Coach Education with Frans Hoek

To kick off the season, Fremont YSC coaching staff enjoyed a great day of coach education with Netherlands assistant coach, Frans Hoek. Frans is the elite of football coaching, an UEFA Technical Advisor, and having worked at the worlds biggest clubs, Bayern Munich, Barcelona, and Bayern Munich; and reaching the FIFA World Cup final with the Netherlands in South Africa.

Covering the structure of football, creating a universal language for coaches so analysis can be identified as objective, the coaches were set assignments on analysis in game moments, observation of reality based training, and further assignment in creating reality based session from analysis of a game moment.

Not only were the coaches extremely grateful for the opportunity to be educated by an elite coach, and coach educator; but our Senior Boys and a collection of 07B ID I, were lucky enough to be coached by the same coach who has worked with Iniesta, Xavi, Van Persie, Schweinsteiger, de Jong, and Rashford.

In Memory of Victor Campos – 2006 to 2021

On July 6th, 2021, the Campos family were left devastated by the loss of Victor.

We will always remember Victor for his positive outlook, great humor, personality, and his excellent ability to play soccer, with so many skills and tricks. Victor will forever be in our thoughts, and we are grateful for the memories.

End of Season – Roots Tickets

We are now at the end of the season, with only a small number of games remaining. Send us your end of season pictures, whether team or individual players in action, or any pictures from throughout the season you would like to share.

End of Season Event

This season we are celebrating the end of the season with Oakland Roots. We encourage all players to watch us much live soccer as possible, it supports the love of the game and a visual reference for what can be achieved in the future. Purchase your tickets, for your age group event at the links below.

13’s to 09’shttps://fevo.me/fysc22

08’s to Seniorshttps://offer.fevo.com/22-game-8-vs-orange-county-sc-6jc5jau-86778e7?fevoUri=22-game-8-vs-orange-county-sc-6jc5jau-86778e7%2F

Frans Hoek – Returning to Fremont YSC

We are incredibly excited with the return of Frans Hoek to Fremont YSC.
Frans will be returning to the club from his previous visit in 2020, working with the club coaches, with one of our club teams getting the opportunity to practice in front of him as he supports the coach’s education.
The US is flooded with many new acronyms for the latest fancy ‘elite’ and ‘premier’ leagues, but this does nothing for the players development, just fuels the egos of coaches and insanity sweeping youth sports. Players will develop from better coaches, who continue to pursue their own education to support the needs of the individual player.

Happy Mothers Day

Happy Mothers Day, thank you for always being the players biggest supporter.

Have a great day with friends, family, and loved ones.

Congratulations, McKenna Nolasco, Committed to Chapman University

A huge congratulations to McKenna Nolasco, committing to 4 Year College, Chapman University.

McKenna played for Fremont YSC through her Foundation Phase, and early Youth Development Phase years. Although born in the 2004 playing age, throughout her time with Fremont YSC, McKenna played with the 2002 Girls, demonstrating excellent individual footwork and manipulation, and the physical component to compliment her excellent soccer ability. You will recognize McKenna from the Long Term Development video. McKenna more recently was playing with Sporting Santa Clara, but we would still see her around the club during club events.

McKenna’s family have been huge supporters of the club, and we are lucky to have had such a great family, and dedicated player as McKenna at the club.

We wish McKenna all the best with her college career.

As the Games Begin – Insight into the Player Development at Fremont YSC

Hello everyone,

This weekend is the main first week of the season, with most teams having their first games of the season. The following information will support your understanding of the development pathway for the players, and a useful resource to guide you in both the short- and long-term development.

Sadly, for many players, the games are a stress inducing outcome event, with the adults influencing the players in relying on the outcome (result) as an indicator of rate of development. At Fremont YSC our focus is development, where definition of success is not game outcome or league position, but the development of players in reference to a development pathway, and the nurturing of the whole player. A player’s development is non-linear and will be influenced by the four pillars of development (technical, tactical, physical, and psychosocial). These are not independent structures, they are all connected, influenced by each other, and individual to the athlete.

Psychosocial Pillar (Behaviors and Values)

This drives our culture; all club members, representatives, staff, and players, are responsible for upholding the values and behaviors, and must behave how they expect others to behave. While periodized into learning phases, the values and behaviors should be present in each phase, but with specific reference to their age appropriateness. See the following link on our behavior and values, and to make sure you are upholding the culture of Fremont YSC https://www.fremontyouthsoccer.com/mission-statement-and-philosophy/

Technical / Tactical Pillar

Each development phase has its own separate objective, to provide guidance along the development pathway of the individual player, with performance indicators as benchmarks through the phases. These performance indicators are what informs the player evaluations. These provide short term goals within a long-term framework.

Foundation Phase (U9 to U12): the objective here is to optimize the individual playing elements to provide a foundation for later advanced techniques, and to be able to execute the football actions in reference to the game model. Coaching objectives here are the individual footwork foundations, and individual player elements. Assimilating this to the game scenarios of weekend games, we frame the game as an opportunity to perform the foundation performance indicators, in 7 v 7 this is through playing centrally in the 1-2-1-2-1, this provides a high number of individual duals which are critical for player development. 9 v 9 we continue to focus on the individual foundations and player elements, but now introducing width from FB’s getting forward, and introducing the sub-principles (playing elements). The player must feel freedom to make mistakes and learn from experiences, with joy-sticking and negative comments from sidelines being detrimental to the players experience (joy-sticking is autocratic demands for players to perform actions you desire, making the decision for the player).

Development Phase (U13 to U16): in line with the players cognitive development to be able to take dynamic and complex situations and find solutions, we now start to introduce more tactical understanding. This being the introduction of the game principles (playing concepts and objectives). In full 11 v 11 and using the 1-4-3-3, we play in multiple lines and offering passing channels at angles. The system supports the concepts and objectives. The ability to perform the foundation phase performance indicators supports the performance of game principles. Within the constructivist learning theory, the game acts as opportunities to experience moments, and learn from those experiences. As coaches we are there to guide and question, offering the level of support needed for the level of challenge (scaffolded learning).

Performance Phase (U19): With a game model that is a top-down vision, with a bottom-up framework, the constructivist nature of learning, empowering of players to be decision makers, and a scaffolded approach to levels of support to accept failure as a learning opportunity, players are in a position to perform within an identity. The earlier short term development pathway gives us the direction to destination of long-term development in reference to a game model. The game model is our IDENTITY.

We firmly believe in the need for early age sampling of multiple sports, and soccer is not an early specialization sport as many players will drop and not develop a well-rounded skill set and motor competence (see presentation on Early Specialization). However, there must be a direction towards a long-term outcome, with short term objectives, with players being supported to become individuals within a team framework. As mentioned, this is not linear, and players will experience many challenges, from early and late maturation, effects of peak height velocity, and the environment they are in. No two individuals are the same. Player’s jersey numbers represent when in the year they are born, and this is to draw attention to the relative age effect (a combination of above factors), and players must be viewed upon individually at the youth level, and not identified or critiqued based on the team outcome.

What is Success?

The success of Fremont YSC is the interconnected relationship between the culture and playing identity, in coaching towards high performance at U19. This only achieved through the development at age-appropriate stages in the four pillars of psychosocial, physiological, and technical, and tactical structures.

Success is not the win/loss ratio in foundation and development phases, it’s not the cups and league brackets being played in; it’s the optimizing of the pillars of development in short term objectives, to reach a high-performance long-term goal, and supporting the individual holistically in being a good human being.

If any of this does not make sense, you have questions, or challenge the philosophy, make sure you reach out to me. It is my role to help support you in understanding and offer deep learning around the coaching process and player development. We should all be lifelong learners, don’t be afraid to not know something, seek the knowledge you need.

Coach Education – Coaches as Life Long Learners

Excellent work from the Fremont YSC coaches. Coaches must be life long learners, engaged in their own education, so players get the best possible learning experience.
Coaches create a 6 session portfolio, in reference to the Fremont YSC Game Model. A task for coaches to design sessions in consideration of the four pillars of player development with the freedom to create and design their own templates and periodized training cycle, and reflect on sessions to learn from their experiences.
For detailed information on the structuring of a session – https://www.fremontyouthsoccer.com/2021/07/week-1-review/

Jesus, 1996 to 2022, Rest in Peace

We are deeply saddened and devastated by the passing of Jesus. On Friday February 18th, Jesus passed away at home, leaving us shocked and in great sadness.

Jesus was the kindest person you could meet. A club coach, and former Fremont YSC player, Jesus was dedicated to his passion of soccer, compassionate and caring to the players he coached. An exceptional player, but more importantly a great human being.

Our thoughts are with his family, we cannot begin to understand the pain his family will be feeling, taken away from us far too young at only 25.

Jesus had a positive influence on us all, and he will be sorely missed.