La Masia

For a type of rural construction common to the Catalan Countries, see Masia.
La Masia de Can Planes

Main façade of La Masia
Location within Spain
Alternative names La Masia
General information
Town or city Barcelona
Country Spain
Coordinates 41°22′59″N 2°07′23″E / 41.3831°N 2.1231°E / 41.3831; 2.1231Coordinates: 41°22′59″N 2°07′23″E / 41.3831°N 2.1231°E / 41.3831; 2.1231
Completed 1702
Renovated 1966
Owner FC Barcelona

La Masia de Can Planes, usually shortened to La Masia, (Catalan pronunciation: [ɫə məˈzi.ə], English: "The Farmhouse"),[1] is the name of FC Barcelona's football training facilities, originally located near the Camp Nou in the Les Corts district of Barcelona, and is often used to generically describe the Barcelona youth academy. The youth academy of Barcelona holds more than 300 young players, and has been praised since 2002 as one of the best in the world, being a significant factor in FC Barcelona's European success as well as the Spanish national team's success at the 2010 FIFA World Cup, and the 2008 and 2012 European Championships.

In 2010, La Masia achieved a record breaking honour becoming the first youth academy to have trained all three finalists for the Ballon d'Or in a single year, with Andrés Iniesta, Lionel Messi and Xavi.[2]

The original building itself was an ancient country residence (In Catalan: masia) built in 1702, and once Camp Nou was inaugurated in 1957, the building was remodelled and extended for use as the club's social headquarters. With the gradual expansion of the club, the building became too small for headquarters, and on 20 October 1979, La Masia was converted into a dormitory for young players from outside of Barcelona. On 30 June 2011, the Masia building ceased housing the young sportsmen who are trained to become a part of the club’s professional teams. In a simple ceremony, the doors were closed and the Ciutat Esportiva Joan Gamper took over the function of the residential center for the youngsters.

History

In 1979 Johan Cruyff wanted to establish a copy of the Ajax Academy in Barcelona. His proposal was accepted by president Josep Núñez.

La Masia de Can Planes was an old Catalan farmhouse, built in 1702. In 1979, it was first used by the club to house its young footballers who originated from outside of Barcelona.[3] The idea for the youth academy was proposed to Núñez by Johan Cruyff, and Oriol Tort was put in charge of the facility.[4]

In 2011, it was announced that Barcelona would be moving all its football training activities to La Ciutat Esportiva Joan Gamper.[5]

La Masia received more publicity after Barcelona B's success with homegrown players; Rory Smith reported in The Daily Telegraph that La Masia "has replaced the fabled Ajax Academy as football's foremost production line".[6] The recent fame and success of La Masia as a talent school was ascribed by Ian Hawkey of The Times to the class of 1987, which featured prominent members such as Cesc Fàbregas, Lionel Messi, Gerard Piqué and Pedro.[7] In 2000, Louis van Gaal, coach of Barcelona's first team, was widely ridiculed by the city sports media for his dream to win the Champions League with 11 home-grown players. The first team won the trophy in 2009 with eight home-grown players.[8]

From 1979 to 2009, 440 youngsters have left their homes and families to stay at the academy. About half of them were from Catalonia, and the rest came from other regions of the Kingdom of Spain and beyond, including 15 from Cameroon, 7 from Brazil, 5 from Senegal and 3 from Argentina. Of those 440, 40 made it into Barcelona's first team.[9]

Organization

La Masia houses about 60 players: 10 in the farmhouse, and the rest in rooms of the adjacent stadium; the rest of the youth players must provide for their own accommodation.[3][10] The academy is one of the most expensive in Europe, operating at a cost of £5 million a year. The main cost is the dormitory, La Masia itself.[10] The minimum age for the youth program is six years; each year, more than 1,000 boys from the ages of six to eight try out for admittance. The best 200 are selected.[11] The club also actively seeks for prospective students; it employs a system in which 15 scouts are deployed in Catalonia, 15 in the rest of Spain and 10 scattered throughout the world. To alleviate the expenses of this scouting, the club has an agreement with 15 local clubs for them to train players who are not ready for entry into the youth academy. In return, FC Barcelona gives money, coaching and technical advice to these clubs for their services.[12] While expanding its operations abroad, the club established five schools in Mexico and one in Egypt; successful applicants to these schools become full-time students, receiving academic education and football training.[13]

When Guardiola re-organised the reserve side, he set up a three-staged program to formalise the advancement from Juvenil to Barcelona B and finally to the first team. The first stage of a youth player's career involves a rotation scheme with Barcelona B. The second stage involves making the player aware of his importance to the team and the expectation that the player will improve cohesion and performance within the reserve side. In the last stage, he is designated a "key" player of the B team and might be called to the first team. One of the players in the third phase is made captain, regardless of the experience of older players.[8]

The teams at Barcelona play from August to May; mild weather at La baks allows players to train outdoors throughout the year. The youth teams train after school; Barcelona B plays as a professional team, training in the morning and evening.[14] All of the trainers at FC Barcelona are former professional footballers.[15]

Barcelona B, the club's main youth team, and the 12 other youth teams contained 24 coaches and more than 300 players. There are 56 other employees, including doctors, psychologists, nutritionists, cooks and physiologists.[10] In the 2009–10 season, the B team qualified for the Segunda División again. Barcelona B play in a 4–3–3 formation, which is the same formation employed by the first team.[16]

Sergio Busquets, a graduate of La Masia, has been a part of the Barcelona first team since 2008.
SquadAgeHead CoachAssistant CoachLeague
Barcelona B[n 1]GerardFrancisco García PimientaSegunda División B (Gr. 3)
Juvenil A16–18GabriAlbert JorqueraDivisión de Honor (Gr. 3)
Juvenil B16–18Quique ÁlvarezDenis SilvaLiga Nacional (Gr. 7)
Cadete A14–15Franc ArtigaXavier FranquesaDivisión de Honor
Cadete B14–15Cristian CatenaCarlos LópezPreferente (Gr. 1)
Infantil A12–13Carles MartínezIsaac GarcíaDivisión de Honor
Infantil B12–13Sergi MilàÓscar HernándezPreferente (Gr. 1)
Alevín A10–11Marc SerraPau MoralFútbol 7 Preferente (Gr. 1)
Alevín B10–11Jordi FontJosep Ramon OlivéFútbol 7 Preferente (Gr. 2)
Alevín C10–11Óscar JorqueraDavid SánchezFútbol 7 Primera División (Gr. 1)
Alevín D10–11Daniel HorcasMiguel Ángel CaldeónFútbol 7 Primera División (Gr. 2)
Benjamín A8–9Jordi PérezRafael RodríguezFútbol 7 Preferente (Gr. 1)
Benjamín B8–9David SánchezAlejandro UrrestarazuFútbol 7 Preferente (Gr. 2)
Benjamín C8–9Albert PuigJoaquim RamonFútbol 7 Primera División (Gr. 1)
Benjamín D8–9Alexis PintoAdrià DíazFútbol 7 Primera División (Gr. 2)
Prebenjamín6–7Juanan GilDaniel SegoviaBenjamín 7 Segunda División (Gr. 4)

Philosophy

Guillermo Amor, Albert Ferrer, Josep Mussons (Barça Vice-president) and Pep Guardiola. This photo was displayed for many years at the entrance of La Masia dining room. Their signature, in Catalan language, encourages future young Barça players by saying "With effort and sacrifice, you can also make it. Just do it, it is worth it!".
"The player who has passed through La Masia has something different to the rest, it's a plus that only comes from having competed in a Barcelona shirt from the time you were a child."
Former Barcelona coach Pep Guardiola[18]

Former technical director, Pep Segura, attributes the club's success to its "philosophy of play": "It is about creating one philosophy, one mentality, from the bottom of the club to the top". The philosophy consists of the application of total football mixed with traditional Spanish one-touch play (tiqui-taka). The total football approach was derived from the Netherlands football team through Cruyff.[6] The total football approach requires the players to move in a fluid formation, where players can interchange positions quickly. In the youth academy, there is a large focus on technical ability, which is seen as a pre-requisite for inter-changes.[6][19] An often-quoted reason for Barcelona's success is the continuity and commitment with which Barcelona follow the current philosophy of pass and move. Guardiola was the prototype of the pivotal midfielder; famous midfielders Xavi and Iniesta are its custodians.[20]

Another aspect of La Masia is its marked Catalan national character—local talent in the service of a club with a strong, defining sense of the cultural make-up of Catalonia.[21]

Impact

The new Masia residence, opened in 2011 at the Ciutat Esportiva Joan Gamper.

In 2009, Messi became the first player from La Masia to be awarded with the Ballon d'Or prize for the best footballer in Europe, and the FIFA World Player award, for the best footballer in the world.[22]

On 11 July 2010, Spain won the World Cup final with eight players from Barcelona; seven were from La Masia, and six of them were in the starting line-up: Gerard Piqué, Carles Puyol, Andrés Iniesta, Xavi, Sergio Busquets, and Pedro. This set a record for the most players to be provided by a club side for a team in a World Cup final.[23] Joachim Löw, coach of Germany, said after his side's defeat by Spain that the opposition had a distinct Barcelona style: "You can see it in every pass, how Spain plays is how Barcelona plays. They can hardly be beaten. They are extremely confident and very calm in the way they circulate the ball."[24]

Alumni

This is a dynamic list and may never be able to satisfy particular standards for completeness. You can help by expanding it with reliably sourced entries.

Below is a sortable list of La Masia alumni who have played in more than 200 professional top-tier league games. Only league appearances (first and second division) and goals are included.[n 2]

FC Barcelona includes games of FC Barcelona B in second division.

NameNationality[n 3]PositionYear of birthCareer[n 4]AppearancesGoalsClubs
Pedraza, ÁngelÁngel Pedraza SpainDefender19621980–199734120Barcelona, Mallorca
Milla, LuisLuis Milla SpainMidfielder19661984–200133811Barcelona, Real Madrid, Valencia
Nayim, Nayim SpainMidfielder19661985–200038735Barcelona, Tottenham, Zaragoza, Logroñés
Amor, GuillermoGuillermo Amor SpainMidfielder19671984–200345158Barcelona, Fiorentina, Villarreal, Livingston
Parralo, CristóbalCristóbal Parralo SpainDefender19671986–200355814Barcelona, Oviedo, Logroñés, Espanyol, PSG
Ferrer, AlbertAlbert Ferrer SpainDefender19701988–20033282Barcelona, Tenerife, Chelsea
Jiménez, ToniToni Jiménez SpainGoalkeeper19701991–20043670Figueres, Rayo, Espanyol, Atlético Madrid, Elche
Barjuán, SergiSergi Barjuán SpainDefender19711991–200539510Barcelona, Atlético Madrid
Guardiola, PepPep Guardiola SpainMidfielder19711990–200632814Barcelona, Brescia, Roma, Al Ahli, Dorados de Sinaloa
Pinilla, AntonioAntonio Pinilla SpainForward19711988–200845273Barcelona, Mallorca, Albacete, Tenerife, Salamanca, Gimnàstic
Carreras, LluísLluís Carreras SpainDefender19721991–200731833Barcelona, Oviedo, Racing, Mallorca, Atlético Madrid, Murcia, Alavés
Cembranos, LuisLuis Cembranos SpainMidfielder19721992–200424645Figueres, Barcelona, Espanyol, Rayo
García, ÓscarÓscar García SpainMidfielder19731991–200527158Barcelona, Albacete, Valencia, Espanyol, Lleida
Cruyff, JordiJordi Cruyff NetherlandsMidfielder19741992–201029955Barcelona, Manchester United, Celta, Alavés, Espanyol, Metalurh Donetsk, Valletta
Moreno, JaviJavi Moreno SpainForward19741995–201022971Barcelona, Alavés, Numancia, Milan, Atlético Madrid, Bolton, Zaragoza, Córdoba
Alvarez, QuiqueQuique Álvarez SpainDefender19751993–20093708Barcelona, Logroñés, Lleida, Villareal, Recreativo
Arnau, FrancescFrancesc Arnau SpainGoalkeeper19751995–20112400Barcelona, Málaga
Arpón, ÓscarÓscar Arpón SpainMidfielder19751995–201237123Barcelona, Betis, Racing, Mallorca, Osasuna, Poli Ejido, Recreativo, Salamanca, Gimnàstic
Celades, AlbertAlbert Celades SpainMidfielder19751993–200928115Barcelona, Celta, Real Madrid, Girondins Bordeaux, Zaragoza, New York Red Bulls
Peña, Iván de laIván de la Peña SpainMidfielder19761993–201133425Barcelona, Lazio, Olympique Marseille, Espanyol
García, RogerRoger García SpainMidfielder19761994–200728435Barcelona, Espanyol, Villarreal, Ajax
Rufete, FranciscoFrancisco Rufete SpainMidfielder19761995–201240433Barcelona, Toledo, Málaga, Valencia, Espanyol, Hércules
Velamazán, ToniToni Velamazán SpainMidfielder19771994–201128336Barcelona, Oviedo, Albacete, Extremadura, Espanyol, Almería
García, LuisLuis García SpainForward19781998–¤41789Barcelona, Valladolid, Toledo, Tenerife, Atlético Madrid, Liverpool, Racing, Panathinaikos, Puebla, Pumas UNAM, Atlético Kolkata
Luque, AlbertAlbert Luque SpainForward19781997–201131681Mallorca, Málaga, Deportivo, Newcastle, Ajax
Puyol, CarlesCarles Puyol SpainDefender19781996–2014 43115Barcelona
Gabri, Gabri SpainMidfielder19791998–201429324Barcelona, Ajax, Umm Salal, Sion, Lausanne
Gerard, Gerard SpainMidfielder19791996–201125931Barcelona, Valencia, Alavés, Monaco, Recreativo, Girona
Xavi, Xavi SpainMidfielder19801998–¤51057Barcelona, Al Sadd
Trashorras, RobertoRoberto Trashorras SpainMidfielder19811999–¤30134Barcelona, Numancia, Las Palmas, Celta, Rayo
Arteta, MikelMikel Arteta SpainMidfielder19822000–¤38358PSG, Rangers, Real Sociedad, Everton, Arsenal
Motta, ThiagoThiago Motta ItalyMidfielder19822001–¤26129Barcelona, Atlético Madrid, Genoa, Inter Milan, PSG
Navarro, FernandoFernando Navarro SpainDefender19822001–¤3283Barcelona, Albacete, Mallorca, Sevilla
Reina, PepePepe Reina SpainGoalkeeper19822000–¤4540Barcelona, Villarreal, Liverpool, Napoli, Bayern Munich
Valdés, VíctorVíctor Valdés SpainGoalkeeper19822002–¤3870Barcelona, Manchester United, Standard Liège
García, SergioSergio García SpainForward19832003–¤32077Barcelona, Levante, Zaragoza, Betis, Espanyol
Verdú, JoanJoan Verdú SpainMidfielder19832002–¤26441Deportivo, Espanyol, Betis, Baniyas
Iniesta, AndrésAndrés Iniesta SpainMidfielder19842002–¤35233Barcelona
Fàbregas, CescCesc Fàbregas SpainMidfielder19872003–¤33065Arsenal, Barcelona, Chelsea
Messi, LionelLionel Messi ArgentinaForward19872004–¤348312Barcelona
Piqué, GerardGerard Piqué  SpainDefender19872005–¤21517Manchester United, Zaragoza, Barcelona
Pedro, Pedro  SpainForward19872008–¤23165Barcelona, Chelsea
Busquets, SergioSergio Busquets SpainMidfielder19882008–¤2386Barcelona
Alba, JordiJordi Alba SpainDefender19892008–¤20412UE Cornellà, Valencia CF, Barcelona
Bojan, Bojan SpainForward19902007–¤22154Barcelona, Roma, Milan, Ajax, Stoke City

Notes

  1. No age restrictions; a fully professional team. Before the disbandment of Barcelona C, only players under 21 were allowed, but that is no longer the case.[17]
  2. All player information from La Liga can be found on the official La Liga homepage, which list player data for each completed season.[25]
  3. Country indicates national team as it has been defined under FIFA eligibility rules. Players may hold more than one non-FIFA nationality.
  4. Begins with first top-tier league game and ends with the last

References

Bibliographies
Notes
  1. Price, Sean (6 July 2010). "School of Soccer Champions". Scholastic. Retrieved 20 August 2010.
  2. totalbarca.com, It’s an all Barça affair at FIFA Ballon d’Or Archived December 10, 2010, at the Wayback Machine.
  3. 1 2 Rogers, Iain (22 October 2009). "Barca talent farm marks 30 years of success". Reuters. Retrieved 11 April 2013.
  4. Genis Sinca. "Oriol Tort, the soul of Barça's Masia". Barcelona Metropolis. Ayuntament de Barcelona. Retrieved 25 October 2014.
  5. "Inside : Ciutat Esportiva Joan Gamper". Inside Spanish Football. 29 September 2011. Retrieved 11 May 2013.
  6. 1 2 3 Smith, Rory (17 July 2010). "World Cup 2010: Spain's battle won on the playing fields of Barcelona". Telegraph. Retrieved 20 August 2010.
  7. Hawkey, Ian (28 March 2010). "Friends reunited: Cesc Fabregas and the class of 1987". The Times. Retrieved 30 July 2010. (subscription required)
  8. 1 2 Perarnau, Martí (18 August 2010). "La Masia, como un laboratorio" (in Spanish). SPORT.es. Retrieved 19 August 2010.
  9. Rogers, Iain (25 May 2009). "INTERVIEW-Soccer-La Masia a fertile breeding ground for Barca". Reuters. Retrieved 30 July 2010.
  10. 1 2 3 Kay, Alex (27 March 2010). "Lionel Messi, Cesc Fabregas, Gerard Pique... all forged in Barcelona's hothouse of champions". Daily Mail. Retrieved 27 August 2010.
  11. McShane, Kevin. p. 39
  12. McShane, Kevin. p. 53
  13. "FCBEscola". FC Barcelona. Retrieved 14 August 2010.
  14. McShane, Kevin. p. 74-79
  15. McShane, Kevin. p. 105
  16. McShane, Kevin. p. 77
  17. McShane, Kevin. p. 79
  18. "Barça kids at home at La Masia". UEFA. 1 January 2009. Retrieved 30 July 2010.
  19. McShane, Kevin. p. 74
  20. Lowe, Sid (24 May 2009). "Andrés Iniesta graduates from cameo role to take centre stage at Barcelona". Guardian. Retrieved 15 September 2010.
  21. Hawkey, Ian (14 May 2006). "Fame academy". The Times. (subscription required)
  22. Pellicer, Miquel (1 December 2009). "Messi, primer Balón de Oro de la Masia del Barça". El Mundo Deportivo. Archived from the original on September 20, 2010. Retrieved 27 August 2010.
  23. Fitzpatrick. Furthermore, both Cesc Fabregas and Pepe Reina also hail from the Masía bringing the total number of players in the team to nine, Richard (9 July 2010). "Spain's heart not winning over minds of Catalans". The Irish Times. Retrieved 30 July 2010. (subscription required)
  24. Hughes, Rob (9 July 2010). "Talent to Spare, but There's Only One Trophy". New York Times. Retrieved 1 August 2010.
  25. "LFP – Barcelona Seasons". Liga de Fútbol Profesional Tables for other seasons may be obtained using the "Other searches" button. Retrieved 20 August 2010.
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