Brian Barwick famously consulted "12
wise men" from British and European
football
By Alistair
Magowan (republished from BBC Sport)
12/18/2007
Brian Barwick famously consulted "12
wise men" from British and European
football as he began his search for the
new England manager. Were he now to
canvas the opinions of the best players
in the world about the malaise in
English football, it is possible that
the word futsal would come up time and
time again.
 |
"Futsal did improve my
technique - it makes you more
composed on the ball"
Micah Richards
Man City and England defender
|
Cristiano Ronaldo and Ronaldinho both
credit the skills-based game with making
them the players they are today.
Perhaps it is no coincidence that the
countries who excel at futsal - Brazil,
Spain, Italy and Portugal - also feature
prominently in the Fifa world rankings.
In contrast, England's senior futsal
team have won one match in 46 attempts
and lost 4-2 and 6-3 in a double-header
against Andorra in October.
Futsal is a five-a-side game played on a
basketball-sized pitch with a weighted
ball.
The emphasis is on improvisation,
creativity and technique - you are
unlikely to hear calls of "get stuck in"
or "get rid of it" at a futsal match.
While it is widely played by youngsters
in Brazil, Portugal and Spain, the game
is still rare in England, where
traditional five and 11-a-side matches
predominate.
England's futsal coach, Graeme Dell,
believes the desperate record of his
team points to a wider malaise in the
English game.
"A lot of the success of countries like
Brazil or Italy has to do with the
breeding of players in the younger age
groups and the fact that they grow up
playing futsal," he told BBC Sport.
 |
WHAT IS FUTSAL?
Originated in Uruguay and Brazil
in the 1930s. Played indoors,
with five on each side. Uses a
small, weighted ball
Goals 2m high and 3m wide
When foul limit reached, all
subsequent fouls result in a
penalty
Played by Cristiano Ronaldo,
Nani and just about every
Brazilian international when
they were young
|
"They learn to keep the
ball in play because of the nature of
the futsal ball and court."
Countries such as Spain host a
professional domestic futsal league, in
which players are paid as much as their
11-a-side counterparts.
Manchester City and England defender
Micah Richards is one of the few top
English footballers to have played
futsal as a youngster.
"It did improve my technique," he told
BBC Sport.
"It makes you more composed on the ball
and makes you want the ball more, so you
can do something with it."
Brentford, as part of their Community
Sports Trust programme, introduced
futsal to their training programmes a
year ago, and coach Luis Melville says
it is already making a difference to the
technique of his players.
"Futsal makes players more difficult to
play against in 11-a-side and gives them
more tools in their armoury to be a more
complete footballer," he told BBC Sport.
 |
"Unless we start bringing the
futsal concepts to the way we
train young players, we could be
having this conversation again
in 15 to 20 years' time"
Graeme Dell
England's futsal coach
|
"Players find it
challenging. Because space is at a
premium on a futsal court, the ball has
to be manipulated far more closely to
the body.
"Players also have to do clever things
with the ball and their foot skills
improve. There is no hiding place on the
court, so decision making is absolutely
paramount."
Zinedine Zidane once said he was
fortunate to have played football on the
streets of Marseille until the age of
14, meaning no-one had the chance to
coach skill and improvisation out of
him.
"That is what futsal is all about," Dell
says. "It's a platform to allow a player
to use invention and game understanding
to not only develop themselves but get
out of trouble.
"Whatever drill or exercise you develop,
you have to make the player think for
themselves."
Dell says that a lot of English coaches
have a "blinkered vision and are "doing
the same thing year after year".
And he adds ominously: "Unless we start
bringing the futsal concepts to the way
in which we train young players we could
be having this conversation again in 15
to 20 years' time."