Thursday, October 28, 2010

Every once in a while we get a call from a TV-commercial or movie-production person needing soccer uniforms or accessories for their film shoot. (Remember the ensemble romantic comedy Valentine's Day earlier this year? Our goalie jersey almost became a star but ended up on the cutting room floor.) From regional-bank ads to snowboarding magazine spreads, our soccer gear has graced the promotional-product world in a variety of ways.



The latest: this 30-second spot for Tony Chachere's creole seasoning, based in New Orleans and sold worldwide. The soccer players featured in their ad needed white soccer shorts and bright socks to match their color scheme, and Code Four was happy to oblige. (Our same-day shipping didn't hurt, either...these folks always seem to need everything yesterday.)

Go Tony!

Monday, October 18, 2010

Man Gets Full Soccer Jersey Tattoo To Honor Team Icon

Felipe Alvarez, an Atletico Nacional supporter, decided to pay homage to murdered club legend Andres Escobar by having a replica Atletico shirt tattooed across his torso, complete with Escobar's number on the back.
 

We're not sure about you, but we might suggest a less-permanent solution: one of our team jerseys to show your support. You don't have to wear it 24-7, it doesn't leave unsightly stretch marks, and you can frame it on your wall when your playing days are over.  

Wednesday, October 13, 2010

Thursday, October 07, 2010

5 Ways To Improve Your Soccer Skills

1 TOUCH. Juggle with the ball. Aim for 1000 touches on the ball each day. You learn to juggle in 3 stages, 1-3 juggles, 3-10 juggles, 10+ juggles. To help you get started, you can use your hands and you can let the ball bounce as well, all you are aiming for is lots of touches on the ball. The hardest stage is 3-10 touches, this seems to cause beginners the most frustration, but stick with it. Once you can consistently juggle the ball 10 times, you are off to the races and 10-20 gets easier, the 50, then 100 and beyond.

2. PASS and/or SHOOT against a WALL. Find a wall and pass and shoot against it and control the rebound. This may sound simple and basic, but it is no different to going to the driving range to practice your golf shot or using one of those machines at tennis that serve balls to you. You can work on passing, shooting and controlling the ball and start with controlling the ball first and then passing or shooting and then build up to first time passes and shots.

3. TURNS. Practice all six turns, INSIDE HOOK, OUTSIDE HOOK, DRAG BACK, STEPOVER, CRUYFF and STOP TURN. Master each turn at game like speed and then do combinations of turns e.g. inside hook, take a touch into space and then do a stop turn. Keep working on this until you can do routines involving all 6 turns one after another.

4. MOVES/DRIBBLES. There are so many fancy moves, some named after stars e.g. Stanley Matthews, Maradona, Scissors, Touch Touch etc. You don’t need to know how to do all of them. Just perfect two moves that you can do with both feet and that you can both take on the defender on their inside and outside. When I say perfect them, you need to be able to do these at game like speed without looking at the ball and be able to produce an end product, either a shot or a pass.

5. CONTROL. Find some open space and kick the ball up in the air. As it comes down work on controlling it with your feet, thighs, chest and head. Once you get the hang of controlling the ball, then add a turn or a move or a shot or pass against the wall.

FINALLY: Concentrate on these five areas and you'll be one of the best players on the pitch. Along with that, you and your team will want to look sharp...so of course we suggest you check out our exclusive collection of soccer uniforms when have time inbetween all of that practice!

Wednesday, October 06, 2010

Friday, October 01, 2010

33 years ago on October 1st: Pele's last match.

They say all good things must come to an end and that proved to be true today in 1977 as the career of the world’s most famous footballer came to a close, as Brazilian legend Pele played his last game at Giants Stadium in New York.

For the last three years Pele had been plying his trade for the New York Cosmos in the short-lived NASL, where he shared the pitch with the likes of Franz Beckenbauer, Carlos Alberto and Giorgio Chinaglia. His final game was a friendly with Santos, the only other club side he had played for during his illustrious twenty-one year old career.

As was the case with the NASL, hype and over exuberance were the order of the day. Covered by 650 journalists from 38 nations, the game was the hottest ticket in town, and the Cosmos had unintentionally over-sold the fixture, as almost 100,000 had managed to buy tickets for the 77,000 capacity stadium. A public relations disaster, and a host of lawsuits were narrowly avoided when the organisers gave out refunds and free tickets for future games.

Celeb-spotters had a field-day also, as President Jimmy Carter made a speech for Pele and he was joined in the dressing by a certain Muhammad Ali, who characteristically said that “I don’t know if he’s a good player, but I’m definitely prettier than him.” He would later admit that “now there are two of the greatest,” confirming their place as the planets two most recognisable sports stars.
The game itself saw Pele play the first half for the Cosmos, where he would score his final goal with a thirty-yard free kick, and the second half for Santos. At half-time Pele’s number ten shirt was retired and full-time saw yet more speeches and flag-waving amongst the pomp and circumstance of the day. The only sour note of the day was the fact that it was pouring it down with rain by the end of the game, but a Brazilian newspaper explained that it was because “even the sky was crying.”