An article: Where has all the home-grown talent gone? (3 Viewers)

ReBeL

The Jackal
Jan 14, 2005
22,871
#1
When Serie A celebrated its first Juventus-Internazionale match for some 18 months a fortnight ago, the so-called derby d’Italia produced something less than a classic. It was cagey but had some suspense, with a late equaliser for newly promoted Juve.

Inter, the champions, maintained their position at the top of the table with the 1-1 draw and the 90 minutes left the president of Fifa disgusted. For Sepp Blatter, the derby d’Italia had been too conspicuously unItalian. “That match,” declared Blatter, “had something unacceptable about it and was a clear example of the excessive use of players who come from outside the country the competition is actually taking place in.”

Inter are getting used to hearing such noises. Like the Premier League leaders, Arsenal, the team at the top of the Italian first division regularly field an XI without an Italian among them, their goals generally provided by a Swede or an Argentinian and occasionally a Brazilian, their midfield muscle by a Frenchman, their defence organised by various South Americans. In the land of the world champions, its own champions are almost as foreign as can be. Inter provided a single member of the triumphant Italian 2006 World Cup squad – Marco Materazzi, currently injured – and though they then eagerly signed the Italy full-back, Fabio Grosso, he would find no regular place in his new club side.

Well, what did he expect joining a club called Internazionale? “Institutions transcend the people who are in them,” reckons the articulate Inter midfield player Santiago Solari, an Argentinian, “and Italian football will continue to have its own stamp independent of who is lining up for its clubs. Today many of the bigger European clubs are in the hands of foreign investors, like Manchester United or Chelsea. Capital doesn’t have a nationality and talent doesn’t recognise borders. Chanel hasn’t stopped being the emblem of French chic just because its chief designer for the past decade happens to be a German.”

Foreign excellence, Inter would argue, has always been part of their identity and indeed part of Serie A’s, save for the period in the 1970s when a ban on outsiders was imposed on Italy’s clubs. By the end of the following decade it was the most sought-after destination for the world’s finest migrating footballers. Now it would have to acknowledge that the Premier League is the place where foreign players flock in highest numbers: more than 55% of employees at England’s top 20 clubs are from outside England. Fifa would like a formula imposed that sees clubs fielding a minimum of six players per XI eligible for the country they are working in, and has just commissioned a report on the impact of foreign players in the major European leagues. Plenty of evidence was found to support the idea that youth systems were failing and thus Fifa’s most prized territory, international – as in country versus country – football was in danger of being undermined. Or at least it was in Europe. It would be hard to argue that the national team of the Ivory Coast are not stronger for having Didier Drogba at Chelsea, Emmanuel Eboue and Kolo Toure at Arsenal and Yaya Toure at Barcelona than they would be if these players were turning out for ASEC Abidjan or Africa Sports each weekend, or that Ronaldinho or Kaka have not raised their value for Brazil by winning the Champions League with Barcelona and Milan.

At the same time, the difference in standards being set by clubs from Italy, England and Spain in European club competitions and by their own national teams yawns. Italian, Spanish and English clubs occupy the top three positions in Uefa’s club football hierarchy and dominate the Champions League; the England, Spain, and Italy teams all entered this week’s final qualifying rounds for Euro 2008 in danger of elimination, having watched countries such as Greece and Romania, whose clubs are far from heavyweights, cruise through to the finals.

According to the Fifa-commissioned report, carried out by the Centre for Sports Studies at Franche-Comte university, fewer than one quarter of players across the five leading leagues of Europe – the Premier League, Spain’s La Liga, Serie A, the German Bundesliga and the French Championnat – are products of club academies. Not even all of those would necessarily be what Blatter calls “selectable” for the country they work in, because recruitment, even at teenage level, has become globalised.

Barcelona, who have one of the most productive youth development structures, find their prize students from the class of juniors born between 1988 and 1989 are a Mexican-Brazilian, Giovani Dos Santos, and an Argentinian, Lionel Messi. Little wonder Spain found their native resources so thin in some positions that they took a naturalised Brazilian, Marcos Senna, and an Argentinian, Mariano Pernia, to the last World Cup in their squad.

Spain, where the national team inspire a peculiar mix of fatalism and downright antipathy in some regions, has many people agitated about what the foreign influx means for the soul of their clubs. For the first time in their history, Atletico Madrid have no madrileos on their roster, and Atleti have started the season rather well.

Now look at the club in Europe with perhaps the most fierce commitment to its locale: Athletic Bilbao. Athletic, one of the three longest-serving teams in the top flight of La Liga, follow a policy of only picking Basque players, not exactly enshrined in their statutes – lest it be scrutinised too closely as discriminatory – but nonetheless true: to play for Athletic you have to have been born or grown up in the Basque country.

This used to be quite a successful formula. The club drew crowds with a profound sort of local allegiance and, at one time, this sort of strong regionalism produced results. Real Sociedad, of San Sebastian, also in the Basque country, had a similar policy, now abandoned, and between them, Real and Athletic won four successive Spanish leagues in the early 1980s.

Then the law of the market took over, the Bosman ruling accelerated the movement of players and Athletic, runners-up in La Liga in 1998, found that not only were the Barcelonas and Real Madrids but the Osasunas and Deportivo la Corunas, too, were shopping around in South America and Africa, while they were looking for footballers from a Basque population of barely two million, and sooner or later being obliged to sell any stars they produced. Athletic, the sole senior club from Spain’s fifth biggest city, have finished in the top five of La Liga only once in the past nine years. Last season, they escaped relegation by the skin of their teeth.

Over in Belgium, meanwhile, Beveren were relegated from the top flight, only three years after reaching the Belgian Cup final in what remains one of the most striking examples of importing foreign footballers en masse. Beveren had 10 Ivorians in their lineup for some of their cup run, dividend of an agreement they had with ASEC in the West African country.

They sold many of their better Ivorians and, without this concentrated stream of overseas talent, began to slide. They now have as many Belgians as foreigners, which is good enough to place them . . . ninth in the second division.

The legal position: Fifa’s Sepp Blatter has said that he will lobby the EU to “stop the overwhelming presence of nonnational players in club leagues”. But the EU pointed out that a quota of up to fi ve foreigners per team, as Blatter suggested, would not be “compatible with the fundamental freedom of movement rights that exist in the European Union”, which allows citizens to take up employment in other member countries. Blatter will now have to seek a change in EU law that would exempt footballers

By Ian Hawkey
 

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Red

-------
Moderator
Nov 26, 2006
47,024
#3
I really think the guy should have mentioned we started the Derby D'Italia with 8 Italians.

I think Grygera, Nedved and Trez were our only foreigners.
 

HelterSkelter

Senior Member
Apr 15, 2005
20,635
#6
Very good article.There should be a restriction imposed on the number of forigners you can have in your team.This has been going around for quite a while now,and it needs to be stopped.I dont care if it effects teams.An Italian team should have Italian,a spanish team should have Spaniards and so on and so forth.
 

JCK

Biased
JCK
May 11, 2004
125,395
#7
What disturbs me the most is the title of the article. One can easily think that home-grown weed is no longer good.
 

Eddy

The Maestro
Aug 20, 2005
12,645
#9
Where has the home-grown talent gone you say ? Well that's easy. They all went to Inter and just...vanished really.
 

Badass J Elkann

It's time to go!!
Feb 12, 2006
69,070
#10
yet the foreign numbers in serie A is far less than la liga and the prem, so i dont know what the fuss is all about. if anything i think the home grown talent in italy is growing, i think too many critics are focusing too much on the inter squad and not looking at the other italian clubs.
 

Ahmed

Principino
Sep 3, 2006
47,928
#12
you must have an Italian (or any home country) backbone to have a legacy...Man Utd Juventus even Madrid have had their home-grown players as their main players...that is what Inter and Arsenal fail to understand and that is why they will remain inferior clubs
 
Jul 5, 2005
2,653
#13
I found another article with the opinion of Steven Gerrard about this matter. This report made before the game of England with Croatia:


Foreign imports getting out of hand - Gerrard
15 November 2007, 09:13


By Robert Millward

Steven Gerrard fears national teams such as England will suffer unless clubs are forced to reduce foreign imports.

Uefa president Michel Platini wants to stop the practice of plundering overseas clubs for talented teenagers.


They have different motives - Gerrard to protect national teams, Platini to prevent burnout. But the present-day star and the great from the past are both fighting the threat of out-of-control soccer imports.

"I think there is a risk of too many foreign players coming over which will affect our national team eventually, if it is not doing it now," said Gerrard,stand-in captain of an England team in danger of not qualifying for Euro 2008.;)

"I am all for getting good young English players through. It has happened to myself and all the other English players and it is important we keep producing. It is pointless having the best league in the world if our national team is going to suffer in the long run."


Gerrard may be on shaky ground with his Spanish coach at Liverpool, Rafa Benitez, who has recruited mostly overseas stars to Anfield. But the midfielder is concerned that young homegrown English players won't receive game time.

"There is a concern that this talent will stop coming through if foreigners do take over our league," he said. The most important thing is we have one of the best national teams as well, and that will only happen if we keep producing good young talent like we have done over the years.

"I am all for there being a rule change. Something has got to happen otherwise there will be more and more foreigners and they will take over."

Gerrard will lead England when it faces Austria in a friendly in Vienna on Friday as a warmup to next Wednesday's final Euro 2008 group game against Croatia at Wembley.

By the time the Croatia game arrives, England may well be on the brink of elimination. If group rival Russia beats Israel on Saturday, it will be a point ahead and then has only to beat last-place Andorra. Croatia can clinch a place by beating Macedonia.

As well as leading France to its European Championship triumph in 1984, Platini helped Italian club Juventus to two Serie A titles and a European Cup.

Yet, though he was an import, he was critical of how top clubs such as Manchester United and Arsenal have such a sophisticated international scouting system that they can lure players as young as 14 from overseas clubs.

"I am totally against this philosophy and I am a firm believer that we need to take care of the identity of the club," Platini said. "I don't like the system that scours other countries for the best young talent to bring back to their team.

"But because of the money, the best players will leave at 14, which means success will always follow money and we need to correct that. You have regulations in England that you can buy players from other countries and other clubs. So you protect your clubs but you go and attack foreign teams' youth setups."

Platini sees no problem of restricted players moving to other countries once they have established themselves.

"I want to protect the young players of 14 or 15 years of age who need to stay with their hometown clubs, with their families, and then if they go to England at the age of 20, 21, 22 it's no problem," he said.

"Many will come back at the age of 16 destroyed because it was not a success."




http://www.dailynews.co.za/?fSectionId=&fArticleId=nw20071115085155497C676771
 

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