkamp, Edgar Davids, Patrick Kluivert, Clarence Seedorf (generation 1995 – 2004) • Ruud van Nistelrooy, Dirk Huyt, Rafael van der Vaart, Arjen Robben (generation 2004 – 2010)

  9. World Class Coaches • Rinus Michels (Ajax, FC Barcelona, The Netherlands) • Louis van Gaal (Ajax, FC Barcelona, The Netherlands) • Leo Beenhakker (Ajax, Real Madrid, The Netherlands, Trinidad and Tobago, Poland • Guus Hiddink (PSV, Valencia, The Netherlands, South Korea, Australia, Russia • Dick Advocaat (The Netherlands, PSV, Glasgow Rangers, South Korea, Zenith St. Petersburg)

  10. Dutch FA Coaching Staff • 8 national staff coaches • 20 district staff coaches • 50 regional coaches These coaches “influence” all youth coaches, officials and other volunteers in the 3,000 clubs.

  11. The Dutch Way • Develop the players • Develop the coaches • Individual and team development • Youth development is a joint responsibility of the Association and the Clubs • The best players play with and against the best • Talented players have about 6 training sessions and 1 or 2 competitive games per week • Well educated and football experienced coaches for talented players

  12. Youth Development as a joined responsibility 18 team Premier League 20 team first Division (Professional) Individual player A – team U/21 U/20 U/19 U/18 U/17 U/16 U/15 Amateur Clubs U/15 U/14 U/13 KVNB (National) KVNB (6 Districts) CLUBS

  13. Football Association League Organisation National Youth Development Program National Youth Teams National Talent Scouting from U/11 to U/21 Coaching Academy The Clubs Participation in Organised Football Leagues Club Youth Development Program Talent Scouting Accommodation Football Association and Clubs

  14. Talented Players Playing With The Best National teams: • Boys - U/15, U/16, U/17, U/18, U/19, U/20, U/21, Senior • Girls – U/18, U/19, Seniors District teams (6 Districts): • Boys – U/13, U/14, U/15 (12 teams in each district) • Girls – U/15 (12 teams in each district), U/17 (4 teams in each district) U/19 (2 teams in each district) Regional teams within the districts: • Boys – U/13 (60 teams), U/14 (24 teams), U/15 (12 teams) • Girls – U/13 (24 teams)

  15. National Youth Leagues (playing against the best) National Youth Leagues: U/19, U/17, U/15 ------------------------- Premier ------------------------------------- 2 x First Division ---------------------------------------------- Etc., etc.

  16. Regional Youth Leagues Youth Leagues in each District • Under 19 • Under 17 • Under 15 11 v 11 • Under 13 • Under 11 • Under 9 • Under 7 • Under 6 Organised club football from the age of 5! 7 v 7 4 v 4

  17. Developing CoachesStructure Coach Professional Football UEFA PRO experience Trainer – Coach I UEFA A Amateurs Youth experience Trainer – Coach II UEFA B experience Trainer Coach III Preliminary B Amateurs Youth

  18. Characteristics of Coach Development Vision based on: • Vision of football: Organisational, strategic and tactical team building (aim – winning the game) • Vision on coaching: Players themselves have to become more and more responsible for solving the football problems (dependent – independent)

  19. Characteristics of Coach Development • Vision on education: • Learning is most efficient in a practical situation • Educating is facilitating of learning in the practical context (club) • Qualifying is confirming that someone has the required competences • Competences are not static: coaches have to keep on developing (life long)

More Related