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Football intelligence: the missing link

Mabena rounds the keeper, only to shoot wide

 

Football intelligence: the missing link

Football intelligence: the missing link

Posted: 2011-12-12 15:10

Anthony McLennan watched the Telkom Knockout Final, and then El Classico, and came to some conclusions about South African soccer.

Follow Anthony on Twitter @Soccer_Ant

Watching Saturday night's Telkom Knockout Final and Benni McCarthy's at times masterful performance highlighted what's missing in our game: football intelligence.

This was further compounded and emphasised when watching Barcelona shred Real Madrid to pieces in the second half of the El Classico later that night.

Back in Durban, McCarthy was sublime. Aging legs and extra pounds meant Benni did not exert his influence for the entire 90 minutes, but when he was involved, the former Blackburn and West Ham striker was a joy to watch.

Benni missed one relatively easy chance, but what has been setting him apart all season are his clever touches, and superb vision – how many magical passes have we seen already from him? This alone makes it money well spent by the Iron Duke.

To sum it up, what Benni has, apart from technique and composure in front of goal, is game intelligence. Off the field he may shoot his mouth off, but on the field, McCarthy has a football brain, far above the average PSL player.

But while Benni was demonstrating his finesse with clever flicks and defence-splitting passes, we got to see the other side of South African football too.

As witnessed by Ndumiso Mabena's embarrassing Moemish-of-the-Year miss. And as witnessed by several other incidents which saw players lacking composure, or simply taking the wrong option.

For a player to be successful, he or she needs skill and technique, physical fitness, and in modern football for the most part, pace.

The majority of our players have these attributes, in abundance.

But in the highly competitive and scientific world of football, this alone is not enough. With some exceptions, our players are lacking in intelligence, and with this I mean two types of intelligence: game intelligence, and emotional intelligence.

I believe also that our football culture, and our fans, need to take some of the blame. Far too much emphasis on individual skill, on shibobos, show-me-your-numbers, Scara Ngobese-like pirouettes. It's time we stop over-encouraging this type of showmanship, but rather applaud the teams that are able to implement Barca-style, one touch, triangle football.

Game intelligence is about making the right decisions, passing when needed to, shooting when the opportunity arises. Picking out a teammate in a better position. Reading the game. Making runs into the right spaces. Assuming the best positions to make oneself available for a pass. Envisioning a situation before it arises, like a defender getting back onto his line to cover a goalkeeping blunder.

To a certain degree, players are born with this intelligence. But it can also be cultivated at youth level, with the proper training, through coaches who instil these concepts into the players' minds until it becomes second nature.

Ajax Cape Town are one club who I believe have done this well – the Urban Warriors have successfully blended European discipline and tactical awareness with the natural skill of an African player. Thulani Serero is a great example of what can be achieved. Ajax's notable list of exports, and of turning average players into good, or great ones, speaks for itself. Granwald Scott is another; a player who expertly blends natural ability with tactical discipline.

But on-the-field intelligence is not always enough. (I believe McCarthy is a good example– if he had been more emotionally mature, I think he could have achieved far more in his career.)

Players need to be mature emotionally, to be able to handle the pressure when the chips are down. To come back from making a bad mistake or missing an open goal. Not to burst into tears when berated by a coach. To have the character and guts needed to be a really top performer. Not to flinch when watched by thousands or millions. This is what sets aside the Lionel Messies, Tiger Woods, Sachin Tendulkas and Novak Djokovices of our world.

In this respect, it's not easy in South Africa. Many of our most talented players come from the poorest backgrounds. What's key in this scenario is for players to be identified early, and placed in proper academies, where not only their football skills are honed, but where they are given top-class education and life-skills training, where their confidence and self esteem is built up.

Tuks are a good example. Over the years I must have spoken at least half a dozen Tuks players, and each one has proven to be a well-spoken, polite, intelligent, well-rounded and grounded individual. Your Bongani Khumaloes and George Malulekas. Look at the way Andile Jali's career is progressing.

Tuks are doing something right. So too are Ajax. If Safa, the PSL, and the clubs can tap into these two clubs' ideas and duplicate their methods, I feel we could start moving in the right direction.

Anthony McLennan







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Recent Comments (16) :

Fela: 2011-12-12 15:43

Wait a minute, is Mabena looking at the ball and not the target? If he is looking at the ball then how is he supposed to give it direction without looking at the target? Imagine driving a car and every time you shift gears you look at the gear lever? Hiw are you supposed to gie the car direction?

no1fan: 2011-12-12 15:48

Oupa Manyisa and Andile Jali have the same amount of intelligence on the ball as Benni. Look at the Pirates 2nd and 3rd goals.Maybe they should play in Europe before some people start praising them.

That said, I agree that our players make too many incorrect decisions and if that aspect is fixed, we can be world beaters.

Fela: 2011-12-12 15:56

Anthony if you busy dissing kassie football and Ajax,Amatuks are the best teams with development structures that are effective then i got ask what have they achieved?

There is nothing wrong with tsamayas and shibobos as long as they are constructive. Messie does this shibobos and there is nothing wrong with that? The only thing lacking in our soccer i will agree with you when you say technique is lacking as you can see from the insert above. And for your information Mabena is still on cloud nine for winning the TKO that you journalist claimed it was impossible, should n't you be concentrating on his win instead of the negatives? I wonder when did you write this article because to day is monday and the final was only on saturday night. nxxxxxxxx.

CAF Rule 14.1: 2011-12-12 16:01

"As witnessed by Ndumiso Mabena's embarrassing Moemish-of-the-Year miss. And as witnessed by several other incidents which saw players lacking composure, or simply taking the wrong option"

Now this what i call clamsy and myopic ****ysis by you Anthony McLennan. You come across as very shallow and not properly schooled the art of football ****ysis, what warrants Mabena's miss a Moemish-of-the-Year miss?? Did you see how a one-legged experienced player like Sphiwe Shabalala missed kicking the ball in their last game when he had the goal keeper to beat??
Over and above this there are a lot of awful misses in this league than what Mabena did, in fact some of your favorites strikers (Majoro, Parker etc)lack the intelligence of anticipating ***** in the opponent's half or even rounding the keeper!
So please do a thorough research on your articles
before your paste your ignorance on this blog

Baross: 2011-12-12 16:16

I would like to disagree with the assertion and observation by Anthony relating to the above story. Firstly, I would like to point it out to him that Barcelona style of football is unique only to them, hence if you look at the Spanish League, none of the teams play the same style as Barca and therefore this cannot be used as a yardstick of measuring our football. Messi is from Argentina and he does not play the same system in his native country as the way he plays in Barcelona. This does not mean that Argentian football is weak. It just confirms that we cannot use a particular system as a yardstick for soccer success.

I do agree though that you need to have both emotional and game intelligence. Now game intelligence is something that you are born with, it cannot be taught. A player can only be taught to use his talent and skill in a particular format or system. Emotional intelligence just like everything in life is based on experience and exposure. If one is used to playing in a full to capacity at a very young age, participate in poetry and educational speeches or drama in front of people, then when you get to play as an older person in a full capacity stadium you will not have any problems to relate to the multitudes of people because it would be something that is engrained in you.

In the very same 'El Classico on Saturday night, Christiano Ronaldo missed few sitters and made bad choices, are we then going to say Spanish football lacks intelligence or Portuguese soccer lacks intelligence? I do not think that this would be a fair comparison and assessment. What about similar (Mabena's)miss from Fernando Torres. Isn't he Spanish, he is. Does it mean that he does not have football intelligence? I guess to differ. Mabena scored a superb and difficult goal when Pirates played against Supersport and I guess if we only focus on few simple comparisons such as the one above by Anthony, then based on Mabena's goal we would then change our tune and say SA footballers are skillful and complete. How many matured and intelligent players have achieved what Benny has achieved in Spanish football for that matter? This does not mean that we do not have faults of our own. I just think that we do not play to our strengths as a country and we do not have a particular football philosophy or system that can be applied across the whole soccer academies from under 8 right through to Bafana Bafana. My view by the way

Dikotsi: 2011-12-12 16:21

CAF Rule 14.1:
Yopu are one of the Pirates supporters who shivers and the thought of Kaizer chiefs. Your examples are not surprising.

Dikotsi: 2011-12-12 16:22


Anyway, the best players have missed chances like Mabena did and all he need is composure and the skill of being able to look at the marker, poles and the space while he knows all the time where the ball is. That is a skill that should be taught from young age.
I see nothing wrong with Mabena nor the ****ysis of Anthony because we need to start looking at problems and short comings in our football. I wil repeta this today ,No Team in The World can beat South Africa if we get all teh basics right. Pound for pound we have the best skilled players. We only lack the intelligence...thats what Jomo Sono and Ace ntsoelengoe, Kaizer maotaung, Ace Mnini most gretas of the yeater years had and is missing now. The we used to have ameture teams playing at the same ground from F to A teams. The players were exposed to football the whole day and could talk, play and think football and techniques. We did not need special training because everything was natural then..we had it all and we can still have it if SAFA can think from "out of the box" instead of following "international trends.

Jacob/Styles: 2011-12-12 16:40

The perception of this guy is somehow a bit distorted, as i struggle to figure out what exactly Ajax and Tuks have achieved. Why is Serero not breaking into the starting line-up for Ajax Amsterdam? Yes it is true that there is lack of tactical discipline in our players, but the comparison to Ajax specifically is not really on for me.

Yes in terms of team-work against individual talent i agree with u Anthony and that has been a problem with most African players including Ronaldo in R.Madrid and Portugal. In terms of education and life-skills most teams have established development centres with facilities to give aid to the up and coming players. In-as-much-as being eloquent is imperative for any career one would think football intelligence outweighs speaking skills. If these players know the basics of the language and would be able to communicate, read and understand their contracts what more is expected of them. We have lots of professionals who are not well spoken but they are still competent in their work. I understand your effort in encouraging these players to develop in other areas of their lives but in the same vein do not exert unnecessary pressure on them. Slowly but surely our standard of football is getting there. Up The Bucs and I pause.

Disco: 2011-12-12 17:31

I hope this is not a Bucs excitement

Anthony, self control is a personality trait and cannot be taught anywhere. Humbleness allows one to be precise and composed; it allows one to think clearly and make the right decisions. A football player who lacks this trait will suffer in football.

I don’t know what you mean by both emotional and game intelligence, however, to me intelligence is simply knowledge and by suggesting that our players lacks both, then I can simply conclude that we don’t have the right Coaches in this country.

Some of us have been preaching that Diski 99 or whatever you want to call it is useless in the structured football and were seen as not being patriotic because we defy the culture of football in this country.

Today you still find people who criticize football owners who look for Coaches and players abroad. Have we ever asked ourselves why?

The football community in this country should look for medicine that will cure this chronic disease of thinking that they are superior in football.

The General - Soccer Dude: 2011-12-12 20:20

@WHOEVER YOUR NAME IS WHO WROTE THIS CRAP, HAVE YOU JUST SAW THE DIFFERNCES BETWEEN THESE LEAGUES JUST NOW AFTER THE BUCS HAVE CLINCHED THEIR LATEST TROPHY?? JEALOUS WILL KILL MANY PEOPLE THIS YEAR. PLEASE ARE TRYING BY ALL MEANS TO PUT DOWN THE ACHEIVEMENTS FROM PIRATES. WHY ALL OF A SUDDEN NOW??

WAS THIS COMPARISON MADE LAST YEAR AFTER THE ZEBRAS (AKA FAMILY BUSINESS) WON THE TKO TITLE??? THE ASNWER IS NO OFCOURSE. I'M STARTING TO BELIEVE THAT MANY PEOPLE ARE WOUNDED BECAUSE OF THE MIGHTY BUCCANEERS SUCCESS. JUST KNOW THAT THE MORE YOU TRY TO KEEP US DOWN, THE MORE THE BLESSINGS WILL FLOW TO OUR CAMP.

CAN'T WE JUST BE ALLOWED TO CELEBRATE OUR SUCCESS WITHOUT PEOPLE TRYING TO BRING UP ALL THE NEGATIVE STUFFS?

ONCE A PIRATE ALWAYS A CHAMPION!!!

East Rand: 2011-12-13 08:56

I agree 100% with your article Anthony. The days of doing 360 degrees int he middle of the pitch just to get fans excited then lose the ball when attempting to make a pass has relegated us in the world standings. what we see now from our players is something which has been cultivated from a young age where a player is considered to be a good soccer player by how he can dribble opponents without purpose. In all this mist we forget the fundamentals of football which is to to trap, pass, run into spaces and scoring goals. December soccer tournaments are coming, Godfrey Moloi, Phillies etc. What we normally see there is nothing but shibobo's, tsamayas which we consider to be football. We need a change of mindset. This will unfortunately take generations to overcome

Dooba OPC: 2011-12-13 09:24

"In this respect, it's not easy in South Africa. Many of our most talented players come from the poorest backgrounds"

I did not know there was a correlation between poerty and intelligence! If it is there, then this means Mabena has poverty of footba_ll and deserved to be nothing more than a ba-llboy!

Dooba OPC: 2011-12-13 09:26

CAF Rule 14.1: 2011-12-12 16:01

Some people can't exist without Chiefs. Your constant comparison to Chiefs is no more shallow, its beginning to irritate. Leave Chiefs out of this, is 5 cups not enough bathong?

CAF Rule 14.1: 2011-12-13 10:06

@Dooba OPC
For as long as jealous Chiefs fans like you&Anthony McLennan hide behind their profession of journalism when they write unbalanced reports trying to discredit the cablibre of Pirates players we the Bucs fans will continue to defend our players period...
Why publish a negative article about a Pirates player immediately after they have won a cup??the whole idea was to discredit them, why not talk about the Bucs' goals All of them were Text Book Goals or the fuildity of the team when going forward!!!

Ant: 2011-12-13 11:46

In response: Mabena was just used as an case in point, as his miss was a memory fresh in my mind, yet highlighted an issue I have long noticed. He is not being singled out, nor are Pirates players. Any PSL game would probably reveal similar mistakes.
@no1fan: I fully agree on Manyisa and Jali. Of course there are several other examples, I just used the Benni & Serero examples for the purposes of my article.
@Fela: Ajax and Tuks haven't won trophies because their best players get sold. To teams like Chiefs and Pirates and Sundowns who should be developing more of their own players. Their achievements in terms of players produced are outstanding.
@ Baross: of course we are never going to replicate Barca football here. But we can learn things from them - how to develop local players that play in a system (like Ajax). How to play simple yet effective football. Its not about comparing the two leagues, its about raising our standards by learning from the best. When Messi nutmegs, its usually when in the process of running at goal.

Ant: 2011-12-13 11:55

In response: Mabena was just used as an case in point, as his miss was a memory fresh in my mind, yet highlighted an issue I have long noticed. He is not being singled out, nor are Pirates players. Any PSL game would probably reveal similar mistakes.
@no1fan: I fully agree on Manyisa and Jali. Of course there are several other examples, I just used the Benni & Serero examples for the purposes of my article.
@Fela: Ajax and Tuks haven't won trophies because their best players get sold. To teams like Chiefs and Pirates and Sundowns who should be developing more of their own players. Their achievements in terms of players produced are outstanding.
@ Baross: of course we are never going to replicate Barca football here. But we can learn things from them - how to develop local players that play in a system (like Ajax). How to play simple yet effective football. Its not about comparing the two leagues, its about raising our standards by learning from the best. When Messi nutmegs, its usually when in the process of running at goal.

 
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