Coach Bell calls for 'high intensity'

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Women's World Cup, Coach Bell's cry for "high intensity"..."Common sense" for the advanced women's soccer team


High intensity that is often heard in World Cup...Bell "general concept in European football"
Women's Soccer 'All-out Reform' Mentioned..."Youth, University, and WK League are all in one frame"

"High intensity" is the trademark of Colin Bell, the coach of the women's national soccer team, but it is not a word that is often used in everyday life.

This is a translation of 'high-intensity'. Director Bell has been shouting this in both Korean and English in public.

Even the Korea Football Association has selected the 2023 FIFA Women's World Cup cheering slogan as "High-intensity - Challenge Strongly Challenge!"

The word, which has been cited as a unique philosophy that differentiates itself from domestic leaders, is often heard in Australia and New Zealand, where the World Cup is held.

Leaders of foreign teams, such as "intense games" and "high-intensity running," bring this up in various ways.

Both Sarina Hirman of the English national team and Lars Sønger of Denmark, who held a press conference at Sydney Football Stadium in New South Wales, Australia on the 27th, emphasized "high-intensity" along with terms such as sprint, sprint and physical that Bell often uses.

Coach Bell, who met at Campbelltown Sports Stadium outside Sydney on the 28th, sighed when he mentioned the press conference of the England and Denmark teams the previous day.

Then he said, "There are aspects that are frustrating and difficult to talk about, but I want to talk in a productive and helpful way for Korean women's soccer."

Coach Bell said, "As a national team coach, we have to see what happens outside of Korea," adding, "The U.S. has dominated for several years in both high-intensity and physical aspects. (High-intensity) is a general concept in European football."

"I brought a normal concept to Korea," he added. "I try to show the players the aspect of 'fierceness' during training," he said. "Only then can I adapt to high-intensity games."

"If you are friendly to the players during training, you can say, 'Why didn't you coach me properly' when you hit Colombian players," he said. "You have to face reality." "The results of the Nigeria-Australia match came out in two aspects: physical and strength," he pointed out.

Nigeria beat host Australia 3-2 the previous day. Australia (10th) has a high FIFA ranking, but Nigeria (40th) laughed after tapping the backspace and side through the strikers' fast sprint.

In fact, "high-intensity," the original text of "high intensity," is a word that appears in overseas research on women's soccer.

With the recent full-fledged research in the field of sports science on women's soccer, whether players can play "high-intensity" on the ground has emerged as a key factor in determining their performance.

High intensity is different from the amount of activity, which is simply the concept of 'running a lot'.

It is a generic term for activities and sections in which physical and mental loads are applied to athletes in the process of raising them to the highest speed or rapidly reducing their speed.

Dr. Jason Veskovi of the U.S. Lacrosse Sports Science and Safety Research Institute, who has studied women's soccer players, analyzed through the FIFA Training Center on the 13th that "high-intensity learning" is required as the level rises from youth to A matches. 토토사이트

Dr. Veskovy pointed out that the 'physical gap' should be filled to compare and analyze the movements of players and settle at a higher level by dividing them into youth, college, professional football, and national team games.

According to data collected by Dr. Veskovi himself, professional soccer games were about 2% more than A matches between national teams. However, the distance played at 'high intensity' was 12% higher in the A match.

Coach Bell believes that it is this World Cup that such academic discussions have been proven on the ground.

In fact, at a press conference shortly after the match against Colombia, he stressed the need for high-intensity, saying, "This is the international standard (where the World Cup takes place). Colombia, Morocco, and Germany are all at that level," he said.

Coach Bell mentioned the "full reform" of Korean women's football.

Coach Bell said, "This high-intensity concept should lead to a framework from childhood to middle and high schools, universities, and the WK League," adding, "I think the entire Korean women's soccer system should be reorganized."

"If you are feeling this part of this tournament, you should go back to Korea and present a clear vision of how the entire Korean women's football should change," he said. "If there is no change, you may be caught up by the Philippines, Vietnam, and Uzbekistan."

He stressed, "We need to move forward more in line with the current trend."

Foreign media are also paying attention to Bell's call for "high intensity."

Sports media The Athletic moved Bell's remarks at a press conference shortly after the match against Colombia and diagnosed that the world's women's football is entering an era that requires stronger physical strength.

The Athletic said that both players and coaches who played their first game of the tournament felt that physical and physical strength became important.

Spain's coach Jorge Bilda said, "If you look at the games so far, this is the most physically intense World Cup."

Denmark's coach Sönergor said, "In all matches of the European Women's Football Championship (Women's Euro) last year, high-intensity running and sprints came out," adding, "The competition for the ball has also intensified." "Even teams with low rankings play rough," he pointed out.

He added, "All aspects of women's soccer (not only the intensity of the game) are improving."

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