Norway steer steady grassroots course to World Cup success
FIFA World Cup 2026 - Group I - Norway v Senegal - New York/New Jersey Stadium, East Rutherford, New Jersey, U.S. - June 22, 2026 Norway coach Stale Solbakken, Erling Haaland and teammates perform the traditional Viking rowing celebration for their fans after the match
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Norway are riding the crest of a wave having made
the knockout stage on their return to the World Cup after
28 years and for Norwegian Football Federation chief Lise Klaveness their
success confirms their holistic approach to the game is paying off.
Much like the synchronised rowing celebration made
famous by their fans, the Norwegians approach talent development with an
emphasis on the collective working together, creating a system where young
players stay with their local clubs under the guidance of volunteer coaches as
long as possible.
"We don't have professionals in youth football
- Erling (Haaland) was coached until he was a teenager by fully voluntary
people, they don't get a dime for it, same with
Martin (Odegaard, Norway captain), so then we have to pay back to them in some
way," Klaveness told Reuters ahead of
Norway's final Group I game against France on Friday.
The payback for those volunteers has been two World Cup
games that have captivated the nation, with Haaland netting twice as Iraq were
beaten, opens new tab 4-1, and he notched another double in the 3-2 win over
Senegal that will extend their stay into
the last 32 of the tournament.
"Our model in Norway, it's very much based upon
the fact that grassroots and elite football are very interconnected. We
don't scout and select players in their younger years ... we want them to stay
in their local club as long as they can, so that we have dynamic, living, vital
clubs everywhere in Norway," Klaveness explained.
During their 28-year absence from the blue riband
event in men's soccer, Norway's women's team have continued to perform at a
high level, and the NFF never considered deviating
from the path of inclusion that underpins their overall model.
"It's not my idea - I inherited it. It's a huge
consensus that, yes, we have academies, yes,
we have scouting, yes, we have a national team football school et cetera, but
we try to build quality clubs around the country," Klaveness said.
"This means that the grassroots clubs themselves can develop players so that they don't have to drive four or five hours to training, or move out of home early. And if you take away all the best players early, you know the club will fall away, so all our elite clubs are also grassroots clubs."
Academic approach
Mark O'Sullivan, Associate Professor of Football at the School of Sports Science in Oslo, told Reuters the Norwegian approach is grounded in academic research and best practices.
"To live up to the idea of 'as many as
possible, as long as possible, in as good an
environment as possible', Norwegian football seeks
to invest where it is really needed - out in the changing contexts, situations
and limitations of the 'real world', where coaching, learning and performance
take place with the aim of setting high standards without being
standardised," he said.
For youngsters taking up the
game, the focus is on having fun and game-based learning, rather than winning
or losing matches, and since 2016 more
than 500 artificial soccer pitches have
been laid.
Capped 73 times by her country, Klaveness points to
Norway's geography and climate as obstacles to overcome, and she is keen to
stress that the broad base where everyone is welcome is where Norwegian
football gets its strength.
"We want our national teams to qualify for big
championships, but our model is built on solely volunteers.
We have 1700
clubs, we're a small country ... it can never be in a different model, it has to
be with this one. A bit slower, a bit bigger and more holistic, and we have to
be very stubborn," Klaveness said.
"We want the clubs to be able to deliver top
players, but also to have teams where you are
welcome, even though you will never play one single professional game in your
life."

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