The word "soccer" actually
comes from England, where the
modern version
of the game originated.
In England, there were two types of
football: rugby football and association football. The slang term for
rugby football was "rugger," and the slang for association football was
"assoc." The word "assoc" gradually evolved into "soccer," which was much
easier to say.
When association football was introduced
to North America, gridiron football (the type played by the NFL and in the
Super Bowl) was already well established. To avoid confusion, Americans
adopted the British nickname "soccer" for the new sport.
what is youth soccer?
(from
bettersoccermorefun)
Soccer is a game. The children are
involved in an activity that pits them against an opponent. It is, in most
cases, about winning and losing, competition and cooperation. It is also a
leisure activity. The children are there because they want to be there.
They want to play a game.
To
play a game of soccer you first need a ball. Then an opponent. Add a
field, a couple of goals across from each other, mix in a few soccer rules
and you have a game of 1v1. But this is hard work and you can't play it
for very long. So you get some teammates, and to keep it fair, a few more
opponents. With these elements you can play soccer all day.
These are the elements of soccer. They
make the game what it is. If you remove a key element such as the ball or
opponent it can't be soccer. Likewise, to change an element too much you
can move too far from the game. Playing with two balls or three teams
might be fun and a game, but is it soccer? To pass a ball across a grid
and run to a corner involves kicking techniques, but is it soccer?
Soccer also involves the element "chaos." Opponents, team mates and the
ball are all moving in different directions. Players, parents and coaches
are shouting different instructions and information. Bringing "order out
of chaos" is an important skill in learning how to play the game.
A soccer coach coaches
soccer, not something else.

I want
to be a soccer coach! |