Webisode V - Celebrating our best

This is the fifth and final webisode for the MSA Blog.

I had the honour and privilege of speaking with six winners of awards at this year's MSA Annual Awards Banquet.

I put this piece together using their answers to some of my questions. Each of the full interviews will soon be available to check out on our MSA Facebook page!

Thanks to the winners who agreed to participate in this but recognition also needs to go out to those who won awards but were not able to be in the video. They are as follows:

Harry Harwood Outstanding Youth Male Player Award: Dylan Carreiro
Lorrie Thompson Outstanding Youth Female Player Award: Neena Young
Victor Batzel Outstanding Youth Volunteer Award: Greg Nordman
Frank Stambrook Outstanding Volunteer Award: Lynda McLeish
Mario Perrino Outstanding Referee Award: Graham Forsyth


Proposed changes...some thoughts.

Change.

It’s a six-letter word that seems to strike fear into the very hearts of this city’s soccer community. Always a passionate, tight knit but fairly conservative bunch, Winnipeg’s fairly small group of passionate soccer supporters have always seemed content with the status quo.

That status quo is being threatened big time by a proposed new ruling from the Manitoba Soccer Association that would eliminate any official competition from the sport of soccer for kids under 12 by the year 2014. Instead of keeping score in league play and awarding trophies and championships, greater emphasis would be placed on actually learning the game. More time would be spent in training sessions, learning skills and getting active. Less time would be spent playing games.

Naturally, much of the soccer community is up in arms over the idea. Claiming that it will set back the development of our top prospects and no longer really be a sport.

That idea is foolish and narrow minded.

For starters, it isn’t as if competition is being removed from the sport entirely, just for young kids under the age of 12. At that age, the competition is often more between wild parents harassing each other, referees and coaches on the sidelines than the kids anyway.

One a child is a teenager and even old enough to stay home alone, they can keep score and win trophies as much as they want.

While age is a factor, the biggest thing we have to face up to as soccer fans is that the current system for soccer in this province just is not working.

Soccer fanatics who know some good players and have friends who they think could play for provincial programs etc might disagree but at its very foundation, our province is producing very, very few top level soccer players. Our men’s national team is ranked below tiny countries most of us have never even heard of.

So let’s try something new. Let’s actually have our players spend time working on getting better, working on becoming skilled and fit and then put them in competitive games. It’s just logical that they will touch the ball and improve more by being out practicing for hours than touching the ball 10 times in a one hour long game.

As MSA Chief Executive Hector Vergara said this week, this is the system used for soccer in much of the rest of the world. Spain uses a similar system and just won the World Cup. In South America you don’t see kids playing in organized leagues, but spending endless hours out with friends on the streets learning their craft.

The bottom line is this, whether you agree with it or not. This plan should be given a chance before it’s condemned as an outright failure.

Sure, we could resist change, stick with the nice little bubble world that we have as a soccer community, but what’s the point? Why not aim for more?

With any luck we might see players from Manitoba on the sports biggest stage one day, instead of just winning a community club tournament.


Stay tuned. I will be speaking with Hector and other MSA executives this week to continue taking a closer look at this story and what it means for soccer in our province.

keith

A change in philosophy?

Hey everyone,

Check out this article on the Free Press website today about how there could be changes in Manitoba soccer to move to more of a fun component rather than competitive.

Article

It certainly seems to have generated a lot of discussion. What do you think?

Let us know!

keith

Alliance Soccer on Shaw

Just a reminder to everyone that the Winnipeg Alliance, Winnipeg's professional indoor soccer club are playing at the Gateway Recreation Centre today (Super Bowl Sunday) in a game that will be televised on Shaw.

The game can be seen in its entirety on Shaw on the following Monday night, at 7 PM

Tune in and support a major partner of the MSA!

Celebrating our best - MSA annual awards

We at the MSA are excited to announce that we have finalized plans for our Annual Awards Banquet. This is a chance for us to honour or brightest players, referees coaches and volunteers for their hard work over the past year.

We are extremely excited to announce that our keynote speaker will be Karina Leblanc, the goalkeeper for Canada's senior national Women's team. She has emerged as one of the top goalkeepers in the game and will also be available to run clinics with our young players.


Stay tuned to the blog for pictures from the event as well as as full profiles on the winners.


For now, here is some key information on the banquet and how you can get tickets to support the soccer community in Manitoba.





MANITOBA SOCCER ASSOCIATION

ANNUAL AWARDS BANQUET

SATURDAY, MARCH 12TH, 2011

FOUR POINTS BY SHERATON WINNIPEG SOUTH

MASTER OF CEREMONIES: MICHELLE LISSEL, ANCHOR OF THE FOX SOCCER REPORT

KEYNOTE ADDRESS: KARINA LEBLANC, GOALKEEPER FOR THE 2011 CANADIAN

INCONJUNCTION WITH THE ANNUAL AWARDS BANQUET, THE MSA WILL ALSO BE HOSTING A GOALKEEPER CLINIC WITH SPECIAL GUEST KARINA LEBLANC ON SUNDAY, MARCH 13TH, 2011.

FOR TICKETS TO THE BANQUET OR CLINIC PLEASE CONTACT CARLO AT 925-5614

Expanding our reach

At the Manitoba Soccer Association, our goal is always to make it easier for our members to understand our initiatives and what we are striving to do in order to make their soccer experience better.

That's why we have been striving to develop an enhanced presence on Facebook.

Over the past month or so a small team us made up of myself, Chief Executive Hector Vergara and Special Events Coordinator Carlo Bruneau have come together to set up the page that provides members will all the information they could want on the MSA.

Our goal was to make the page interesting while not being bogged down in too much information. We have included everything we thought members would most want.

This includes :

- Tons of photos
- All of our key information
- Background and ahead of time notifications on our events
- News stories
- Opportunities

And much more.

The new page is something we are very proud of and is a key part of the strategy of my project. We hope that it will leave a lasting impact on the future of the organization and help educate everyone around the world on the great work that the MSA does.

Please take some time to check it out and feel free to provide any feedback!

Webisode IV - National Training Centre