THE ARCHIVE
Youth football
Child's play | Child's play |
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In June, a 12-year-old, Marco Quotschalla, was sold by Bayer Leverkusen to Cologne for £60,000. Remarkably, it wasn’t even his first transfer, since Cologne had sold him to Leverkusen just a year before. Marco’s signing caused a stir in the German media principally because he is German and there’s a sense that such a thing should not happen to a nice European child. Sadly, much less attention is paid to the thousands of youngsters who are being brought over to Europe from South America and Africa in increasing numbers with promises of big money and stardom. There are two main methods for corralling up cheap local talent. The first involves an agent arriving somewhere suitably impoverished, holding a trial and selecting the best half dozen boys. These will typically be between ten and 14 years old, though there have been reports of boys as young as six being “spotted”. The parents, hoping their son’s ability will take the family out of poverty, sign a document releasing the child and are paid a token sum, sometimes as meagre as $20. The second approach is the setting up of football academies. According to Emmanuel Huesu of African Soccer magazine, “youth farms” have sprung up all over the African continent, either fully owned by European clubs or, in the case of Mali, by the former African Footballer of the Year Salif Keita. Where the “farms” are owned or sponsored by European clubs, the best players are sent to the mother club. If they don’t work out, they can always seek to offload them to smaller clubs or simply dump them. It’s a very inexpensive way of maintaining a youth policy. Among others, Feyenoord own a school in Ghana, Inter have one in Argentina and Lyon are said to be investigating the possibilities in Nigeria. But never fear, for swooping over the horizon comes FIFA, albeit a full ten years after Issa Hayatou, the current president of the African Football Confederation, first blew the whistle on the trade in child footballers. Principles set out by the world body governing the involvement of minors in football were accepted by the European Union in March this year and should come into effect on September 1. From WSC 175 September 2001. What was happening this month On the subject...
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