This study aimed to explore how technical directors working in elite youth football academies understand and interpret players’ developmental pathways. Through a qualitative interpretive approach, it examines how they understand and interpret different routes towards expertise, including the interplay between early specialisation, and early diversification across players’ developmental trajectories, as well as the role of late specialisation and informal play. It further seeks to capture the reasoning and practical logics that underpin their approaches to player development within the academy context. Eight technical directors participated in semi-structured interviews, which were subsequently analysed using thematic analysis. Findings revealed a persistent tension between the perceived developmental value of early diversification and the structural pressures favouring early specialisation. Participants viewed multisport and informal play experiences as crucial for fostering broad motor, cognitive, and psychosocial competencies that support long-term football development. Nonetheless, early specialisation was seen as the prevailing and advantageous pathway for acquiring complex technical and perceptual–motor skills. Concerns were raised about the associated risks of burnout, overuse injuries, and dropout, while external pressures from parents, coaches, and agents were identified as key factors reinforcing premature specialisation and a results-driven culture in youth football. The results suggest a disconnect between developmental assumptions and practical realities, raising important questions about the sustainability and inclusiveness of existing talent development pathways. This study underscores the need to critically revisit current developmental practices in youth football, advocating for coach education and development frameworks that prioritise long-term, holistic, diversified, and context-sensitive approaches to youth football.
Building similarity graph...
Analyzing shared references across papers
Loading...
Patrícia Coutinho
Belém B Pedroto
Universidade do Porto
Mariana Vieira
Universidade do Porto
International Journal of Sports Science & Coaching
Universidade do Porto
Building similarity graph...
Analyzing shared references across papers
Loading...
Coutinho et al. (Wed,) studied this question.
synapsesocial.com/papers/69eb0a94553a5433e34b49f2 — DOI: https://doi.org/10.1177/17479541261443383