Find Out What Scouts Look for in A Footballer – Before You Go For Your Next Trial Test
Before you go for your next football trials test, it is important that you find out
what scouts look for in a footballer and begin building yourself to acquire both
the Ability and Attitude.
I actually culled this article from Four Four Two,
just to help our numerous young players
who visit or blog… to start preparing ahead.
A look inside the world of football scouting to find
out exactly what the game's recruitment experts look for in their pursuit of
talent
Harry Redknapp recently took a phone call from a
scout, who told him he’d just watched the best prospect he’d seen in his
30-year search for talent.
The man – or schoolboy – in question was Exeter
City’s 15-year-old prodigy Ethan Ampadu. The centre-back was named
man-of-the-match on his professional debut, nearly a year before sitting his
GCSE exams.
He’s a teenager in demand. Representatives from
Arsenal and Manchester United have already been dispatched to St James Park and
returned to their clubs with glowing reports.
But what exactly do scouts look for when they watch
players and is there a secret to unearthing a star? We spoke to
some of football’s finest talent spotters to find out…
1.
Player must Have Ability and Attitude
Former Chelsea scout Gwynn Williams spotted John
Terry when the Chelsea captain was a 13-year-old midfielder playing for Sunday
League side Senrab FC. He says there are two qualities a player must have to
make the grade.
“It’s all about the 2As, Ability and Attitude, you have to have both,”
he told our correspondence
“Ability, in
my opinion, is decision making on a pitch. Can he see a forward pass? Can he
beat another player? Can he play a one-two touch? If he’s a defender, does he
stand up and intercept rather than tackle?
“John was a good passer of the ball and could get up
and down the pitch. He never missed a training session and was a leader from
day one. Even in the middle of winter he’d wear t-shirt and shorts.”
It was that same combination of technical and mental
quality that alerted Tottenham to a 17-year-old prospect at Southampton back in
2007.
“My scout, Mel Johnson, flagged Gareth Bale up to
the club,” says former Spurs director of football Damien Comolli. “He said,
‘there’s this kid at Southampton, he’s outstanding, you have to come and see
him'.
“He reminded me of Paolo Maldini because of his left
foot and his pace. We met him and his family a number of times and he had a
wonderful personality. He was very humble, but also confident without being
arrogant.”
2. Players
must fit in with the club’s culture
However, it can be difficult for scouts to assess a
player’s personality before they join a club. Williams remembers a former
Chelsea goalkeeper who fell foul of Jose Mourinho during his first spell in
charge of the Blues and subsequently failed to make single first team
appearance for the club.
“On Mourinho’s first day, he told everyone they had
to meet at the training ground at 7am,” he says. “It was a test to see how
committed everyone was. Everyone got there apart from one player, [Yves]
Ma-Kalamby. If a player doesn’t have the hunger and desire, they won’t make
it.”
Williams – who now works as a scout for Hull City -
conducts extensive background checks to gauge a player’s character. “I speak to
former coaches, ex-team-mates – you need to know what a player is like away
from the pitch. Is he a drinker? Is he a shagger? Does he mess around?”
Brentford’s head of football operations, Robert
Rowan, says the Bees look for personalities who fit with the club’s ethos: “If
the club is making an investment, regardless of the size of that investment,
it’s important that you make sure it’s as safe as possible.
“References can identify a lot of positives and a
lot of negatives about a footballer’s character. We have a culture that we are
proud of at Brentford, therefore it’s important that any player joining the
club is not going to damage that culture but embrace it.”
3.
Data can’t explain a players like Luka Modric
Brentford are one of a host of clubs who use
WyScout, Instatscout and Scout 7 – software packages which provide video clips
of players from all over the world and individual statistics on potential
signings at the click of a button.
“The head coach is responsible for building position
profiles which explain the attributes required for each position to suit the
club’s style of play,” Rowan explains.
“Those profiles are then translated into report
format. Scout 7 measures the quality of answers for each area against the
desired level set by the chief scout. The software then produces a list
prospective targets based on the data entered.”
But can data really provide the same insight as the
trained eye of a scout? Comolli was criticized for using this method to recruit
players at Tottenham and Liverpool and he admits the approach does have its
limitations.
“Technology isn’t advanced enough yet to explain the
quality of a player like [Luka] Modric,” he says. “He’s a midfielder who
doesn’t score many goals or make many tackles – so what exactly makes him so
good?
“Our scouts at Tottenham spotted him playing for
Dinamo Zagreb. They noticed his ability to force a player to pass sideways or
backwards because his positional play was so good. Also, his first touch is
always into space, which means he plays a lot of forward passes.”
4.
I gambled on Di Canio – he was a genius
While background checks and data can help to build a
profile of a player before a bid is made; there’s no measurement for the
feeling of excitement that consumes a scout when they come across a rare
talent.
“You’re always looking for that player who can do
something different,” says Williams. “Joe Cole was the best player I ever had.
He was playing under-13 football when he was 11. He had all the technical
ability. He could use both feet, he had a great change of pace, he had vision.
We’d beat teams 6-1 because of Joe.
“Jose Mourinho likes the same type of player. He
likes players who can create. He likes players with flair and ability. At
Chelsea we spoke about signing David Villa for a long time but we couldn’t pull
the deal off.”
Redknapp remembers coming across Paolo Di Canio when
the Italian was at Sheffield Wednesday. "I like players who give my teams
problems and who I enjoy watching on the training pitch," he told FFT.
"At West Ham I used to tell my players to man mark Di Canio because he’d
always cause us problems.
“When the chance came up to sign him for it was a
no-brainer, even though everyone told me he’d get me the sack. He was a genius.
The great buzz of it all is finding a player like him, Modric or [Rafael] Van
der Vaart – players who express themselves. That’s what it’s all about.”
No comments