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Lennon critical of Scottish soccer academies

Neil Lennon has blasted Henry McLeish's report on Scottish football, claiming soccer academies do not work and facilities are "not the be all and end all". Among a list of recommendations in the detailed document was a call for more than £400million investment on facilities and the creation of '20 Schools of Football'.

"The academies are not working," Lennon said. "We haven't produced a regular first-team player since (Aiden) McGeady, probably, although we have a good crop of players coming through.

"I'd like to go back to the system when I was growing up.

"There were no academies in those days and Scotland, England and Ireland were still producing top-quality players.

"My argument is someone like Wayne Rooney. Would he have needed an academy to come though in the game?

"Would Steven Gerrard or McGeady? I'm not so sure.

"Some people think academies are the way forward and a lot of them work on the blueprint from Clairefontaine in France.

"But I've been on courses where I've argued about it and studies have come back to say academies aren't working. They are not as successful as people thought they were going to be.

"So maybe I'm right and everyone else is wrong, I don't know. It's just an opinion.

"Maybe that's something that needs to be addressed and the money maybe put somewhere else."

The former Celtic captain added: "We have produced some very talented players throughout the years - McGeady and (Shaun) Maloney, (Darren) O'Dea, (Stephen) McManus and (Paul) Caddis - but we are always looking for more.

"I think that somewhere down the line, between 15 and 19, something gets lost and it needs to be looked at.

"That might upset a lot of people working in academies but that's my opinion.

"When I was growing up I played for boys' clubs, the school and I played on Saturdays and Sundays.

"I just played football and that's how you learned the game and once you got to 15 and 16 you were moulded by professional coaches at clubs.

"I was a YTS and cleaned the boots - I served an apprenticeship.

"There was a hunger there, you got £28.50 per week and the following year you got £35.

"So you weren't in it for the money. You didn't have an agent. You were there to progress and I think players 20 years ago were a lot more hungry than they are now.

"The players might get too much too soon but there is so much competition from the bigger clubs.

"The young ones get hoovered up pretty quickly, get taken into academies and then get lost in the system.

"They get brought in at eight and nine years of age which, for me, is far too young an age to be coached.

"And by the time they are 15 they are deemed not good enough. They are heartbroken and where do they go from there?

"Call me old-fashioned but that's my opinion."

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