football golf club
The cantera ( quarry ) of spanish professional football golf club Real Sociedad is the organization ‘s youth academy, developing players from childhood through to the integration of the best prospects into the adult teams. The final examination category within the youth social organization is the Juvenil A ( Basque : Gazteak A ) under-18/19 team which represents the club in home rival. The successful graduates then normally move to the club ‘s substitute teams, Real Sociedad C or Real Sociedad B, which are besides considered share of the cantera due to being a stagecoach in progress towards the senior team, albeit competing in the adult league system. The academy is based at the club train complex, Zubieta, which is often the mention used informally to refer to the system itself.

Background and structure [edit ]

Álvaro Odriozola is a recent example of a player who joined the club at a young age, moved through the youth levels and established himself in the senior team The peak football clubs in the spanish leagues generally place capital importance in developing their cantera to promote the players from within or sell to other clubs as a source of gross, and Real Sociedad is no exception. Until the former 1980s, the club operated a Basque-only musician recruitment policy but abandoned this in order to remain competitive ; [ 1 ] [ 2 ] [ 3 ] [ 4 ] [ 5 ] [ 6 ] however their youth recruitment network is silent focused around their home area of Gipuzkoa and there are collaboration agreements in place with the minor clubs in the region, assisted financially by the regional government. [ 7 ] [ 8 ] In 2013, it was noted that 22 of the 23 members of the Juvenil A police squad that season were from Gipuzkoa. [ 9 ] Most of the aged team players in late seasons are young person academy graduates : [ 5 ] [ 6 ] 15 of the police squad in 2014 ( as per analysis from the CIES Football Observatory ). [ 10 ] In 2016, Real Sociedad ‘s entire of 16 ‘homegrown players ‘ ( as per UEFA guidelines : three years of train between 15 and 21 years old ) still at their formative cabaret was the second-highest across Europe ‘s ‘big five ‘ leagues, significantly more than all other elite clubs apart from neighbours Athletic Bilbao. [ 11 ] [ 5 ] [ 6 ] furthermore, far end-of-year analysis demonstrated that these graduates were not merely backup police squad members but integral elements of the team, involved in 50 % of the minutes in the 2016–17 La Liga, where they finished 6th. [ 12 ] With the inclusion body of nine early trainees at other eligible clubs, Real ‘s entire of 25 homegrown players ranked as the fifth-highest across the continent, although merely third in Spain behind Real Madrid and FC Barcelona who retained equitable a few of the many high-level professionals they produced. real Sociedad ‘s good standing in La Liga since being promoted second in 2010 – including qualifying for the 2013–14 UEFA Champions League – was achieved using a large proportion of homegrown players, [ 5 ] with the huge majority of those hailing from the local region ( which has a population of just 715,000, a little catchment area for an elite football club, and with that likely pool of endowment drained far by frequent swoops for the best youngsters by Athletic Bilbao ), [ 13 ] [ 2 ] indicating a high standard of coach and exploitation of the unseasoned players at their disposal. A luminary exception to this local focus was Antoine Griezmann from France who was integrated into the setup at a young age after his potential was identified by real staff at an event ; [ 14 ] in 2014 he left the club for a transmit tip of €30 million. [ 15 ]
Youth alumnus Iñigo Martínez ‘s deviation in 2018 earned the club a €32 million fee. The congress of racial equality of boys from the Gipuzkoa region are beginning introduced into the Zubieta Alevín teams at around 10 years of age and advance by an long time group every season through Infantil, Cadete and Juvenil levels. The players who are retained by Real after their Juvenil A spell ( aged about 17 ) would typically join Real Sociedad C – a 2016 accession to the club structure [ 16 ] – with that police squad normally expanded further with some signings from the regions ‘s youth clubs such as Antiguoko, a minor San Sebastián team who regularly challenge the master youth teams for the deed in their División de Honor group. [ 17 ] [ 18 ] The players normally spend one or two seasons at Real C before the best are promoted to the reserve team Sanse and then on to the senior team when considered ready to do therefore. In summation to Griezmann, the Real Sociedad youth system produced three other players during the 2010s who commanded bombastic transplant windfalls when they departed : Asier Illarramendi moved to Real Madrid in July 2013 for €32.2 million [ 19 ] only to return two years subsequently for around half that measure ; [ 20 ] in January 2018, Iñigo Martínez signed for rivals Athletic Bilbao after they paid his €32 million publish clause fee ; [ 21 ] [ 22 ] in July of that year, Álvaro Odriozola besides moved to Real Madrid for a fee reported to be €30 million plus €5 million of conditional add-ons. [ 23 ]

National competitions [edit ]

The Juvenil A team play in Group II of the División de Honor Juvenil de Fútbol as their regular annual competition. Their main rivals in the league group are Athletic Bilbao and Osasuna. The under-17 team, Juvenil B or Easo ( named after a nickname for San Sebastián which itself derives from the nearby Roman town of Oiasso ), plays in the Liga Nacional Juvenil de Fútbol which is the lower division of the same structure. The team besides regularly participates in the Copa de Campeones and the Copa del Rey Juvenil, reservation for which is dependent on final league group stead. In these nationally competitions the resistance includes the academy teams of Barcelona, Atlético Madrid, Sevilla and Real Madrid .

International tournaments [edit ]

In 2012–13 real Sociedad ‘s senior team qualified for the UEFA Champions League group stages, meaning that the Juvenil police squad could play in the 2013–14 interpretation of the UEFA Youth League. [ 24 ] [ 25 ] They finished top of their group in the competition but were eliminated from the hard stage by Schalke 04.

In the subsequent years there has been no further opportunity to participate due to the senior team failing to qualify. The alternate path into the Youth League would be to win the previous season ‘s Copa de Campeones but Real Juvenil have indeed far been unable to achieve this .

pass coaches [edit ]

The coaches [ 26 ] are frequently erstwhile Real players who themselves graduated from Zubieta, which is besides truthful of Loren Juarros, the golf club ‘s former director of football [ 27 ] who held the post from 2009 [ 28 ] until 2018. [ 29 ]

Squad Age Coach Tier League
Juvenil A 16-18 Jon Mikel Arrieta 1 División de Honor (Gr. II)
Easo 16-17 Unai Gazpio 2 Liga Nacional (Gr. IV)
Cadete A 15-16 Gorka Valle 1 Cadete Liga Vasca
Cadete Txiki 14-15 Egoitz Etxarri 2 Cadete División de Honor

Juvenil A [edit ]

As of December 2018 [30]

bill : Flags indicate national team as defined under FIFA eligibility rules. Players may hold more than one non-FIFA nationality .

Juvenil B ( Easo ) [edit ]

As of December 2018[31]

notice : Flags indicate national team as defined under FIFA eligibility rules. Players may hold more than one non-FIFA nationality .

Season to season ( Juvenil A ) [edit ]

Seasons with two or more trophies shown in bold [ 32 ]

Season Level Group Position Copa del Rey Juvenil Notes
1986–87 1 N/A 14th N/A Relegated
1987–88 2 2 1st N/A 4th in playoff group, not promoted
1988–89 2 2 1st N/A 2nd in playoff group, not promoted
1989–90 2 2 1st N/A 1st in playoff group, not promoted
1990–91 2 2 1st N/A 1st in playoff group, not promoted
1991–92 2 2 2nd N/A 1st in playoff group, not promoted
1992–93 2 2 1st N/A 2nd in playoff group, not promoted
1993–94 2 2 2nd N/A
1994–95 2 2 2nd N/A No promotion due to restructuring

Seasons with two or more trophies shown in bold

Honours [edit ]

celebrated players [edit ]

The club ‘s purpose-built discipline center and academy at Zubieta dates from 1982, but special mention should be given to the generation of players who emerged precisely anterior to its open : actual Sociedad were La Liga winners in 1981 and 1982 with a play squad filled with homegrown talent ( not all players were developed from childhood, but those who did arrive by and by were acquired from the area ‘s local clubs in their teens or early 20s and improved farther ). A group comprising Luis Arconada, Genaro Zelaieta, Inaxio Kortabarria, Juan Antonio Larrañaga, Alberto Górriz, Gaztelu, Periko Alonso, José Diego, Roberto López Ufarte, Peio Uralde, José Mari Bakero, Jesús María Zamora and Jesús María Satrústegui all became spanish internationals. Since that successful era, many more players have emerged from the youth system to star for the Real Sociedad first gear team or play elsewhere at a high degree, including :

As of August 2018players currently at Real Sociedad in bold, ‘graduation’ year in parentheses

See besides [edit ]

References [edit ]

  • Official website ( in Spanish and Basque )