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A bioecological perspective on talent identification in junior-elite soccer: A Pan-European perspective.

Matthew J ReevesSimon J Roberts
Published in: Journal of sports sciences (2019)
Elite soccer clubs across Europe spend ever-increasing sums of money on transfers and salaries for world-class players. Consequently, clubs' talent identification and development processes for junior players have become more professionalised. Based on a holistic ecological approach, this study presents an analysis of talent identification practices across some of the most productive soccer academies in Europe (N = 11). Data were collected via semi-structured interviews with 11 heads of academy recruitment from clubs in the "big five" European leagues. Clubs were purposively sampled based on their player productivity ranking. Interviews ranged from 52:26 minutes to 114:06 minutes in length (m = 87:53 ± 20.10 minutes). This study argues that holistic ecological approaches the environments were characterised through the interplay of factors that ranged from high-level internal to international level relationships. This resulted in the identification and recruitment of players from local and international environments. The purpose of recruitment was suggested to have a dual purpose: recruitment of players for the first team; recruitment of players for further development/monitoring and/or selling to another club.
Keyphrases
  • high school
  • climate change
  • bioinformatics analysis
  • healthcare
  • primary care
  • big data
  • body composition
  • palliative care
  • machine learning
  • electronic health record
  • risk assessment