The Wookiee
Back From The Dead
It's just not a football area. Never has been.
Doesn't Sussex have the biggest Sunday football league in the country ?
It's just not a football area. Never has been.
Josh Dickens - b. Crawley (Released by Aldershot at the end of his scholarship last summer, he is now playing for Deportes Concepcion in the Chilean Primera B)
I don't agree at all. Football is as popular in Sussex as anywhere in the UK and its young players are no more or no less talented.
True, we don't have the pro clubs or the footballing infrastucture of London and big northern cities but the grass roots game has always thrived, the county league has traditionally been strong, and the level of participation must be on a par with most of the rest of the country.
I watch youngsters most weeks in junior football and there is some real talent on display. Some of these kids I've watched come through the ranks have been snapped up by Brighton or the London clubs and many others will go on to play at a respectable level. The Lancing facility will hopefully give more of these kids a chance to develop their full potential, with minimal disruption to school and family life ... I know some parents have had to drag their kids up to London and even further afield for midweek training and games and it's a huge drain on time, money and enthusiasm.
To anyone who thinks that Sussex isn't a football county: start by looking at the crowds at the Amex, then look at the way Crawley and Eastbourne Borough have progressed, take a look at Lewes, Whitehawk and Bognor, maybe Burgess Hill and Peacehaven, see how much people care about the county league, then the smaller leagues like the East Sussex League, and the town leagues, the Sunday leagues, and the many youth leagues and tournaments. The level of participation, whether that means players, fans, coaches, admin people and families, is frankly phenomenal.
(Hall is Spurs, btw)
I know - playing on loan at Swindon.
El Abd ineligible, I'm afraid - plays for Egypt.My Sussex National XI... How far would they get in this year's World Cup?
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Further than England?
Bad scouting and bad coaching!
Many,many excellent players were lost in the 70's and 80's when youth players were in the hands of people like Mick Fogden and John Shepherd.
Glen Geard,whilst pretty brain dead,was as good as Wilshire,Ramsay,Rooney and even Gazza.
He needed decent coaches and mentors and he got dumb and dumber.
So much talent was lost at that time.
The problem with youth coaches at the Albion over the years is that they have seen themselves as the focus of attention rather than the young players.[/QUOTE
Very true. Fogden and Sheppard were two of the most inept pair of coaches I've ever come across. Brighton really were at laughing stock amongst other clubs during that period with their youth set up. Thankfully times have changed.
Bad scouting and bad coaching!
Many,many excellent players were lost in the 70's and 80's when youth players were in the hands of people like Mick Fogden and John Shepherd.
Glen Geard,whilst pretty brain dead,was as good as Wilshire,Ramsay,Rooney and even Gazza.
He needed decent coaches and mentors and he got dumb and dumber.
So much talent was lost at that time.
The problem with youth coaches at the Albion over the years is that they have seen themselves as the focus of attention rather than the young players.
Peter Bonetti grew up in Worthing and played for Chelsea and England.
I agree to a point when talking about scouting and coaching, but I am sure Geard bypassed Shepherd and Fogden.
Wasnt he lifted in from Lewes and probably became an apprentice or pro and into the arms of George Aitkren, Craggs, Ken and even Mullery.
I think if we are looking for blame for Geards underachievement, its a little unfair to blame Shepherd and Fogden.
He played in the Youth team under Shepherd and Fogden.He played in the ressies under Gutteridge and Aitkin who were about as good as Shepherd and Fogden.
Mullers was a good manager and Ken Craggs was a good number two,but scratch the surface at that time and there was some real crap dealing with the kids.
Frankie Howard was groundsman and the young players related more to him than those I have menttioned.Billy Boston (Glenn Wilson) as well.Who was the physio.
There were players who should have made it and didn't.Geard is just the one who springs to mind the most.
I can only think of one person who made reasonable progress through that youth system and that was Micky Ring who had far less ability than Geard,but a far better attitude.
Geard was undoubtably his own worst enemy,but I think that if he was in the system today,things have progressed so far in terms of mentoring etc,he would not have slipped through the net.
He really should have been a top player.