Thursday, 24 September 2015

Schalke day 2

Got out early for a 15km route which basically ran around all the Schalke grounds. Ran past all the first team out doing their morning drills.  I love the fact that this is a people's club and that the players are accessible. In England you'd never be able to walk on to the training ground of a Champions League club.

Jack today had his usual technical session in the morning followed by the academy in the afternoon but this time outside on the 3G. Did good today. Yesterday he did particularly well in the 1 on 1s and the game. He is getting more aggressive.

Other things of note today;

- fitness is key. At one point they had been continually running for 30 minutes through a circuit of ladders, jumps followed by passing and shooting accuracy after each loop. All the boys are equal on both feet.

- in the game situations the coaches play too and do not hold back one bit. Crunching tackles.

Schalke - Day 1 (Monday)

The agenda for Jack over the next week is basically eat brekkie at the Schalke hotel, train in the morning for 2 hours followed by lunch, sleep, train between 4.30 and 6.30, eat dinner and go to bed.

The grounds here are different to Premiership clubs in that the hotel, training grounds, gym, goalkeeper square, stadium etc is all on one massive complex.  There are about 8 pitches in all (one indoor) and 2 stadiums.  The one which held the 1974 WC and the new one built for the 2006 WC. It is a phenomenally large complex with facilities second to none.

Jack came last year for a week to train with his age group but this is the first time I am here. 

Most German clubs are set up in this way but Schalke is one of the largest with its 150,000 members (the second largest club in Germany) and has the best youth academy in Germany and arguably in the whole of Europe. The stats are insane:

1. In Schalke's current first team squad of 28, 15 have come through the Schalke youth academies. Premier League clubs are lucky to have 1.

2. After FCB, Schalke has produced more professional players than any other club in Germany. Bayern though buy a lot of teenage talent.

3. #4 of Germany's WC winning squad came from the academy here: Neuer, Ozil, Hoewedes, Draxler. Neuer apparently still calls his Schalke goalkeeping coach ahead of every game. Ozil's nephew also plays in the 11s academy and looked pretty good from where I was sat.

Ominously Chelsea are now mirroring Schalke's set up for their youth academy. They apparently tasked a management consultancy to find the best operator and Schalke (not Barca or Milan) was top of list.

Today Jack had skills training in the morning with Sam (one of the academy directors) and then had the session with the academy players in the afternoon. The afternoon session was intense with a lot of 1 on 1s and under time pressure. In fact the sessions were all about creating pressure to simulate game situations, 'how on earth are they expected to learn?' the coaches kept saying. There was hardly any idle time too.

There is a maturity about young German people which is directly borne out of their history and it is obvious in football too. At 4 o'clock when the academy kids turned up the first thing they do is say hello to all of the parents and coaches.  They shake everyone's hand and the coaches also treat them like adults. I often say that German football teams have the upmost respect for their opposition.  That is why they are so good. When the academy boys were asked to stop their warm up exercises the coaches hardly had to raise their voices. Before the coaches starting explaining how the session was going to go you could hear a pin drop (and this was in an indoor hall).

One funny story came back from the 14s when the gun player in the team point bank told the 3 new triallists that one was John Terry, the other Oxlaide- Chamberlain, the third Jack Wiltshire and finally that he was Ronaldo!  Apparently he is the most sought after 14 year old in European football and that he is already on 4k a month.  Tellingly he is the only kid at Schalke allowed to wear Nike boots (the pink sock ones no less!) as he is already sponsored by them.

No running today.

Tuesday, 22 September 2015

Schalke, Germany

Got out early for 9km at 4minkms and then was off to Dusseldorf with #2 boy Jack for his week with the Schalke academy.

My series of  mishaps continued when my new Garmin Epix watch decided to fail whilst waiting for plane. In other words it just stoppeed at 4.13pm.  God we've got ages Jack I said when I panned up to the screens and it said Gate Closed for the Dusseldorf flight. We then legged it to the gate and got there just in time.

Got to the hotel at the Schalke Arena at 10pm local time and went straight to sleep. 

Saturday, 19 September 2015

RUGBY World Cup 2015

Hung out with the family before heading to Twickers for France vs Italy.

A beaut of a day and managed a slow 9km on my usual home circuit.

Hung out with Matt Dawson in the evening. The atmosphere around the ground was crazy, one big carnival.

London (Friday)

Arrived early morning into London and came straight home to work until 8pm. The joys. Knackered. 

No run. Boys enjoyed their pressies.

Thursday, 17 September 2015

Manhatten Wednesday

This morning I planned my NYC bridge run over to Brooklyn and that's exactly what I did. The route sends me due east down Canal Street across the Manhatten Bridge before returning via the Brooklyn Bridge.  The early morning sun hitting the red brick Projects (the Lower East Side social housing) makes for spectacular colors.

The weather was again warm and sunny with clear blue skies and little humidity. Felt great pitter pattering along in 4.35s for c.10kms saying numerous hellos to fellow runners. The Brooklyn bridge being the highlight.

This was also my debut run with the new Garmin Epix. I have to say I really like it. This is my 5th Garmin but was never totally happy with the 610 that I bought whilst in NYC 9 months ago. Cheekily I brought my receipt with me and argued that the watch was not to my liking and that I wanted to upgrade which amazingly they accepted.  The guy then gave me more discount which meant I upgraded for a mere $35 dollars, RESULT!

The day was again back to back @ work but snuck out at 6pm to walk the 2 minutes across the street to the 'One World Trade Center' to buy a ticket for the viewing platform. It only opened in May and I made it as one of the first million to visit. The views were spectacular but arguably not as good as from work where you have an outside balcony looking north back along Manhatten.

21 years ago in 94 I made it to the top of the Twin Towers. I will never forget that day on 911 with Jacqueline in Frankfurt watching those airplanes hitting. It beggars  belief. It has made NYC and its people stronger.

Pics from the morning run and then from the top of the One World Trade Centre (the building itself and the surrounding memorial is gobsmacking) - final pic of a 'Negroni' intro'd by Michael consisting of campari, gin and martini:

Last day in NYC (Thursday)

Dehydrated to the max this morning after the Negroni intro last night but as is standard for me I got out early for my route Uptown this time along 5th Avenue and back. Humid today and temps already hitting 27 degrees celsius on more clear skies. God I love NYC like this and to think it's nearly October.  Since I have been here there has not been one cloud in the sky, amazing.

Meetings today went well despite sleeping poorly since I have been here.

*Now on route home and cannot wait to give the boys their pressies.

**Lots of press on the Refugee crisis in Syria - the pictures from the NYT were haunting.