Andrew Matthew, Barraclough Sam, Triggs Andrew O, Dugdale James H, Kelly Adam, Reeves Matthew J
Department of Sport and Exercise Sciences, Manchester Metropolitan University Institute of Sport, Manchester, United Kingdom.
UCFB Manchester Campus, Manchester, United Kingdom.
PLoS One. 2025 Sep 12;20(9):e0331134. doi: 10.1371/journal.pone.0331134. eCollection 2025.
Talent identification (TI) in soccer is a complex and multifactorial process within the context of collegiate sport in the United States, where coaches must assess performance-ready athletes often under strict regulatory and resource constraints. Despite the critical role college coaches play in bridging youth to professional soccer, little is known about their evaluative priorities during recruitment. This study examined how soccer coaches from female and male NCAA Division I and II programs perceived the importance of various player attributes and scouting methods in the TI process. A total of 178 college soccer coaches completed a survey assessing perceptions across seven attribute categories (technical, physical, psychological, game intelligence, social, other, and coach-specific) and common scouting methods. Bootstrapped trimmed means, effect sizes, and inter-rater agreement (rwg) were used to analyse the coaches' ratings of importance across attributes and to assess for differences in coach perceptions within the female and male programs. Results showed coaches across female and male programs rated technical proficiency, coachability, decision-making, and work rate as critically important. College-specific soccer knowledge was the most highly valued coach attribute, while live match observation was the most preferred scouting method. Sex-based differences were generally minimal, although emerged in perceptions of physical and social attributes, with coaches of female players placing greater emphasis on communication and agility. Results highlighted a shared prioritisation of technical and psychological qualities in college TI, with contextual differences influenced by sex and program structure. These insights support the development of more aligned and evidence-informed TI strategies in collegiate soccer environments.
在美国大学体育背景下,足球人才识别(TI)是一个复杂且多因素的过程,教练们常常要在严格的监管和资源限制下评估具备参赛能力的运动员。尽管大学教练在连接青少年足球与职业足球方面发挥着关键作用,但对于他们在招募过程中的评估重点却知之甚少。本研究调查了美国国家大学体育协会(NCAA)一级和二级男女足球项目的教练如何看待TI过程中各种球员属性和球探方法的重要性。共有178名大学足球教练完成了一项调查,该调查评估了他们对七个属性类别(技术、身体、心理、比赛智慧、社交、其他以及教练特定)和常见球探方法的看法。使用自抽样截尾均值、效应量和评分者间一致性(rwg)来分析教练对各属性重要性的评分,并评估男女项目中教练看法的差异。结果显示,男女项目的教练都将技术熟练度、可训练性、决策能力和工作效率评为至关重要。特定大学的足球知识是最受重视的教练属性,而现场比赛观察是最受青睐的球探方法。基于性别的差异通常很小,不过在身体和社交属性的看法上有所体现,女球员的教练更强调沟通和敏捷性。结果突出了大学TI中技术和心理素质的共同优先排序,以及受性别和项目结构影响的背景差异。这些见解有助于在大学足球环境中制定更一致且基于证据的TI策略。