Liked it up on Medium but sharing the love here too.
Great piece.
Great piece.
Whilst harsh in my article on the FA's overall investment (and especially the Premier League) which frankly is a disgrace. I also want to stress that the Sussex FA have some terrific coaches, courses, and people working for it.
Excellent points.
We have had to pay extra subs this winter so my younger sons team can train, and that was just for one hour a week.
They didn't play a match from 13th Dec until early February ( there was a short Christmas break )
Having been involved a few years ago I found funding a problem, but for different reasons.
I actually found the individual clubs get a little bit greedy off the back of the volunteer coaches, by that I mean most youth sections tended to stock pile money, it seemed that each youth department of a club was holding cash balances unnecessarily high.
If the club was associated to a senior side then most of the time the youth sides were batting away advances from the senior sides for funds, or alternatively not redistributing the funds back to the players or their sides.
I have sat in meetings with copies of accounts showing a balance of £6000+, whilst the rest of the meeting was about procurement of sponsors for new kit or equipment rather than even thinking of using those funds (parents money raised by those volunteering coaches), at times it all seemed a greedy approach.
All clubs require some working capital a few thousand seems quite adequate, but why the need to amass more.
The money should be turned over quickly and appropriately, one aspect that always seemed under represented was specialised goalkeeper coaching, use the funds to perhaps ask for qualified sessions for each goalkeeper of each age group, or for those times when we need to hire a 3g/4g, but it needs to be spent, not hoarded because ultimately it will be used inappropriately or wasted, using the contributions from previous age groups on current age groups, that seems unfair, or if imaginative ways cannot be found why not cut the annual fee's demanded from parents.
Use the money, use it wisely, quickly and imaginatively, but use it, spend it and allow those children to be the main benefactors of their own parents contributions and the hard work of the volunteer coaches.
Interesting points.
To be fair to the team my youngest son plays for the subs are good value, so paying a few pound so he could train on an all weather pitch wasn't an issue.
But they have trained at 5 different venues this season because of the weather, the all weather pitch ( not even a decent 3G ) was a last resort.
He did play for another team 2 seasons back and the subs were double what I pay now, his manager was always pleading poverty and asking for sponsorship and money for equipment. This club was part of a well established county league team that had many junior teams, but there never seemed to be a togetherness.
Something was definitely not right with the running of the financial side.
My older son played for a very well ran junior club, the presentation night was brilliant with all ages from u-7 to u-16 attending, also training was on 3G pitches when the weather was bad at no extra cost.