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[FOX26]Not an ONION article: U.S. soccer bans heading in youth soccer

Discussion in 'Other Sports' started by SwoLy-D, Nov 13, 2015.

  1. SwoLy-D

    SwoLy-D Member

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    LOLs!

    http://www.fox26houston.com/news/48239575-story

    Bwwwaaahahahahaha... :grin:

    Seriously. It's not an ONION article.

    MEXICO will remain the leader in the region.
     
  2. ipaman

    ipaman Member

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    USA soccer parents must be very different folks compared to USA football parents because those parents let their kids kill each other.
     
  3. leroy

    leroy Member
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    I've been paying more attention to this lately as a player, parent of a player, and as a coach. I'm currently coaching a U8 team and last season had U7 and U10 teams. I can probably count on one hand the amount of headers that happened in any of those seasons. It's not common at all. We spent no practice time on it because I was much more concerned with core skills and technique...and I don't consider heading one of them. Yes, you need to know the basics so that you don't give yourself a headache. We did maybe one drill and discussed the basics (use your forehead and keep your eyes open).

    As a player who has been through high level tryouts, I don't ever remember a time when someone did or didn't make a team simply because of their abilities to head the ball. It's a great extra skill to have but not something that would be enough to push a player over someone who has better skill with their feet, IMO. I do not think that preventing headers before the age of 10 is going to delay any development at all. I'm not sure why that would be a thought. How much time do people think is spent on headers.

    I do agree that putting the restriction in is silly. Mostly because it happens so infrequently. Collisions with other players and the ground are much more likely to cause a concussion than heading. But I definitely disagree that there will be some delay in development because of it.
     
    1 person likes this.
  4. Jontro

    Jontro Member

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    They should ban crossovers because it promotes deception. Not something you want your children to learn.
     
  5. Beavis Stiffler

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    It works on hockey. :grin:

    [​IMG]
     
  6. SwoLy-D

    SwoLy-D Member

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    ^ LOLs. :grin:

    I understand kids' heads might be soft and all, but... man, use softer balls or teach them how to head the ball properly, man. Dang sissy stuff. :eek:
     
  7. rm365

    rm365 Member

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    As a parent I have no problem with the ban. I haven't looked at the methodology but at least one study shows heading is bad for mental function. Little kids soccer is mostlyjust for fun (with the parents surfing the web in the stands) and not worth the risk, however small, anyway.

    http://www.wired.com/2013/03/soccer-headers-cognition/
     
  8. PhiSlammaJamma

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    The Truth is the brain is susceptible all the way through adolescence. The brain can be permanently altered in function. So this is only part of the solution. But far from complete. So if they think head collisions are a concern, more needs to be done. This would not be enough.

    All that said. I never headed the ball in youth soccer for a goal and I scored a lot, almost all the way up to 9th grade. Crossing only seemed to become evident around the 6th grade. It was either a lost art in American Soccer, or skill level doesn't necessitate it.

    I think you can learn the art quickly in highschool, however, I think in order to have a true natural talent for something you would likely be training on it from almost day one. I believe that. Even as a true goal scorer, I was never any good at headers. So it will set American Youth back against other countries in my opinion.
     
  9. leroy

    leroy Member
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    Please don't use the "I was awesome in 6th grade so I'm an expert" argument. It's beneath you.

    I'm not sure how having kids spend even more time with the ball at their feet will be a detriment. I spoken to some other coach friends of mine and they say the same thing as me. It's a silly rule and it's not going to affect very much. But it's not going to set anyone back because the amount of time spent on it is minimal anyway. The concussion concerns are in collisions with other players and with the ground (and occasionally with the post).

    I've been playing for over 35 years. If I worry about anything long term, it's the knee replacement I already need. I not drain bramage.
     
  10. Torn n Frayed

    Torn n Frayed Member

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    Nice! :p
     
  11. PhiSlammaJamma

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    Your post is clearly the result of 35 years of concussions. Read the science and the reports. understand the adolescent brain. Then post.
     
  12. Jontro

    Jontro Member

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    This rule only applies to the tall kids. Shorter kids like me never won headers so we just run around in circles chasing the ball.
     
  13. leroy

    leroy Member
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    Again, I never said it wasn't something to be concerned about. I said it's not as prevalent as its made out to be. There simply aren't a lot of headers in the age group they're trying to protect. I'd guess just as many kids playing little league get hit in the head with errant pitches, throws and line drives.
     
  14. heypartner

    heypartner Member

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    This explains why Brits and Germans are so stupid.
     
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  15. rockbox

    rockbox Around before clutchcity.com

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    It's more àbout practicing lots of headers that is the issue. Some parents and coaches overdo it. It's better to just take it out of the game at younger ages.

    BTW, where are you coaching at? My kids play at One World.
     
  16. Jontro

    Jontro Member

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    But the Germans invented Hydra.
     
  17. arno_ed

    arno_ed Member

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    I agree with the people saying this is not a really usefull rule (on the other hand, I also agree that Heading is not that an important part of soccer that you relaly need to learn it on a young age).

    I do find it funny that this is coming from the country that has american football......
     
  18. DaDakota

    DaDakota Balance wins
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    More lip service than anything actual as heading is not taught until after U10 anyway.

    DD
     
  19. Dairy Ashford

    Dairy Ashford Member

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    If that doctor married Johnny Ohm, she'd be Summer Ott Ohm.
     
  20. SwoLy-D

    SwoLy-D Member

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    Anything to "take care of the kids" and appease to a "politically correct" audience of the wheel that gets the grease. There's no real research or real reason for them to rule that this is bad for those kids. If anything, they'll not be ready for the time they get to middle and high school to play the sport. "ouch! that hurts!" :rolleyes:

    So leroy420, I take it you're not going to implement that rule in your coaching? :cool:
     

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