Beyond Scouts: How can the community help to identify talent? You are Palmas

Football talent is never found in academies or official tournaments. Sometimes, the best scout is a neighbor, a neighbor coach or even a taxi driver noticing a group of children playing in a park and finding one of them.
In UD Los Palmas, the talent collection is beyond traditional methods and relies on the community network, which has become crucial in the invention of future promises.
Historically, Yudi Los Palmas depends on its collection of direct observation and the exact analysis of the players, but there is often a factor that is not recognized: information coming from society. The passion for football on the Canary Islands turns any fan into communication capacity, the club’s capture of the body.
For the Director of Training and Collection Manual Rodriguez Tono, “Football is part of our people’s culture, and most of the best information is not in the offices, in neighboring areas, in courts and stands.”
“Our land people prefer football and have a special eye to recognize talent. Thanks to the comment from a person who has seen something different in our best players,” said Capture and Players Coordinator Jesse Hernandez.
In the world, which plays a very important role in technology and databases, UD Los Palmas is betting about intimacy and connection with its environment. For the club, the mouth mouth is still a key tool in the capture process.
Talent stories found outside the radar
One of the most significant cases of non -conventional collection in City Park occurred. A taxi driver, a football fan and team follower, contacted Tono to tell a team of children who play regularly in Juan Pablo II Park. “I’m going to pick up a client and I have seen some guys playing with a tremendous level. Especially there is one that attracts my attention. I know nothing about professional football, but the child played differently,” said the taxi driver.
The comment did not fall into a broken bag. A few days later, a member of the club’s capture team went to observe the boys and, as a result, confirmed that there was an unusual talent. The child was later invited to train with the quarry and today is part of the construction process of Yudi Los Palmas.
Similar cases have occurred in neighboring tournaments, a tehian person in the beach and a tehian club tracking list in better matches and youth matches.
Beyond sudden fans and observers, surrounding coaches play a basic role in recognizing talent. In Canary Islands, children and young people have many soccer schools that are not affiliated with professional clubs that take their first actions in sports. Many of these coaches continue to be in contact with UD Los Palmas and act as the first evaluation phase.
Capture Coordinator and Players Roberto Arocha highlights the importance of these statistics: “Neighborhood coaches don’t know anyone. They know their strengths, their weaknesses and their ability to know their strengths and their opinion.
UD Los Palmas has developed contracts with agreed clubs, but there is an open channel to recommend players for not even part of this network. “We are interested in any talent anywhere. We don’t understand boundaries or labels to football,” Arocha said.
The first step is to recognize talent. Once the possible interested player is identified, a deeper observation process begins. Yudi Los Palmas prevents heavy tests and prefers a more natural approach.
Tono explained: “We cannot immediately tell a child that we want to sign it. In order to find out how it develops in different situations, in its natural environment, in its natural environment, without stress.”
In some cases, in some cases, the club’s capatitors come to attend local leagues matches and training as a general audience, to prevent the club from changing the player’s performance.
A system that strengthens the identity of the club
For Yudi Los Palmas President Miguel Angel Ramerez, “Football is not limited to the DNA of our land and talent collection scouts or databases. Our people, our fans, our fans, neighboring coaches, and even the teacher of physical education are key to identifying a great player.
According to Ramerez, “We will always say that talent is anywhere, so we give a great value to the cooperation of society. It is not uncommon for a young man with a neighbor coach or a young man with a neighbor coach.
“We are clear that we need talent in Yudi Los Palmas and wherever we recommend our work, we have to expand our gaze and not recognize our gaze. The club’s history is filled with examples of soccer players who thanked this collaboration system,” the Yellow Entry President is perfect.
The fact that the association plays a key role in talent detection not only help players but also strengthens the sense of UD Los Palmas. Fans believe that they are part of the team’s success when they see a player recommended to be in the first team.
“This is a virtuous circle. How much people participate, the relationship between the club and the community is strong. It allows talent and will consolidate us as deep sources in society,” Tono concluded.
With a model that combines technology, direct observation and the invaluable cooperation of society, the UD Los Palmas continues to prove that the talent is not always found in clear places, but the football tastes in those corners will never stop.