Friday, June 27, 2008

Congratulations Ron Royston! 50 yrs service!

Ron Royston with ex Red Devil Tim Cahill at Marrickville Football Club

Canterbury District Association and Marrickville Football Club extend congratulations to Ron Royston for 50 years of service!

During this period Ron has held every position at the club and until this day still is not only a member of the Executive of Marrickvile but also coaches a winning girl's team

Ron has also held numerous posts at the CDSFA and is presently chairman of the Appeals Committee. We congratulate Ron and his wife, Christine, on the work they have done for Football in our District.


from the CDSFA website.

Tim Cahill article - the Glebe (Brendan Berecry)


full .pdf of article here

Monday, June 16, 2008

Tim Cahill at Mackey Park on Fox 2 Wed 4.30

Tim Cahill's Visit to Mackey Park

Please inform your Players

Fox 2 Wednesday 4:30pm

FOOTBALL STARS OF TOMORROW – EPISODE 8

Things are looking up for Football NSW's popular television program 'Football Stars of Tomorrow' as Episode 8 kick's off.

It promises to be the best show - so far - as we go behind the scenes with Socceroos star TIM CAHILL

TIM CAHILL: He is arguably our best performed Socceroo on the international stage. TIM CAHILL continues to make headlines for all the right reasons as he spends the off-season recovering from injury. We catch-up with the Everton midfielder for an exclusive interview and behind the scenes look at a special visit he made to one of his junior clubs - the MARRICKVILLE RED DEVILS. Tim's tells us where his football journey began!!

Monday, May 26, 2008

Zinedine Zidane NOT in Sydney on June 1st - POSTPONED


Tickets now on sale for Zinedine Zidane's International 11 vx Aust's 97 side (incl Frank Farina, Paul Okon, Craig Foster, Tony Vidmar) - Sunday June 1st at Sydney Football Stadium.

First 2,000 children (u12) free General Admission entry with paying adult - go to ticketek site!

Monday, May 19, 2008

Craig Foster on SSGs, Parent Behaviour and Player Development

On any Saturday, the suburban park is full of parents yelling out bad advice to their kids. It distracts them and detracts from the child's own game.

Ku-Ring-Gai Association have just had a quiet weekend, where only players were allowed to say anything. If you opened your mouth on the sidelines, you were requested to donate to the Shepherd Centre for the Hearing Impaired.

In summary, small sided games where children learn through experimentation and play are the best way, not just for all children to participate, but for players to develop in to world class players.

Small sided games WITHOUT interference. That's what all the research recommends. That's where the world's top players developed their magic. So let the children PLAY!

summary by Andra - full article by Craig Foster below

Keep it quiet, mums and dads – let the kids play their own game, and learn by being bold

Craig Foster

The Sun-Herald May 18, 2008

There were two initiatives for kids' football last week, one concerned with the environment that moulds our young players and often holds them back, the second a living example of why this cultural change around youth football is so critical to Australia's success as a football nation.

Hands up all those parents who have seen what we can euphemistically call
“inappropriate” parent behaviour at a junior football match? We can now applaud an initiative by the Ku-Ring-Gai Association to begin changing the perceptions and the conduct of everyone associated with junior and youth football, including parents, spectators and coaches.

For an entire weekend no one apart from the players is allowed to say anything. If they do, they are asked to donate to charity – to the Shepherd Centre for the hearing impaired.

And this weekend follows on beautifully from the launch of small sided games (SSG), which is the first step and a critical one. Ultimately four or five a side and pitch measurements are just that, numbers and statistics which ensure our kids have the opportunity to play the game in the best format for their enjoyment and development, with the emphasis on “opportunity”.

The next step must be to capitalise on that chance by educating adults about how their conduct and messages affect the children so every child is able to maximise their experience of playing football.

This is different from the usual “sport rage” campaigns and policies which seek, importantly, to curtail those adults who cannot help taking the importance of an under-eight match far too seriously. “Get rid of it”, kick it out”, “don't do that”, “tackle him” and “pass it” are the usual fare we can hear on any suburban pitch every Saturday, all of these messages restrictive, telling a youngster what not to do and often teling them to take the most basic and, in fact, incorrect option.

Many of these messages are actually setting the youngster up for failure in adult football, since to play at elite level requires the ability to deal with risk, to make and deal with mistakes, and to be able to play comfortably on the ball in all situations.

The truth is that our kids would be far better off if they could play by themselves with parental supervision, not involvement, and would more quickly find their way within the game on what does and down not work.

Indeed, many would become far better players simply by not having an adult telling them not to try something, or why they should take the “percentage option”.

Football for kids is not about percentages – quite the opposite! Rather, it is about joy and risk, testing themselves and their skills, about trying the outrageous and learning how to pull it off, and not being made to understand why great moves hold too much risk.

This message is very confronting for many parents and coaches to find that their presence at their child's football match is not only not required, but is actually a hindrance to their youngster's enjoyment.

Ask yourself this, when Maradona and Pele, Cruyff and Ronaldinho, Messi and Ronaldo learnt to play the game, do you really think their parents were there, constantly berating them for losing the ball, telling them not to go too far forward, not to risk all in attack, or to pass the ball, not “hog” it?

No, in fact as kids, their experience would have been almost totally child-centred, playing with others at school or in the street, probably with no adults within a cooee, with other kids to regulate the game, all able to find their own way.

There is one other football great, Zinedine Zidane, who was quoted as saying that all he learnt as a player both technically and philosophically – meaning the want, need and ability to express himself as a football genius – was learnt on the street with his mates.

Zizou, whose presence in Sydney next month is a beautiful moment for football, is certainly in the top 10 to lace a boot. Think about that, the 10 best players in a sport with a history of more than 100year, the most played game the planet has ever devised, with 208 recognised member countries (more than the UN), 129 female national teams and more than 250 million regular participants. And Zizou ranks in the 10 best every.

So, at a time when Kur-Ring-Gai is endeavouring to encourage their adults to get out of the way and give the game back to the kids, the arrival of a world legend who played the game with a freedom and skill few have ever matched, is timely indeed.

If you get the change to watch him live or on SBS in a few weeks, marvel at his skills but keep in mind that they are not built in a climate of restriction, adult interference and negativity. Quite the opposite.

Small Sided Games for 6s at Hurlstone Park

It's lovely to see the small sided games for 6s roll out at Hurlstone Park. Other clubs in our district have started SSGs for 6s and 7s and in other Districts the full range of SSGs upto 11s and 12s have been rolled out for EVERY club!

Imagine a Saturday morning where you only played at Mackey, with teams of 4 in a round robin competition. Your game was always at 9am or 9.30 and no travelling!

FFA have given Districts a couple of years to adopt Small Sided Games (SSGs) and, at the least, all 6s and 7s games across Canterbury should be SSGs by next year. When I watch the 10s playing on a full size field I really hope that we can adopt the SSGs for the older children sooner, NOT later.


Also see Craig Foster's article from the Sun-Herald, Sunday 18th May, 2008 for more information about SSGs, Parent Behaviour and World Best Practice for Player Development.