The Irish Mail on Sunday

ICELAND REAP REWARDS OF SHREWD PLAN

- By Egill Bjarnason

SUNRISE is still two hours away when 700 boys arrive for a Sunday morning soccer tournament in Reykjavik, the world’s northern-most capital. It’s snowing and freezing outside but the players have overcome the natural barrier of playing football on a wind-lashed North Atlantic island by gathering at an indoor hall with a full-size artificial field.

If they dream of playing in a World Cup they know it can come true because their national team is going — on Friday, Iceland, the smallest nation ever to qualify, was drawn with Argentina, Croatia and Nigeria in Group D.

The latest achievemen­t has left many wondering if the island nation of nearly 340,000 people is benefiting from its investment in the sport, or is it only temporary success?

Former Iceland manager Gudjon Thordarson is sure the investment is now paying off.

‘Place Iceland’s seven indoor halls in Coventry,’ he said, mentioning the English city with a roughly matching population, ‘and just wait and see what happens over, say, 15 years,’ he said.

What has already happened, according to Thordarson, is that when Icelanders were able to play soccer year-round, the rest of the sport became more profession­al. Coaching became a paid part-time job with required qualificat­ions, instead of a volunteer role given to any involved parent.

Iceland has 460 coaches with a UEFA B license for training children up to the age of 16, or one per 740 people.

Hakon Sverrisson, who left his job as a maths teacher to become head coach at the Breidablik club, said he wanted the best coaches to stay with the youngest players because ‘that’s when they learn the most’.

Every child pays the club’s tuition with a €300 voucher provided by the local municipali­ty to support afterschoo­l activities.

Public funding towards sport clubs and their facilities mean children need to be provided with equal opportunit­ies.

‘This means it’s hard for us to select the 15 or 20 best players and train them extra hard,’ Sverrisson said.

Iceland’s place at the World Cup in Russia comes after a stunning run at the 2016 European Championsh­ip, where they made it to the quarter-finals, knocking out England before losing to France 5-2.

Vidar Halldorsso­n, a sociology professor at the University of Iceland, argued in a recent book that in an era of big money the Icelandic team preserves an amateur spirit of friendship and sacrifice ‘while the elite teams have been weakened by greed and individual­ism.’

The Icelandic players have relatively modest careers as profession­al footballer­s — team captain Aron Gunnarsson, for example, is with second-tier Cardiff in the English League Championsh­ip, Gylfi Sigurdsson has struggled after a big move to Everton.

‘Together the players are ambitious and supportive,’ Halldorsso­n said, ‘and always willing to put the team first.’

The success is not ‘sport specific,’ he said, pointing to top-class performanc­es by the Icelandic handball and basketball teams.

‘Icelanders have not forgotten the “play” in sports,’ Halldorsso­n said, ‘and with that they champion the values the larger teams have lost in recent years.’

The matches at the Korinn indoor hall are watched by proud parents, catching up with friends and relatives.

Faces are familiar in a country this small, and even Iceland’s President Gudni Thorlacius Johannesso­n was there to watch his eight-yearold son.

‘The kids here, they learn their game and are encouraged to pass the ball to the next player instead of just kicking it as far as you can — tiny things like that give them an understand­ing of the game,’ Johannesso­n said.

A father of five and long-time volunteer in youth clubs, the president said the most important thing was that everybody is involved.

‘We just make sure that everybody has fun, everybody improves himself and everybody has a good time,’ Johannesso­n said.

‘That is what matters to me, not that we are creating profession­al football players 10 years on or something like that.’

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 ??  ?? STARS OF THE FUTURE: Young Icelandic kids enjoying their training session
STARS OF THE FUTURE: Young Icelandic kids enjoying their training session

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