Halifax Courier

Atherton wants the conveyor belt rolling from youth team to first-team

- Tom Scargill tom.scargill@jpimedia.co.uk @hxcouriert­om

FC HALIFAX Town’s youth team head coach Gavin Atherton wants to get the conveyor belt rolling towards the senior side.

Atherton was appointed in November 2020 and has since overseen a more focused strategy towards individual player developmen­t, with the aim of seeing more players make the leap from youth team to firstteam.

“I think I’ve looked to develop the individual­s within the group,” Atherton said on how he feels the youth-team set-up has progressed under him.

“I had a few ideas I threw around with Steve (Nichol, head of youth developmen­t) around adding in positionsp­ecific sessions, really getting into detail around the guidelines for success we have and starting to go down the individual player responsibi­lity route and how we develop the individual­s in the team to give them the best opportunit­y to get something with the firstteam.

“We had a good base already. I created a coaching programme designed to be able to manipulate the sessions, work on those individual­s in the group but also develop the group as a whole, make the team more competitiv­e.

“I think over the last couple of years, especially this year, we’re now starting to see that.

“The position specific sessions, the coaching programme and the guidelines for success, they’ve all given the lads on a weekly basis something to look at and self-analyse themselves against, to go ‘what do I need to do better?’, ‘what do I need to work on?’.”

Atherton says being able to analyse games and training sessions more often has aided player developmen­t.

“We have purchased a new camera and mast that records games and training automatica­lly,” he said. “When we upload them onto Hudl, the platform we use which we share with the first-team, they can look at their performanc­es and review the opposition, have a look at their traits, what were their strengths and weaknesses, what can we change when we play them next time.

“Individual­ly, how are you going to affect the opposition, what strengths of yours will help us beat them.

“Hopefully that side has had a big impact.”

Another area Atherton feels has helped progress the club’s youth set-up has been an increase in self-promotion.

“Social media now is more important than ever in that you’ve got to be out there showcasing what the club’s doing,” he said.

“Over the last 12 months we’ve started an Academy Instagram and Twitter account which has generated a lot more interest from players.

“It’s also about club recognitio­n, you’ve got Halifax fans always commenting on the stories we put out, liking it, sharing it, so it’s getting noticed.”

Atherton worked in the youth set-up at Oldham Athletic at the same time as Pete Wild and Chris Millington, and says that friendship helps tighten the bond between youth team and first-team.

“It’s massive. It’s always great having that relationsh­ip with the gaffer and the assistant from before, it does go a long way,” he said.

“It also helps that their background was youth developmen­t, they’ve got that experience and they know what it’s like from my perspectiv­e.

“I love being around the first-team too because it helps with my personal developmen­t, and I get a good insight into what the first-team is doing on a week-by-week basis.

“I’m always asking questions to the manager about what have they been working on, all the individual bits they do with the players, which helps me relay that to the youth team lads.

“So I’m saying to the lads ‘this is what the first-team players are being told at the minute, so if you want to be in and around the first-team, these traits are what they’re doing’.

“I can say to one of our rightbacks ‘this is the informatio­n Jay Benn’s being given, this is what he’s doing to improve himself, so that’s what you need to be doing within games’.”

When asked if he feels there are players in the club’s youth teams capable of making the step-up to the first-team, Atherton said: “The lads are in there, they’re making mistakes and it’s about teaching them the winning mentality, so saying to them ‘OK, you might be making mistakes, but you’ve also got to have that winning mentality because if and when the opportunit­y comes with the first-team, these mistakes aren’t youth developmen­t mistakes, they’re mistakes that could cost three points.

“These lads need to know that there is the youth developmen­t side of things but also you need to win games, be competitiv­e and make sure you don’t make the same mistakes if you get something with the firstteam.

“We do have some lads who train with the first-team on a regular basis, which is brilliant.

“The gaffer is always asking for two or three lads a week to get involved in training.

“Sometimes he’ll ask for specific lads to go, instead of us choosing he’ll say ‘I want x, y and z’.

“They’ve then got to prove to the manager that they’re good enough to get something at the end of the year.”

Town’s youth team plays in the under 19s National Academy League North Division, and are also in the semi-finals of the under 19s Academy Cup for the first time, booking their place in the last four by beating Chesterfie­ld 3-1 last month.

And Atherton is focusing on getting the conveyor belt rolling.

“If one or two players every year could get something with the first-team, that’s the level I want to get to, where every year there’s always at least one player that’s getting a contract with the first-team because they’re good enough,” he said.

“But that also comes down to me as well, how much are we doing with these lads over two years to help them develop, which is where video analysis, Hudl, guidelines for success, individual reviews and position specific sessions all come in.

“If we’ve got a striker that’s good at finishing, let’s make him tremendous at finishing, if we’ve got a centre-half that’s good at one v one defending or heading, let’s make him the best he can be at that.

“Those are the things we pinpoint. If you’ve got a lad that’s got a great trait, let’s make it outstandin­g so when he goes into the first-team, they can they mould and shape him for how they need him to be.”

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 ?? ?? THE KIDS ARE ALRIGHT: FC Halifax Town’s youth team head coach Gavin Atherton. Left: The Shaymen’s youngsters in recent action against Boston United.
THE KIDS ARE ALRIGHT: FC Halifax Town’s youth team head coach Gavin Atherton. Left: The Shaymen’s youngsters in recent action against Boston United.

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