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Grow Your Brain with Futsal Print
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Grow your brain with Futsal

Grow Your Brain with Futsal

An Interview with Daniel Coyle author of "The Talent Code"

By Anna Edgerton

BERKELEY, Calif. (5-20-10) – The number one question for any coach is how to cultivate the best players possible without killing the love of the game. How do you design a practice that develops talent, simulates real game situations, and gets everyone involved? To find out I asked Daniel Coyle, author of The Talent Code, who argues that it is actually possible to “grow” talent. For those soccer coaches whose players were probably not kicking in the womb, this is excellent news.

(Daniel Coyle.)


For Coyle, Futsal is the “perfectly designed game” to develop soccer talent. Many of us Futsal aficionados could have told you that already, but in The Talent Code, Coyle presents both scientific and empirical research to confirm our enthusiasm for soccer’s smaller sister. In this book he explores the idea of “deep practice” and the effect that constant repetition has on the neurological development of an athlete or artist. Without getting too deep into the science side of the story, it turns out that through constant repetition one can actually grow a kind of insulation called
myelin around connections in the brain to make them fire faster.


When I suggested to Coyle that repetition in practice also develops muscle memory, he claimed that physically there’s no such thing. “Muscles are actually really dumb,” he pointed out. “Muscles are like the wooden part of the puppet. The action is with the strings.” These “strings” are the connections in the brain, and the faster information travels through them, the better you perform. More of the right kind of practice means more myelin to transmit neurological signals even faster.

For a soccer coach, this is where Futsal comes in. According to Coyle, there are many qualities of Futsal that make it the perfect tool for deep practice—and developing that all-important myelin. Because it is played on a smaller scale, with fewer players and a ball that has 30% less bounce, it naturally provides players with “perfect feedback and lots of quality reps.” Although the fundamentals are the same, the significant differences between Futsal and outdoor soccer make it the ideal setting for maximum learning with minimal coaching.


To illustrate this point, Coyle cited the example of board sports—skateboarding, surfing, snowboarding—because there is no coach to explain how to get it right. People learn these sports by repetition, by figuring out what works and what doesn’t, so that “the sport teaches you what to do.” This makes the learning process much more meaningful, because every mistake becomes a teaching moment and every success builds “a pokerhand of possibilities” to use in the future. Add to this the intensity and competition of Futsal, and you have the perfect training tool for building a better soccer player.


For example, consider the depth of soccer talent and range of ball-handling creativity that comes out of Brazil. It’s no coincidence that almost all Brazilian youth play Futsal for years before they ever touch an outdoor ball. For one, there is less space required for a Futsal court than for a soccer field, and organizing a game is “cheaper, faster and easier.” According to Coyle, it’s “the perfect confluence of circumstance and culture” in Brazil that makes Futsal the norm for young players, resulting in some of the best professionals in the world. In the first chapter of his book Coyle says, “since the 1950s Brazilian players have trained in a particular way, with a particular tool that improves ball-handling skill faster than anywhere else in the world.” That tool is, of course, Futsal.

(Kids playing Futsal in Brazil.)


Although this sport
is rapidly gaining popularity in its own right on an international scale, like all things soccer, it is slower to catch on in the United States where coaches are used to sculpting players with drills and conditioning. However, Coyle argues that “the sport sells itself.” After investigating the Brazilian scene, he brought a few Futsal balls back the United States and “just threw them into the high school pick up games. The kids loved it.” Because it’s basically condensed play, which is the best kind of deep practice, anyone who enjoys soccer will be a lot more enthusiastic about playing Futsal than running suicides down eternal lines of cones. Not to mention, Futsal will grow your brain. Talk about the perfect sport!


For more information on Futsal as “deep practice” and The Talent Code, see Daniel Coyle’s website at:
thetalentcode.com

 
Community Club Futsal Leagues Print
Penn West Featured News

Penn West Futsal & Keystone Indoor Kicks
Present

Fledgling Division Community Club Leagues


Gets your club playing indoors?

Penn West Futsal, and Keystone Indoor kicks, are offering your clubs players from age U6 to U10 the chance to experience THE FIFA approved version of indoor soccer Futsal. There are many reasons why Kiski Area Soccer Club should consider this option but perhaps the best reason is that your player will have lots of fun and gets 100’s of touches on the ball they would have missed out on, if they did not participate. Here are some of the important data for this program.

1.      All games are located at the Kiski Area Sports Center.

2.      This is essentially an in-house program indoors. To qualify you must enter at least 4 teams in a single age level from U6 to U10.

3.      You are responsible for assuring the teams are competitively balanced to ensure the fairest competition.

4.      Keystone Indoor Kicks will secure the time on Saturdays to hold these games do the schedules and schedule referees for the competition.

5.      Clubs can adjust the rules from standard Futsal (5 v 5) including keepers down to what format they are comfortable with. The can also set up roster limits that are appropriate for the game format they choose.(4 v 4, etc)

6.      Keystone Indoor Kicks encourages clubs to add a value added premium over and above expenses to make income to support their club program turning this indoor program into a fund raiser. For their organization.

7.      Field Size is approximately (90 x 50) within Futsal minimums.

8.      Only Futsal balls can be used.

9.      USFF Player registration is required giving your teams and club and coaches liability and secondary medical insurance (Not available through PaWest for indoor Soccer)

10.   Cross over games with other clubs involved in the community Futsal level are possible.

11.   League play will start on November 18, 2011

12.   Each team will get 8 games,

13.   We are closed for league play from Nov. 25-28 and Dec 24-Jan 1

14.   Referee fees are$5.00 per team per game and are paid by the teams prior to the start of each game.

The Kiski Area Sports Center has:

·        Modern clean amenities.

·        Ample viewing.

·        A large clean parking lot.

·        A concession area.

·        Locker Rooms

This program allows you to get lots of your players involved in Indoor Soccer at a very cheap affordable price. Playing (5 v5) with an 8 player roster. Players would pay a $31.25 league fee.

If you decide as a club to take advantage of this program please let us know so we may start supplying any support materials you may need.

Yours in Futsal,

Terrie Harsch
 PaWest Futsal
Call 724-864-9330 or E-mail This e-mail address is being protected from spambots, you need JavaScript enabled to view it

 
League Sign-up Print
Penn West Featured News


Leagues At Monroeville Sports Center

To Sign Up A Team for League Play
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Pennsylvaina West Futsal Sets Calender Print
Penn West Featured News
Pennsylvania West Futsal State Association  LogoPennsylvania West Futsal  is finalizing its Yearly Calendar for . Play is scheduled to begin in November 2 Weeks before Thanksgiving and end in the third week of March. This dove tails nicely with PAWest outdoor programs, and stays with Pennsylvania West Futsal's physiology of working with local USYSA and US Club soccer National organizations to compliment each other.
 
The History Of Penn West Futsal Print
Penn West Featured News

2008-08-29
West Penn Futsal History

In the late spring of 1986 a group of 3 soccer enthusiasts in the Western Pa area, became interested in bringing a indoor soccer to our area of Western Pa. At that time there were only two facilities for indoor Soccer in all of Western Pa. These where dasher board facilities. They where long distances away and where suited for the for the dasher board game which at that time was the focus oh indoor soccer in our area mostly cause of Pittsburgh's franchise in the now defunct MISL. When the Spirit went defunct in 1986, the future looked bleak for Indoor soccer. The Founders had contacts in the soccer world and one of them had seen an article about another version of Indoor soccer called Mini-soccer or Futsal. After contacting Alex Para then Operations Director of US Futsal, they received the data on Futsal. After reading the information, the founders liked much of what they read. Of particular interest was the fact that Futsal was played on a Basketball Court. They then decided they would look for a place to play and set up a league. The search was long and frustrating, eventually They discovered a old gymnasium In Manor, Pa. The three invested their own capitol and formed Keystone Indoor Kicks, to finance the repairs and equipment necessary to operate Futsal Leagues,
The 1986 season was the very first Futsal game played at Keystone Indoor Kicks in Manor. The game started out slowly and grew every year, West Penn Futsal organization was started the following spring. Futsal has seen steady growth with leagues forming at various locations across the Pa-West area.


The Organization is following a plan for a slow measured growth rate with emaphasis on expanding in ways that do not adversilly effect exsiting leagues. This is especially true of the interpaly requirements that require leagues to hold interpaly so new lleagues can take time to grow dispite a lack of numbers initially. The Syte Cup and various tournaments are also played every year in the Pa West Area.


Penn West Futsal is considered a hotbed of Futsal in the US and its teams have represented it well in the National Championship competition.

 
Registration Procedures Print
Penn West Registration News

star_red.png Please click here for compete Registration Procedures.


For any information on locating leagues and playing futsal in Pennsylvania
Contact Terrie at This e-mail address is being protected from spambots, you need JavaScript enabled to view it
Telephone: 724-864-(9330)

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  • 2009 Futsal National Champions
  • 2009 Futsal National Champions
  • 2009 Futsal National Champions
  • 2009 Futsal National Champions
  • 2009 Futsal National Champions
  • 2009 Futsal National Champions
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