Month: January 2021

Former BUSA Player Called Into The USMNT

BERHALTER NAMES TESSMANN IN THE 25-PLAYER ROSTER AHEAD OF USA-TRINIDAD AND TOBAGO ON JAN. 31

USMNT head coach Gregg Berhalter has chosen a 25-player roster that includes Tanner Tessman in advance of USA-Trinidad & Tobago on Jan. 31 in Orlando.

The group was selected from an initial list of 12 senior team players and 26 U-23 MNT players that began training on Jan. 9 at the IMG Academy in Bradenton, Fla.

At the start of a crucial year for the U.S. Men’s National Team that includes the Concacaf Nations League Final Four, the Gold Cup and the start of 2022 World Cup Qualifying, the tilt against the Soca Warriors gives the players an opportunity to stake their claim for spots.

“These last two weeks have been an absolute pleasure. The hard work and determination demonstrated by the entire group confirm that the player pool is headed in the right direction,” Berhalter said. “As we transition to Orlando, we switch gears and focus on competing as we prepare to face Trinidad and Tobago.”

Tessmann, 19, looks to make his senior team debut in the international friendly after earning a spot on the USMNT roster. He is also eligible to compete for a roster spot for the 2021 Concacaf Olympic Qualifying Championship to be played from March 18-30 in Guadalajara, Mexico.

Tanner player for BUSA from U6 until when he left for FC Dallas. His Parents PJ and Kelly are still great supporters of the program and we are all super proud of Tanner.

 

Nike’s Perfect Soccer Ball

Inside Nike’s eight-year journey to create the perfect soccer ball

Nike set out on an eight-year mission to create the perfect soccer ball, and players from some of the top leagues in the world will soon play with the latest model of a modern and futuristic ball. It’s no secret that soccer players — and athletes in general — are pretty sensitive to any changes to their equipment, especially the ball. That’s why Nike consulted over 800 professional athletes, including non-Nike sponsored athletes, and spent eight years researching before crafting the Nike Flight ball.

The sleek, innovative ball made its debut in the NWSL – which became the first professional team sports league in the United States to mark its return during the coronavirus pandemic  — along with the Premier League, Serie A, and the Russian Premier League, among others.

The name of the ball hints at what culminated from nearly a decade of research. The engineering team covered 68 different iterations of the ball and spent 1,700 hours in the lab before settling on a ball that, thanks to its new AerowSculpt technology, can hug the air and produce 30 percent truer flight than previous Nike soccer balls. It specifically exceeds the Nike Merlin, which is used in the Premier League and other major leagues these days.

At first glance, the Nike Flight ball nearly looks like a jumbo-size golf ball, especially once you start paying closer attention to details such as the pentagonal-like dimples or ridges from a 3D ink layout. It’s why the sportswear giant opted for a simplistic all-white colorway. Kieran Ronan, who’s the senior director for global equipment at Nike, explained how they managed to take innovative learning from other sports industries, including golf, and applying it to their study to help influence the flight of the ball and prevent wobbling.

“There were so many different permutations, but the one thing that was true to the golf ball back then and still is now is its ability to fly through the air. And in golf, you’re taking into factor how far the ball is going to travel downwind versus into the wind, whether the wind is coming off your left, off your right and so on and so forth — rain, dry, humidity,” Ronan told CBS Sports. “The principles of what that does is, when you think about a smooth surface when it travels through the air, it is gripped by the air. The application of dimples in this case from the golf ball, or in our case with the AerowSculpt technology, is distorting the surface so that the air can grip it, which allows basically, in essence, a truer flight.”

Manchester City, Chelsea, Tottenham, and the United States women’s national team were among the notable teams to work with Ronan over the years. Megan Rapinoe and Alex Morgan both provided feedback during the eight-year project. But it wasn’t just star players that helped Ronan and his team design the ball. They took a ton of input from a robotic kicking leg in their lab to help track boot-to-ball tests on the aerodynamics of the ball, which was another tip-of-the-cap to tracking technology used in golf and adopted in baseball.

“The other thing taken from the golf industry is the speed of iterations. When we brought the robot into the lab three or four years ago, that allowed us to up the ante, the amount of testing that we could do,” Ronan said. “The 1,700 hours of testing comes from the players, what they’re saying, bringing that in and mapping it and plotting it against an equation, feeding that information into the system for the robot, and then the robot starts its job.”

But why robots? Consistency.

“If you think about bringing in a player to come in and you were to ask a player to hit a thousand shots, the muscle fatigue, the overall physical fatigue, the information you get from the first kick, or maybe five or six kicks after they’re warmed up, all the way to the thousand kick will give you a very, very different set of parameters,” Ronan said. “Whereas with the robot, you’re working precisely in that range and you can start to work with the depth of the grooves, the shape of the grooves, the overall aesthetic appearance of the design to help get us to the optimal number that we’re looking for in this moment and time.”

robotic-leg-1-nike.jpg

Unlike traditional 12-panel soccer balls, the Nike Flight ball only uses four fuse-welded panels to help enable a prominent sweet spot for superior touch and performance. USWNT and OL Reign midfielder Ally Long, who is currently participating in the 2020 NWSL Challenge Cup explained the importance of a constant and truer flight to the ball.

“As a central midfielder I want to be on the ball all the time and be the quarterback that can help build the attack by using all different ranges of passes,” Long said. “In order for me to be the best, the ball needs to be consistent and predictable. Not too light, not too hard, made with the perfect material so every touch I take can be perfect to set me up for the next pass. There is nothing better when I hit a ball perfectly and it goes exactly where I want it to go.”

Role Models On and Off the Field

Role Models On and Off the Field

Dean Linke  |  Host of The ECNL Podcast  |  2020

This week’s Breaking The Line podcast from The ECNL features two segments that both come back to a common theme that we should all be thinking about – Role Models.   According to studies, 81 percent of people say their role model has influenced some of their major life decisions.  This is an important reminder that we need to consider who the critical influencers are that shape a player – beyond soccer skills – and what we as coaches, parents, and trainers can do to encourage positive Role Models in players’ lives.

Jason Kutney, the ECNL Boys Commissioner, chats with a panel of some of the top soccer coaches in the US in this episode.  The discussion was insightful, but also was enlightening in terms of the message that kept resonating: coach after coach noted the importance of the culture of the club and team.  The power of having even the youngest players practice and play within the eyesight of pro players to absorb their work ethic, teamwork, and commitment was clear.  It was obvious that a shared belief of everyone was that the pathway to success was lined with critical role models, influencers, and the right environment to succeed.

Our second guest interestingly echoed this message.  Madison Hammond is the first Native American player to play in the NWSL.  She came up through the ECNL program and was recruited to Wake Forest at an ECNL National Showcase years ago.  When you chat with Madison about her career and her path to the pro ranks, her discussion consistently goes back to her mother Carol Lincoln, and the influence and respect she has for her.  “My Mom is so supportive of everything I do. She is such a badass….  She says ‘no, it’s just my job.’  Every time I think it’s too much stress, she takes it like a champ and it’s inspirational. Even though I have this awesome thing with sports, what she is doing every single day is so important for the country.  I’m constantly in awe of her.”

One thing that has always attracted me to sport is how the character is universally celebrated as part of the game – whether through coaches on the sidelines or players on the pitch.  This character creates natural opportunity to be a positive role model.  This episode was grounding to hear that these coaches and players all realize and respect that the role models, people and experiences we surround ourselves with are such guiding forces in our development as people and players.

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Birmingham United Soccer Association