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Performance Goalkeeping
Newsletter
January 2008,
Issue 1: Q&A with Tony DiCicco
Welcome to the first
Performance
Goalkeeping
Newsletter. Each
monthly installment
will bring you
cutting-edge
information—including
interviews and
training
sessions—all from
top-level
goalkeepers and
goalkeeper coaches.
Here's what's coming
up
for this spring:
March: GK Fitness
- John Cone, Fitness
Consultant and
former MLS GK coach
May: Interview -
Martin Thomas,
The English FA
Senior National
Goalkeeping coach
July: Pre-Game warm
up - Paul Rogers,
Canadian National
Team GK coach/Florida
State Assistant
Coach
As we discuss
different thoughts,
philosophies, GK
techniques and
tactics with the
coaching community,
please direct
questions, comments
or topic suggestions
to
newsletter@PerformanceGoalkeeping.com. Other coaches
can join our mailing
list by visiting
www.PerformanceGoalkeeping.com
and entering an
email address in the
sign up box.
* * *
At
the Women's Final Four at College Station, TX we caught up with Tony
DiCicco, head coach for the Boston Breakers, World Cup winner and Olympic
Gold medalist coach.
PGK:
What do you expect the biggest difference to be between the goalkeepers from the
original WUSA, and those we see when the new league starts next year?
Tony DiCicco:
I am not expecting a great deal of change…we had
excellent goalkeepers in 2001 at our last launch.
There were world class keepers such as Briana Scurry,
Bente Norby (Norway), Karlsson (Sweden), and an
excellent group of USA keepers such as Siri Mullinix,
LaKeysia Beene, Jamie Pagliarulo, Tracy Ducar, Saskia Webber and others.
This time around there are some outstanding
collegiate and YNT or WNT pool keepers that will fill the
goalkeeper needs in the league.
PGK: What do you feel are the biggest challenges
for young US goalkeepers as they progress from the US
College game to the professional game in
the US, Europe and the rest of the world?
TD:
It may be a bit different for the
men and women, but when our keepers move onto a playing environment outside
our country they learn a lot of lessons.
First, players overseas are playing for their
livelihood--this is their way to a better life. They
are not college graduates so they, I think especially on
the men's side, put more of themselves
into the effort. If they don't make it,
they don't have a college education to fall back on.
From a technical – tactical standpoint, the game
is faster and more sophisticated for the men and at the
very least more sophisticated for our women. They are
now in a college culture, but the [professional] players are
smarter. The winger will serve the ball right on the head of
the attacking player much more often than her American
counterpart BECAUSE she is expected to.
Clearly playing in the MLS and playing in most European
leagues there are three or four teams of players fighting for a spot in
that first eleven, and there isn't nearly the difference
between them as we experience here.
PGK: In your time coaching male and female
goalkeepers, what do you think has been the biggest change
in the game?
TD:
The ball is changing the game. Because of the way it moves, there are
technical and tactical adjustments that goalkeepers need
to make. Also, training methods for goalkeepers are
getting better all over the world. In the past, Americans
treated goalkeeping more as a specialty and trained it as
such, much more so than foreign professional teams.
The game at the highest level totally dismisses
goalkeepers that are not clearly over 6' tall. They are
looking for the 6'5" goalkeeper. I don't totally agree with
this because there are outstanding goalkeepers that use
quickness and courage and smarts to keep the ball out
of the net. Shay Given for Newcastle is an example.
PGK: And how has the American goalkeeper adapted to these changes?
TD:
American goalkeepers have adapted by becoming solid
soccer players before they became goalkeepers. For
the rest of the world this has always been the case
but here in American…we have goalkeeper
specialists when they are young and they lose something
that comes back to haunt them later on in their development.
We are seeing less of this, but still, specialization
of goalkeepers comes too early in America.
PGK: You've been named the head coach for the Boston
Breakers of the new women's professional league, and are
currently coaching SoccerPlus Connecticut of the
WPSL. Considering the vast number of women's teams in the
WPSL, the USL W-League and college soccer, do you think
the pool of talented American players is as deep as ever?
TD:
Yes. There may be
fewer incredible stars such as Mia Hamm, Julie Foudy,
Brandi Chastain, Joy Fawcett, etc., but I think the
pool is deep. Having said that...one of the things we
learned the first time around was that
W-League and WPSL players really did not understand what
it meant to be a full-time pro player, and it took them a
year to get to that level. The jump in playing level from
year 1 to year 2 in the WUSA was dramatic. We will
likely see the same thing this time around.
PGK: In addition to your National Team and professional
coaching, you're the technical director for FSASoccerPlus
FC, a youth club in Connecticut. How can club and ODP
teams prepare youth players to succeed in college soccer,
in a professional league and on an international stage?
TD:
I am very proud of our youth club FSASoccerPlus FC.
We coach and educate the total child. We serve as role models
as well as coaches. What is neat is that other clubs are
seeing what we are doing and trying to emulate some of our
leadership and mentoring programs. This is
good because the standard of coaching and teaching is
going up largely because of our club.
Our teams are among the best in every age group, but most dramatically in
the younger age groups--the players we have had early in
their development. Our teams are the best
on the field, and we are continually trying to set the standard for
off the field mentoring and teaching.
PGK: When educating GK
coaches, which areas do you feel need to
be emphasized the most, and what are
the biggest weaknesses you see in our goalkeeping
coaches in the US?
TD:
American goalkeepers do not read the game
well enough. This is because we are still
not in a soccer culture (just compare the number
of hours of football or basketball shown on TV and soccer).
Our goalkeepers still are not consistently good
soccer players as well as goalkeepers. These
are the two big areas where we are still lagging
behind.
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