Filed under: David Beckham, Football, Football magazine, Grass roots Football, Motivation, Premership Football, soccer, Uncategorized
September Fixtures
Date Against League/Cup Home /Away
06/09/09 Blackfordby L Home
13/09/09 Whittington C Away
20/09/09 Burton F. C C Home
27/09/09 Etwall L Away
With The first four games out there should be a very encouraging start to the season, we know that we have nothing to fear from any of the games, but as in all matches we must show complete respect for the opponents
Blackfordby, Whittington & Etwall we know that with the right tactics we can beat them, they should be more worried about us especially Whittington, I am sure they would have preferred different opponents, I for one would have chosen this match.
Burton F.C are a different bag coming from the lower divisions it is more important that we play our brand of passing football and get them to chase the ball about.
Here’s to a great Season
Dave
Filed under: David Beckham, Football, Football magazine, Grass roots Football, Motivation, Premership Football, soccer, Uncategorized
You may not be aware that for quite a long time I was employed in the motivational side of Business there is not a lot of difference in Sport motivation I found this article which may be of interest.
Most professional sides employ motivational experts but it is very simple.
When you use self motivation you look to all the positives in your game because you know your own capabilities, criticism of your team mates is only destructive to the team always look to the positives in their game and encourage no one goes out to play badly,
I found this article which is well worth reading you should get something from it.
Sport and Business dont spend Millions on motivation it works but its cost nothing to demotivate
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The principles that determine whether you are performing at your peak are the same, regardless of the sport, from bungee jumping to scrabble, and from high impact sports to skittles.
It can be extremely frustrating, can’t it? What causes you to perform fantastically one day and dismally on another day? Do you suddenly become unfit overnight? Do you forget what you are supposed to be doing? No, not at all. You are still the same player you were the day before. So what’s changed? Your emotional content. How you ‘feel’. And that’s it really. Your emotional state is blocking your performance. Change the way you feel, to the same way you did yesterday, and you will play just as well as you ever do when you know you’re ‘in the zone’.
When you understand the damaging effects of stress, anxiety or destructive self-talk in sport, you begin to see how normally successful athletes can have their efforts compromised, for example, following a string of ‘bad luck’ and persistent losses.
If you remember we ran through something very similar when we thrashed Whittington it is important that you put your head back into where it was when you are playing well if you keep looking to the disappointing parts you will just keep on repeating them
Dave
Filed under: David Beckham, Football, Football magazine, Grass roots Football, Motivation, Premership Football, soccer | Tags: Football, soccer
For the 3rd year Greenfield won the Kevin Greenfield trophy which was a result In character and fight.
As in our previous win against Telford we had to come from behind to gain our victory, I am convinced that after being 3-1 down should we have been in the same position last season we would probably have lost the match.
This is a great credit to you all, there were many other positives to come from the match which if we continue to work hard on we will win more matches than we lose, I think we are now in a position that if we do lose the opposition will have to beat us rather than last season when we lost the game our self rather than being beaten.
It was difficult this week only having a small squad and having to play players out of position, and I would like to thank you all the team for spirit shown which won us the match as well as our new style of football , this is now 2 weeks in arow that the opposition has not been able to live with us once we play our game.
I will keep the down side to a minimum but as you will agree we lowered our game to Blackfordbys long ball game, they play the pitch very well and we were dragged into their game.
When we started to play our touch Football which now hopefully you will all see will win us matches, we are too good to keep hitting the ball long, In addition the response from the players who were substituted show we are heading in the right direction, the changes were made with next season in mind as I now to have a good idea of all of your strengths.
I will on occasions change the side or make substitutions to win matches which I hope will be taken in the right spirit for the team, as you all are aware I will make these only to benefit the team and for team spirit.
On the playing side we have now scored 11 goals from 2 games with 6 coming from midfield of defending players, which as I stressed last season is a must if we are to win trophies.
All of the team played very well but I would like to praise Joe after coming into the squad he is now starting to show a lot of promise which is also down to you all for the encouragement you all gave him, it is difficult coming to a new side and coming on and off, he will be a very valuable asset to the side as the season progresses
Also I would like top thank Josh for his contribution and hopefully will be able to help us again for a young lad he never looked out of his depth
Squad for game
Monk, Darren c, Seb, Sword, Batesy, Tafffy ( did you see my goal ) Tyso, Joe,
Luke, Paul;, Darren, Steve, Josh.
Goal Scorers Paul 2 Batesy Tyso, Darren H, Taffy
As a footnote while the game was coming to an end I had to Ambulance there Goalkeeper back to the dressing room after a Challenge from Hitman Tyson

Sorry photo Library sent wrong shot
The one on the left is a pussy cat
Filed under: David Beckham, Football, Grass roots Football, Premership Football, Sir Bobby Robson, soccer
Sir Bobby Robson, who died yesterday, aged 76, was a man of whom bad words were last said so long ago that they have long been forgotten. The former England manager held iconic status among the Geordie faithful, but reaction from across the globe yesterday told of a man cherished across and beyond the world of football. Politicians, royalty and cancer specialists joined footballers past and present to pay tribute to Sir Bobby, a man whose enthusiasm for life and passion for football knew no bounds. Flags flew at half mast at the clubs he played for or managed. Floral shrines carpeted stadiums in Newcastle and Ipswich, where he first gained fame as a manager. Gordon Brown described a man “who epitomised everything that is great about football in this country”; Prince William, the Football Association president, spoke of his “deep sadness”, and José Mourinho talked of a man “who will never die”. Related Links Ex-England manager Sir Bobby Robson dies at 76 Sir Bobby Robson: the Times obituary Paul Gascoigne, whose tears became the defining image of the most important match of Sir Bobby’s career, said his former manager was “like a second father” to him. Sir Bobby, a lifelong Newcastle fan who stood as a child to worship from the terraces at St James’ Park, said his father would have been even more proud of him managing “the Toon” than he was when he got the England job. When Sir Bobby was sacked in 2004, two years after he was knighted, the Newcastle chairman, Freddie Shepherd, acknowledged that he would be remembered as the man who “shot Bambi”. There is already talk of naming a stand at the stadium after Sir Bobby. By 5pm, more than 5,000 people had filed into the ground to pay their respects. Many more were expected during the evening and the gates will be opened today and tomorrow, from 9am to 5pm. Small boys clutched their parents’ hands, moody teenagers stood in silence. Two elderly women slowly made the uphill ascent to the stadium on mobility scooters. They placed shirts, scarves, flowers, cards, banners and photographs behind the goal at the Leazes End. The messages spoke of a “Geordie Hero”, the “Pride of Newcastle”, a “perfect gentleman” and “one of the greatest ambassadors football has ever known”. The word used most was “legend”. It was not only a day for Newcastle to remember. There were England scarves aplenty, together with the shirts of Ipswich, Barcelona, Leeds United, Swindon Town, Berwick Rangers, Wigan Athletic and Middlesbrough. It was even possible for a young fan wearing the red shirt of Sunderland, Newcastle’s bitter rivals, to walk untroubled through the crowd to leave his own card. At 3.10pm, the Newcastle first team squad walked to the centre circle, to observe a minute’s silence. A wreath of white lilies was laid by the only three players left at the club from Sir Bobby’s time as manager. As the silence came to an end, the hundreds of fans inside the ground applauded before a chant of “There’s only one Bobby Robson” echoed around the stadium. More than 1,200 people have signed a book of condolence in the foyer of the main stand next to a bronze statue of Sir Bobby. His death at his home in Co Durham, after a long fight against cancer, came as no great surprise to the 35,000 fans who saw the frail, wheelchair-bound Sir Bobby at St James’ Park last Sunday. They were there for a friendly match, in which the former players of England and Germany replayed their 1990 World Cup semi-final. This time, England won. The match was held to raise money for the Sir Bobby Robson Foundation, which was set up in March last year and has already raised more than £1.3 million for a specialist cancer detection centre in Newcastle. Sir Bobby was given a guard of honour at the match and shook hands with every player. Friends said yesterday that he had been determined to live until the match was played. Of all the tributes paid yesterday to a man who never forgot his humble roots and always had time for a word with the lowliest of fans, the words of James Paterson carried particular resonance. Mr Paterson, a former security guard at Newcastle’s training ground, remembered a day when it was “hammering with rain”. “The players drove in and then Sir Bobby did too. Five minutes later he came out with a great big umbrella, put his arm around me and said, ‘There you go son, that’ll keep you dry’ and then he walked back into the training centre, soaking wet.”