Ancaster resident Ian McClurg hopes to change that.
Using the world renowned Brazilian Soccer Schools program, McClurg is helping young players raise their game by improving individual ball handling skills, speed and endurance. First in Burlington and now in Ancaster, the BSS system is forming a solid foundation in Southern Ontario. McClurg plans to expand the program across Canada while helping thousands of youth players compete for a chance at professional stardom.
Brazilian Soccer Schools is a concept developed by British soccer enthusiast Simon Clifford. After visiting Brazil and watching children play a game called Futebol de Salao, Clifford noticed the young Brazilians had extraordinary ball handling skills. Their game, a variation of what most of the world calls football, is played with a smaller, size two ball. The Futebol de Salao ball is much weightier than a conventional ball. It has very little bounce. Instead of kicking the ball long distances and chasing it back and forth, Clifford noticed the Brazilian players used their superior ball handling skills to challenge the defenders.
Founded in 1996, Brazilian Soccer Schools uses the same method to improve individual skills. Clifford’s first school was launched in Leeds, England. Today there are BSS schools across the U. K., offering cutting edge training techniques to a football crazed nation. Franchises have also appeared in 64 countries worldwide, including Canada.
McClurg is the first to offer BSS instruction in Canada. The program began last year in Burlington and has recently expanded at Ancaster’s Jewish Community Centre.
McClurg, a native of Northern Ireland, is a firm believer in the BSS system.
“The kids have got to master the ball handling first,” he said.
Brazilian Soccer Schools focuses on youth aged five to 16. It uses a grading system designed by Clifford that measures a player’s individual ball handling skills. Players earn badges for achieving skills, such as juggling a ball with their feet.
Many of the skills are named after professional players, such as the Pele sprint, which involves rolling the ball back and forth with the top of your foot as many times as you can in 30 seconds. McClurg has already seen seven and eight-year-old players who can tally 150 Pele sprints in half a minute. Another Ancaster youth player recently amazed McClurg by executing 460 consecutive juggles.
The BSS method includes 10 core moves such as juggling, plus dribbling and passing exercises.
Level four is considered the standard required to play professionally in England, McClurg said.
While he’s not a professional player himself, Clifford has already used his Brazilian teaching method with positive results in England. He owns a semi-professional team, Garforth Town AFC. The club currently plays in the eighth division of British Football after earning two promotions in the last four years.
Clifford has also developed the Socatots program, the world’s first soccer specific physical play program for preschool aged children. The program is geared towards students aged six months to five years.
Susan Woods leads the Canadian division of Socatots. Like Brazilian Soccer Schools, the program is also based in Burlington and Ancaster.
Featuring parent participation and small class sizes, Socatots uses music, words and activities that strengthen balance, coordination, and body awareness. The program is often used as an introduction to BSS, but it also strives to develop communication skills, language and literacy.
McClurg hopes to establish a technical centre in Ancaster and a Canadian head office for Brazilian Soccer Schools. A technical centre helps to identify and develop players who have the potential to pursue a professional career. The best athletes could be recommended for admission to the British academy system. Teams in the Barclay’s Premier League, the top flight of English football, recruit and develop players using their own football academies.
McClurg currently instructs about 100 students in Burlington and Ancaster. He dreams about someday making the BSS system as prevalent in Canada as the U. K. where programs exist in virtually every community.
“That’s our goal for Canada,” said McClurg, who retains the Canadian rights for Brazilian Soccer Schools. New eight-week sessions for BSS and Socatots are slated to begin in Ancaster next month. Although no long-term commitment is required, McClurg encourages players to stay with the program, especially if they exhibit the potential to perform at a high level.
Registration information for Brazilian Soccer Schools Canada and Socatots is available at www.icfds.com/canada .