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United StatesSports5 days ago

Eight rules made Norway a winter sports superpower. Will they help at the World Cup?

The article discusses how Norway became a winter sports superpower by examining the development of its youth sports system, particularly focusing on the upbringing of Erling Haaland, one of Norway's top athletes. It highlights the 'Children's Rights in Sports' framework, which includes eight principles aimed at fostering child development through sports. The piece notes Norway's high participation rates in sports and its success in international competitions despite its relatively small population.

Twenty years ago in Bryne, a small Norwegian city near the North Sea, a group of elementary school-age kids gathered most weekends to play pickup games at an indoor soccer field.

The soccer dome was often left unlocked, allowing local kids year-round opportunities to play. The kids later told researchers that they would often would break themselves into teams and imagine they were playing someplace much bigger than their hometown of about 11,000. They referred to their game as “World Cup.”

One of those kids from Bryne was a tall, blond goal-scoring whiz named Erling Haaland, who grew up to be one of the most prolific and famous goal-scorers in the world. On Tuesday, Haaland will lead Norway into the real World Cup — the country’s first appearance in 28 years.

There is no denying the role of Haaland’s pedigree in his rise to stardom. His father played in England’s Premier League and for the last Norwegian national team that made the World Cup in 1998. But Haaland is also the product of a Norwegian youth sports system that is considered the most progressive in the world. Its focus on developing children through sports has produced sky-high participation rates — but also gold-medal-winning success unparalleled for a country its size.

The foundation of Norway’s youth system is built on eight principles that form the country’s “Children’s Rights in Sports.” Since they were adopted 40 years ago, those principles establish that children have a right to participate in sports no matter their family’s finances; to compete for fun, in training designed to foster friendship and solidarity; to play in safe environments; and to have their opinions heard by coaches. How many sports a child plays is up to them.

Though kids can start playing for local teams at the age of 6, they can’t travel for regional competitions until they are 9. Results and rankings aren’t kept until age 11. National championships are only for those 12 and up. Thanks to a vast number of volunteers and funding from a state-owned gambling company , costs of taking part are low.

“Norway is so unique because they have sort of drawn from universally accepted human rights principles to champion and safeguard children’s rights in sports,” said Jon Solomon, the research director of the Aspen Institute’s sports and society program. “They’re really big in believing that friendship and enjoyment and freedom of choice and developmentally appropriate play are all really critical for kids, just to be kids. But they also view it as very important for the pipeline to just develop elite athletes at later stages.”

Martin Odegaard #10 during the international friendly match between Morocco and Norway at Sports Illustrated Stadium in Harrison, New Jersey, in June. Stephen Nadler / ISI Photos via Getty Images file The system isn’t designed to separate the weak from the strong, nor to identify future stars early, but to keep as many kids playing for as long as possible. That serves two purposes — to keep everyday citizens active and to keep future elite athletes in the country’s Olympic development pipeline, rather than burn them out.

A recent Aspen Institute survey found that American children are motivated by fun and playing with their friends, too. Yet many U.S. kids have reported high rates of burnout and injuries from overuse in American youth sports, one separate study found , and the high cost of youth sports is often cited as a roadblock.

Today, 93% of children in Norway participate in a youth team, said Martin Erikstad, an associate professor at the University of Agder who has studied the country’s youth system. (In the U.S., recent figures peg the participation rate at around 55%.)

“When I say that we’re kind of broad and inclusive in children’s sport, we’re not anti-competitive,” Erikstad said. “It’s more that we, I think, have a cautious understanding of when and how to introduce competition, so it’s done in a healthy way.”

Norway is often associated with winter sports, but soccer is uniquely popular.

“When the snow melts, (kids) are out with their footballs and playing around the thousand fields all around Norway,” said Tone Lien, the chief executive of Norway Cup, an annual youth soccer tournament. Lien speaks from experience. Since its founding in 1972, Norway Cup has become the largest youth soccer tournament in the world, and this year it expects to draw 30,000 players and nearly 600,000 friends, family members and spectators.

The tournament is run on the same “low-key” principles, of fun and lifelong enjoyment, of Norway’s youth system as a whole, Lien said. The winning teams in each division earn an enormous trophy — but only for the age groups over 13.

“We try to promote that you don’t (stack) the teams,” Lien said. “We try to make people let the kids play.”

When Erikstad and a team of researchers wanted to learn more about youth sports around Norway, they focused on the soccer club Bryne FK and interviewed a cohort of 1999-born kids, their parents and…

Read the full article at NBC News
Source document: Erling Haaland Interview with ESPN

2 reports

NBC NewsIndependentCenter5 days ago
Eight rules made Norway a winter sports superpower. Will they help at the World Cup?

The article discusses how Norway became a winter sports superpower by examining the development of its youth sports system, particularly focusing on the upbringing of Erling Haaland, one of Norway's top athletes. It highlights the 'Children's Rights in Sports' framework, which includes eight principles aimed at fostering child development through sports. The piece notes Norway's high participation rates in sports and its success in international competitions despite its relatively small population.

Bias read (Center): The article focuses on sports development and athlete upbringing without taking a political stance or showing bias toward any ideological perspective. It presents facts about Norway's youth sports system and its impact on producing successful athletes like Erling Haaland, with no apparent slant or o

NewsweekIndependentCenter6 days ago
Erling Haaland Makes Emotional Admission Ahead of Long-Awaited World Cup Debut

Erling Haaland, Norway's star striker, is set to make his long-awaited World Cup debut in the 2026 tournament. In an exclusive interview with ESPN, Haaland spoke about his father, Alfie Haaland, who also played in a World Cup for Norway in the U.S. over 30 years ago. Haaland expressed the significance of his father's participation and mentioned plans to involve him in the experience.

Bias read (Center): The article focuses on sports and does not present any political content or biased framing. It provides factual information about Erling Haaland's World Cup debut and his personal connection to his father's past involvement in the tournament.

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