I have read today a Time (Australia) Magazine article in which Greg Chappell laments on the excessive coaching todays young cricketers are having.
He feels this is to the detriment of (what he calls) intuitive learning, and that intensive coaching and bombarding with instructions is damaging natural flair. He also feels this may destroy young cricketers careers because the intense over coaching turns them away from the game. He attributes this to the large number of young Aussies who take to cricket at school level and show promise but then turn away from the game feeling unhappy, with better pastures in Aussie Rules etc.
He also laments on the excess reliance on Science now by coaches even at school level in designing coaching techniques and practices.
The article quotes a cricketer called Ian Frazer who joined the Australian Cricket Academy at Age 20, and left the following year sick of, and loathing cricket.
I feel there is there is quite a lot of sense in what he says .
What do others think?
Is Over- coaching destroying natural flair or is this coaching in a modern world where you use current science and knowledge to your advantage ?
[The Article by the way is in TIME (Australia) -24th May 2004- Recipe for Failure by Daniel Williams. PP 50-51]
He feels this is to the detriment of (what he calls) intuitive learning, and that intensive coaching and bombarding with instructions is damaging natural flair. He also feels this may destroy young cricketers careers because the intense over coaching turns them away from the game. He attributes this to the large number of young Aussies who take to cricket at school level and show promise but then turn away from the game feeling unhappy, with better pastures in Aussie Rules etc.
He also laments on the excess reliance on Science now by coaches even at school level in designing coaching techniques and practices.
The article quotes a cricketer called Ian Frazer who joined the Australian Cricket Academy at Age 20, and left the following year sick of, and loathing cricket.
I feel there is there is quite a lot of sense in what he says .
What do others think?
Is Over- coaching destroying natural flair or is this coaching in a modern world where you use current science and knowledge to your advantage ?
[The Article by the way is in TIME (Australia) -24th May 2004- Recipe for Failure by Daniel Williams. PP 50-51]
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