Abstract

In 2020, the world was affected by the COVID-19 pandemic, which remains a major challenge for most countries today. In Brazil, football clubs' youth academies have faced a disruption of their regular activities. In order to study how the learning cultures of a Brazilian professional football club youth academy have been changed, and the alternatives created by the club's staff within this context, this perspective article aims to analyze how they have structured the Under-15 (U15) team learning culture during social isolation due to the COVID-19 pandemic. Through document and thematic analysis on a Brazilian professional football club's youth academy program, we promoted a dialogue between the process of adaptation to remote theoretical-tactical teaching with the learning theory proposed by Hodkinson and collaborators. The main theme of analysis of this study was the remote structure of the theoretical-tactical learning and physical training. Challenged with the need to transpose face-to-face activities into a learning culture based on remote communication, the U15 team coaching staff created a process to prescribe physical training, and to teach and discuss football tactical issues with young players during the period of social isolation. This perspective article shows that it is possible for sports institutions to create programs for the development of young athletes within the social isolation/distancing context, considering both theoretical-tactical learning and physical training processes. The adaptation to remote environments as structures for the learning culture seems a challenge, but is also a good alternative for young players to develop their interpretation and perception of football theoretical-tactical issues.

Highlights

  • Since the beginning of 2020, the world has been facing a pandemic caused by COVID-19 (Del Rio and Malani, 2020)

  • The investigated Brazilian professional football club youth academy participates in state level championships and has the ‘Formative Club Certificate’, a quality seal endorsed by the CBF for clubs that offer good conditions for developing young players

  • Within the scenario of sports activities interruption, in the following we present and analyze the learning culture structure of this Brazilian professional football club youth academy U15 team, located in a countryside city in the state of São Paulo

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Summary

Introduction

Since the beginning of 2020, the world has been facing a pandemic caused by COVID-19 (Del Rio and Malani, 2020). As COVID-19 has caused impacts in various fields of society such as health, economics, education, and sport, it can be said that this pandemic represents an Football Youth Academy Facing COVID-19 intersection between the natural and social dimensions that surround human life (Badiou, 2020). To face this scenario, quarantine and social distancing have been adopted as strategies to prevent the spread of the virus in several countries (Frahsa et al, 2020; Wilder-Smith and Freedman, 2020), as any meetings, festivals, professional, or youth football games offer a genuine contamination risk (McCloskey et al, 2020). The authors sought to elucidate how the pandemic revealed the inequalities of access to and consumption of sport in society, bringing to light the need for social sciences studies on the sport world facing COVID-19, considering cultural, social, and political contexts

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