Archive for July, 2007

TourneyCentral soccer tournament sites are 100% compatible with iPhone

Posted on July 24th, 2007 in Soccer | No Comments »

TourneyCentral.com announces that the family of youth soccer tournaments are 100% compatible with iPhone, making iPhone the perfect on-venue mobile device for updating scores and news.

TourneyCentral.com announced today that the web sites that deliver real-time information about youth soccer tournaments are 100% compatible with iPhone. The mobile devices ship with MacOS X’s Safari web browser and allows the user to view the full web site instead of a specially formatted one as used by other popular so-called smart phones such as Blackberry and Treo.

“What this really means for tournament directors,” McLean adds, “is that they will be able to manage their web site in real-time at the venues or en route without worrying about whether or not they have an Internet connection.” Since TourneyCentral sites have web-based scoring and news modules, including email broadcast, a tournament director is now always in touch with their guest teams.

Legislating sportsmanship

Posted on July 17th, 2007 in Soccer | No Comments »

Over the past year, we have seen an increase in tournaments attempting to legislate good sportsmanship, either through rewarding a “good sport” on the other team with a patch, medal or trophy or by penalizing the team by taking away points on red and yellow cards. Has this increased sportsmanship?

No.

What it has done is increase the amount of administration that the tournaments needs to manage the event. Players are either good sports — or they are not. Sportsmanship at the cost of winning is either a character trait or it is not. Ultimately, winning is rewarded. How you got there almost never plays a role. It may not be fair; it may not be ethical but it is ultimately what we measure.

Our advice: Stop trying to legislate sportsmanship with the teams that you have accepted into your tournament. And don’t over-complicate your standings and tie breakers with points off for bad behavior. The red card has its own penalties and players and coaches understand them.

What you can do, however, is RESEARCH the teams that apply a little bit more in-depth. On teams that show some aggression (you know, the ones with the pushy team manager or the cocky coach,) call around to tournaments they have played in recently. Did the team behave? Were they responsible for a large percentage of red cards? Their state association would also have that information. If they gave other events trouble, chances are they will do the same for you.

Also, on every TourneyCentral web site, you have the ability to record notes on the teams to reference for next year. Use this frequently! A whole year erodes memory, whereas a short note in a database lives forever.

Soccer America publishes our article.. check it out

Posted on July 13th, 2007 in Soccer | No Comments »

Soccer America published an article submitted when launching their new newsletter, Grassroots Soccer Biz

It starts out…
When people start talking about “brand,” the talk immediately turns to logo design. While a good logo is part of your brand, it is not “THE BRAND.” The brand is how people feel about and view your soccer organization (league, club or tournament). Your brand is what you can leverage to sponsors, advertisers, guest teams, potential players, potential coaches and the media. (Links to read the rest of the article are below.)

Our advice: Read the article and subscribe to Soccer America for upcoming newsletters.

Not really soccer related, but way too funny to not share

Posted on July 7th, 2007 in Soccer | No Comments »

A friend of mine sent me this link to this video. It is not especially related to managing a soccer tournament, but it is way too funny not to share. Enjoy!

Gerard McLean, TourneyCentral

Digg!