Apalagi kalau jurusan hukumnya di universitas luar negeri seperti Inggris. Inggris sendiri memiliki […]. Jika ditanya negara Eropa mana yang ingin dijadikan tujuan belajar, pasti banyak yang menjawab Belanda. Memang, karena adanya sejarah […]. Event Bulan Ini. Saya telah mendengar SUN Education sebelumnya dari keluarga dan teman-teman saya dan mereka mengatakan bahwa layanan yang disediakan adalah benar-benar baik dan sangat membantu.
SUN Education sangat membantu saya untuk belajar ke Selandia Baru dengan pelayanan dan respon yang cepat dan orang-orang yang benar-benar baik. Terima kasih khususnya kepada para konselor yang membantu saya menyelesaikan persyaratan dan dokumentasi untuk gelar master saya. Pengalaman saya bersama SUN Education sangat menyenangkan.
Saya percaya SUN Education adalah agent pertama yang saya pilih karena memiliki latar belakang dan kinerja yang sangat baik. SUN Education sangat mempercepat proses segalanya. SUN Education membantu saya untuk mencari referensi kampus dan memudahkan mengurus dokumen untuk ke universitas.
Watford 0 Wolves 2 — Player ratings. Subscribe to our daily newsletter! Sign Up. Francisco Trincao - 8. Hwang Hee-chan for Trincao, 63 , 7. Daniel Podence for Traore, 81 , 7. Peter Rhodes 11 hours ago. Peter Rhodes Nov 10, Wolverhampton 11 hours ago. Wolverhampton Nov 10, UK News. Viral news. That prize of helping a player take their first step on the rung of a ladder which could lead to a professional career. And, for the best of the bunch, a journey to the very top and potential stardom.
Being there, at the start of that process? Well that can be priceless. The excellent sportswriter Michael Calvin once wrote a book dedicated to the world of football scouting. He called it 'The Nowhere Men' - a fascinating insight into the world of so many scouts whom he described as the 'ubiquitous yet anonymous members of football's hidden tribe' who 'possess the power of dreams'.
Wolves have been fortunate to have been blessed by many top scouts helping to shape those dreams through the years. From the days of Wath Wanderers launched by Mark Crook after the second World War as a nursery side to feed players into Wolves, to the club's current status as a Category One Academy, the challenge of identifying young talent with the potential to go on and don the famous gold and black is a challenge which has both enthralled and enthused so many.
Among two of the most successful and indeed most long-term at a local level for Wolves were Bob Bennett and Les Green. Both embarked on very different journeys towards working in scouting at the end of previous careers, both possess different personalities and approaches and both ultimately followed slightly different roles as part of a flourishing team.
But what they most definitely shared was a work ethic, determination and indeed passion to identify the very best of the local talent to the benefit of Wolverhampton Wanderers, whether to, ideally, progress all the way through to the first team at Molineux or, if not, build a career elsewhere.
The duo's stories and experiences however count for far more than just the players who made it through, their scouting career comprising a total of 23 years for Green and 21 for Bennett respectively. Almost half a century of memories to discuss as we sit down over coffee at the homely Grade II listed bar at Codsall Railway Station.
Green was so taken with Wolves that he swapped Ilford for Wolverhampton in , at one point went seven years without missing a game home or away, and after meeting second wife Jill, is very much settled in the area after retiring. Both possess a considerable sporting pedigree — Green combining part-time scouting with a passion for running which continued until suffering deep vein thrombosis five years ago — and Bennett a promising striker who was with Walsall as a youngster before going on to play at a high level of non-league including locally for Bilston Town, Sedgley Rovers, Woodcross and the Wolverhampton Amateur League representative side.
Bennett, now 67, was also a runner, marathons to be precise, but when he moved to Codsall with wife Lynne in , a chance meeting with then Wolves defender Mark Venus saw the two start running a Sunday League team.
From there he coached the Bilbrook Juniors team in which his son Steven was playing, and later Willenhall Town youths, before his footballing pedigree and coaching nous attracted the attention of Green and Wolves via another scout in Tony Parkes. Bennett certainly fitted that criteria and, even with extensive working experience behind him in sectors including engineering and insurance, remembers feeling slightly daunted among a group of around 12 scouts at an early induction-type evening in one of the executive boxes at Molineux.
In different roles the two played a pivotal part in a youth recruitment set-up fondly remembered as one of the Golden eras for players coming through the system.
In a department assembled and nurtured under the stewardship of Academy director Chris Evans, Bennett would eventually progress to a full-time position to become Head of Local Recruitment, not just scouting for talent but also overseeing operations.
Green, who may have been 'part-time' but clearly went way above and beyond all that, didn't actually take a wage from Wolves, instead receiving three season tickets as payment along with any bonuses related to his players making the grade. Bennett brings out his iPad with a copy of the file up until he retired and it is indeed a veritable Aladdin's Cave of all those young players who at some stage had the opportunity for a trial with Wolves. And while scouts are always very proud of the individuals whom they successfully recommend, within that framework at Wolves has always been a team ethic which is vital at any club.
There are so many others who have also given Wolves such sterling service, and to single some out runs the risk of missing out others, but the likes of Geoff Blackwell, Colin Eaton, Morris Baker and Jeff Gregory are among those mentioned in despatches.
So then, what makes a good scout? What are they looking for when watching a group of eager-to-impress and sometimes over-enthusiastic youngsters charging around a football pitch? What is it that stands out? Green agrees: "I have seen some very talented players who think they are that good that they pose. As well as technique, as well as mentality, like most opportunities in life, there is also the need sometimes, for good old-fashioned luck.
Lescott, who would make almost appearances for Wolves and go on to win the Premier League with Manchester City and 26 caps for England, was brought in by Green as a box-to-box midfielder. He came in at the age of 12, decided he wanted to step away and play for his school at 14, and then popped up again with Derby at 15 before Wolves, who still had his registration, brought him back into the fold. Lescott was one of four spotted by Green who would go on and play in the Premier League — Davies, Elliott Bennett and Nathaniel Mendez-Laing completing the set — but as a powerhouse defender rather than a central midfielder.
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