France's Clairefontaine centre outside Paris has been open since 1988, while England have seen massive improvement in their youth teams since opening St George's Park in 2012. Their U-20 and U-17 teams won this year's World Cups, while the U-19 side won the European Championship. "Since the English have had their new academy, their youth teams have started performing again," said DFB vice-president Rainer Koch.UCFB student Noel van Dam thrives in Germany’s biggest football academy https://t.co/w65fkljL14 #ReadNow pic.twitter.com/MSHD7HbSnU
— UCFB (@ucfbuk) January 7, 2016
"We must not and cannot rest on our laurels of the victory at the 2014 World Cup." The academy, to be built on an old racecourse, will be responsible for national team training, youth development and training for coaches and referees. "Our goal is to constantly develop German football and to establish our academy as a seal of quality in the world," said former Germany striker and project manager of the academy Oliver Bierhoff. "We want to make our experts, coaches, teams and players better."Football: Germany to open new national team academy https://t.co/eCrW50fZ9E
— TOI Sports News (@TOISportsNews) December 8, 2017