Alex Weaver
Personal information | |||
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Full name | Alexander Weaver | ||
Place of birth | Stoke-on-Trent, England | ||
Club information | |||
Current team | Free Agent | ||
Teams managed | |||
Years | Team | ||
2013 | Hougang United | ||
2013–2015 | Warriors FC |
Alex Weaver is an English football manager and journalist for VoxSports.
Alex began coaching at 17 years old when he passed the English FA's Coaching Certificate (Now FA Level 2 in Football Coaching). Having played youth football at Stoke City, Port Vale, Staffordshire U19s and then advancing into the semi-professional ranks of the North West Counties League, he began to develop his coaching experience as a youth coach at local North West Counties club, Newcastle Town FC.
In between completing the UEFA B and UEFA A Licence coaching certificates, Alex attained a BSc Coaching Science Degree at Liverpool John Moores University. At 28, he began working full-time for Manchester United Soccer Schools, coaching in places such as Seattle (USA), Paris, Dubai (UAE), South Africa and India. He returned to Seattle to coach Seattle Wolves FC for 18 months as they prepared to participate in the USL Division II but the club couldn't manage to attain the financial support to compete in the league. Hired by Highline Premier FC, one of Washington's premier youth clubs, Weaver went on to develop HPFC's playing and coach development programs for 3 years before leaving the US to develop his career in Singapore.
He was appointed head coach of Hougang United, a club in the S. League in early 2013.[1] After only 5 months, Alex resigned from his job, and was later appointed as head coach of rival Warriors FC in June 2013, replacing V. Selvaraj.[2][3] He went on to guide the club to the S-League title in his first full year as Head Coach. In February Warriors FC started the 2015 campaign with Asian Champions League qualifiers against Yadanarbon FC (Myanmar) and Chinese Super League giants, Guangzhou R & F FC.
Weaver has developed a reputation for his methodical planning and preparation of teams and has regularly discussed the 'periodisation' of football conditioning methods of Raymond Verheijen in the local media and its influence on his own coaching practice.
He left Warriors FC by mutual consent in October 2015 and joined the Singapore office of leading British sports production and media company, Sunset+Vine in January 2016 to write for its digital publication, VoxSports.
Honours
Managerial
In one full season of club management, Weaver led his club to win the domestic league.[4]
Journalism Career
After leaving Warriors, Weaver joined Sunset+Vine Asia (Digital) as a full-time journalist for VoxSports in January 2016, where he has been writing commentaries and articles on football for the digital news organisation.
References
- ↑ Football: Alex Weaver footballdatabase.eu
- ↑ http://news.asiaone.com/News/Latest%2BNews/Sports/Story/A1Story20130403-413327.html
- ↑ http://www.goal.com/en-sg/news/3880/singapore/2013/06/13/4044519/weaver-building-for-warriors-future-with-fresh-new-ideas
- ↑ http://www.goal.com/en-sg/news/3880/singapore/2014/11/01/5670991/warriors-clinch-sleague-title-on-final-day
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