Saturday, 11 May 2013

England need Manchester United stores in League One, claims Brentford's... - Daily Mail

UPDATED: 17:19 EST, 25 April 2013 Brentford director Uwe Rosler believes English football has to discard its recent childhood progress system if it's to imitate the powerhouses of Germany. The former East Germany forward, who played for Manchester City in the Nineties, believes top small English players are being lost in progress leagues and should really be flavorful 'actual competition' for reserve clubs in the reduced degrees of the domestic structure, like they do in Spain and Germany. Way ahead: Uwe Rosler claims Premier League starlets like Nick Powell should be playing for their reserve factors in League One Displaying the causes behind the Champions League achievements of Borussia Dortmund and Bayern Munich, both of whom fielded mostly German players in their semi-final first-leg wins, Rosler said: 'I think, in terms of childhood development, the device in Germany is better than here. 'Here we are having growth games; there the 2nd group are playing aggressive football in the third greatest league. They can't increase than that league, and they've to achieve it, but it's an effective way to build up under competitive conditions. Here the growth games mean nothing.' Rosler added: 'I love to work in England and the Premier League is really a wonderful solution. There's a non-stop growth of great players, but what exactly is happening is that at 18, 19, 20 a lot of players are becoming lost. (Clubs should) only go for the most truly effective foreign people and perhaps not the average ones who are stopping places.' Right way: Rosler thinks German and Spanish groups benefit from their young stars playing more competitive activities Warning: Brentford boss Uwe Rosler does not have confidence in the present set up Rosler also thinks English groups have to bear stronger financial controls. He said: 'Over the years, German football was often in the shade somewhat of Serie A, of the Premier League, Spain. The clubs couldn't participate on a level, Aside from Bayern Munich probably. 'In German baseball, you have to proceed through plenty of methods to secure a license. This doesn't happen in English soccer, at Portsmouth or groups where they have go out of money and gone into administration. Such things as this don't exist in German football. 'You need to give you the German Football Federation in March with all of your files for the next period in terms of contracts, sponsorships, obligations etc. In that case your costs should be satisfied by bank currencies, by money. You'll be relegated routinely, if that's not the case a licence wasn't got by you to play. 'That, over time, means German clubs have been very good with money and infrastructure. It meant they are able to not compete economically to obtain the best people in the Nineties or the last 10, 15 years. However now they've groups with balanced finances, small players in a group without plenty of international players. You have participants at 18, 19 playing in a great league. Demonstrably today groups are becoming achievement.'

Link: Corinthians SP - Boca Juniors - Copa Libertadores

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