http://www.guardian.co.uk/football/2013/may/23/germany-bust-boom-talentI know things tend to go in cycles, but this suggests Germany is so far ahead of us not just in talent, but a proper structure to develop more talent. The bit about the amount of education provided as insurance for the vast number who wont make it should make English clubs ashamed
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I'd personally like to see a rule to be put in place within the next 5 years that all prem teams must have a minimum of say 4 academy produced players in their starting 11. Will never happen though..............
http://m.youtube.com/#/watch?v=GRJEFHzHjL4&feature=player_embedded&desktop_uri=/watch?feature=player_embedded&v=GRJEFHzHjL4
Jurgen Klopp is a massive face though.
At some point you would think that changes in this country for all clubs would have to be made in order to fall in line with the FFP rules being introduced but their would need to be a joint initiative between the FA and the Premier league to make these changes happen. Unfortunately I cannot see this happening anytime soon!
I do wonder if Charlton have looked at the German model around the development of youth players and are looking to adopt a similiar approach. A lot of development and focus on the youth team at Charlton across all age groups and this year has seen some great progress. I would say a handful of the u21 players cannot be that far off being a permanent fixture in the first team squad.
I for one would be extremely happy if this was the approach. Nothing better than seeing youth team players taking their chance in the first team and flourishing (Solly and Harriott being the recent successes).
Borussia Dortmund (80520)
In fact 7 of the top 13 in Europe were German
1 Borussia Dortmund 80,520[1] 2012–13 Westfalenstadion Germany
2 Manchester United 75,529 [2] 2012–13 Old Trafford England
3 Real Madrid 73,368[3] 2012–13 Santiago Bernabéu Stadium Spain
4 Barcelona 72,660[3] 2012–13 Camp Nou Spain
5 Bayern Munich 71,000[1] 2012–13 Allianz Arena Germany
6 Schalke 04 61,076[1] 2012–13 Veltins-Arena Germany
7 Arsenal 60,079[2] 2012–13 Emirates Stadium England
8 Hamburger SV 52,916[1] 2012–13 Imtech Arena Germany
9 Ajax 51,037[4] 2012–13 Amsterdam ArenA Netherlands
10 Newcastle United 50,517[2] 2012–13 St James' Park England
11 VfB Stuttgart 50,054[1] 2012–13 Mercedes-Benz Arena Germany
12 Borussia Mönchengladbach 49,623[1] 2012–13 Borussia-Park Germany
13 Eintracht Frankfurt 48,044[1] 2012–13 Commerzbank-Arena Germany
14 Manchester City 46,974[2] 2012–13 Etihad Stadium England
15 Celtic 46,917[5] 2012–13 Celtic Park Scotland
Fair to say German football is interesting (albeit wth Bayern romping it this year), well supported because it is cheap as chips and they make a proper day of it. We could learn a lot from their model