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ARTICLE > Anson Dorrance: 'Coaching is stealing best
practices' Interview by Mike
Woitalla
Wednesday, May 18, 2011
Twenty years ago, Anson Dorrance coached the USA to victory
at the inaugural Women’s World Cup in 1991. During his
1986-1994 national team tenure he coached the USA's first
generation of great female players, including Mia Hamm,
April Heinrichs and Kristine Lilly, who also played for him
at the University of North Carolina, where Dorrance is
aiming for his 22nd national title. We spoke to Dorrance
upon the USSF’s unveiling of its "U.S. Soccer Curriculum"
for youth coaching.
SOCCER AMERICA: What differences do you see in the players
coming to college soccer compared to 10, 20, 30 years ago?
ANSON DORRANCE: The top players are similar. But the average
players right now are so much better than they were.
While the average player is much better, I would be
hard-pressed to tell you that players coming into college
are more effective than April Heinrichs, or Michelle Akers,
or Carin Jennings-Gabarra. The truly elite player we had
back in the day would still, if they were young enough, be
able to compete as starters on our full national team today.
SA: What about their attitude?
ANSON DORRANCE: We have a psychologist at the university
come in on a regular basis and describe the generation we’re
coaching to keep us abreast how this group wants to be
treated.
And it changes regularly, every five, 10 years. All of us
who coach are making adjustments with the current population
we’re working with. …
I’ve had to change the way I communicate with my players, so
now I’m attached to my BlackBerry, text-messaging, hoping
I’ll learn how to type faster on that thing!
SA: Alarm bells have gone off about American women’s soccer
because other nations have caught up and are producing more
skillful teams than the USA. Looking back 20 years, what
should we have been done differently?
ANSON DORRANCE: Trust me, if we had done what’s being put in
place now, [a curriculum] for Zone 1, the U-12 level and
below, and Zone 2, the teenage level, there’s absolutely no
question in my mind we’d be at a different level.
SA: So you believe the “U.S. Soccer Curriculum” that Youth
Technical Director Claudio Reyna created will have an
impact?
ANSON DORRANCE: What I like about what Claudio has done is
he’s designed it for our unique soccer culture. Elite
coaches will benefit from it. But it’s also something you
can hand to a parent coach at the U6 level without any
soccer knowledge at all – and just by following this recipe,
this cookbook, we’re going to be developing soccer players
at a faster and higher level than we’ve done with our
traditional methodology.
So I absolutely love the document. I love the way U.S.
Soccer is presenting it. I love the fact that the Academies
are going to use this as their player development bible. I
love the fact that we’re trying to finally coordinate the
entire country underneath a collection of soccer principles
that are viable and proven worldwide.
SA: What makes “The Curriculum” so valuable?
ANSON DORRANCE: There’s nothing in the document that I think
is particularly profound. From Barcelona to Arsenal to
Tahuichi, I don’t care where you’re from, these are
principles that we all agree on -- and Claudio has done a
great job assembling it for all of us.
Coaching is stealing best practices. All of us steal best
practices from great teams or whoever our mentors are.
That’s what I like about this document. This is almost a
collection of proven best practices from all of the elite
player development platforms in the world. It’s assembled in
a document an educated coaching population can follow.
SA: No doubt there’s much to be said for Barcelona’s playing
style, its philosophy, and the success of its youth academy.
But Barcelona also employs scores of scouts and the players
who enter its program arrive with exceptional skills, such
Lionel Messi, who was already a terrific 13-year-old player
when he entered La Masia …
ANSON DORRANCE: We’re not going to sluff off the
responsibility for developing great players by saying the
raw material at Barcelona is so much better so we’ll never
catch them.
Back in the old days, the European basketball coaches used
to come over to this country and see the Dean Smiths and all
the great coaches. They’d ask, “What should we do in our
practice sessions?” -- and Dean Smith would tell the
European coaches, “Work on the fundamentals. … dribbling,
shooting, etc, etc.”
So these European coaches went back within the confines of
their unique player development environments -- which were
not like the American playgrounds. And they developed
players who are now complete players in the NBA.
I think we have a similar potential. Our potential is to
steal some of the stuff Barcelona is doing and inject it at
all levels of our culture. We’re going to take
responsibility for our development.
SA: Why are the U.S. women’s and girls national teams no
longer as dominant?
ANSON DORRANCE: We’re not as slick as we should be. We’re
not as technical as we should be. We’ve relied on the
classic American mentality and American athleticism because
our genetic pool is so large, but we’re just not as polished
and not sophisticated enough.
As a result these other countries, who could never get on
the field with us, like a Mexico, now actually can steal a
game from us. We have to get back to work.
SA: Perhaps there wasn’t enough criticism of how the U.S.
was getting results so we ended up with a playing style that
relied too much on athleticism rather than skill …
ANSON DORRANCE: Part of our evolution as a soccer culture is
to be self-critical. That’s the first step and it’s starting
to change. I genuinely feel a lot of what’s going on right
now is tremendous for us and in the next eight years we’ll
see a significant difference in the way Americans approach a
game.
On the men’s side, too, it’s no longer good enough just to
get a result.
We still want the result, but we want to dominate more of
the game, have more of the ball, play a certain way. Our
expectations are changing in a very positive way.
SA: It seems to me that relying on size and athleticism to
win seems to be an even bigger problem on the girls' side
than on the boys’ …
ANSON DORRANCE: Yes, it is. And a part of the reason is the
girls don’t watch the game. And honestly not too many of
their coaches do either.
And the game they should watch, in all deference to where
ever our top women’s teams are, is the men’s game. The men’s
game is the university for the women’s game. We should be
studying the men’s game the way anyone would study at an
institution of higher learning.
We’ve got to learn from the men and part of the way to learn
is to watch. But we don’t and as a result we lack
sophistication, we lack problem-solving, we lack ideas in
the final third.
And the way we survive in the women’s game is with raw
athleticism. We overpower another player and blow it into
the goal -- and that’s not going to cut it anymore.
SA: Have you seen an increase in women coaches in recent
years?
ANSON DORRANCE: I haven’t really seen an enormous change,
but I’m convinced that U.S. Soccer hiring April Heinrichs
[Technical Director] and Jill Ellis [Development Director]
will make a difference.
The model I’m using is Germany, where they now have 17
full-time people within their own federation who do nothing
but the development of women’s soccer in Germany. They’re
hiring former full international players, from Tina Theune-Meyer
and Maren Meinert on down, who are responsible to develop
their age group.
Now that we’ve hired two full-time people who are embedded
in U.S. Soccer you’re going to see some changes. Women will
see there’s a career option for them when they see full-time
people whose entire commitment is women’s development.
Now, an athletic director at the collegiate level will
always try to hire a woman first, but unfortunately not
enough of our elite women players are staying in the game as
coaches. Women have to see this can be a legitimate lifetime
profession for them.
SA: What's the difference between coaching males and
females?
ANSON DORRANCE: We could go on forever on that. ... You want
a sound bite?
SA: Sure ...
ANSON DORRANCE: I hate giving sound bites, because everyone
will take exception, but I’ve been taken exception my whole
life so why make an exception now?
Basically women are easier to coach but harder to manage.
Men are more difficult to coach but easier to manage.
Without giving you my book report on it, it basically boils
down to those cliches.
(Anson Dorrance, a member of the U.S. National Soccer
Hall of Fame, is in his 33rd season as women’s head coach of
the UNC Tar Heels, with which he’s won 20 NCAA Division I
crowns and one AIAW title. He was coach of the UNC men’s
team in 1976-1998. He was coach the U.S. women’s national
team in 1986-1994 and lifted the inaugural Women’s World Cup
in 1991.)
(Mike Woitalla, the executive editor of Soccer America,
coaches youth soccer for East Bay United in Oakland, Calif.
His youth soccer articles are archived at YouthSoccerFun.com.)
(c) 2011 Soccer America, 15 East 32nd Street New York, NY
10016 USA
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