Join Us
The Minnesota State High School Soccer Coaches Association (MSHSSCA) is dedicated to the improvement of soccer in Minnesota. We are affiliated with the Minnesota High School School Coaches Association (MSHSCA). A coach must be a member of the MSHSSCA by October 1, 2007 in order to be eligible for coaching awards or have his/her team or players eligible for playing awards.
For more information, including application for membership visit the MSHSCA at www.mshsca.org.
NSCAA
The National Soccer Coaches Association of America (NSCAA) is the largest coaches' organization in the United States and includes more than 18,000 members who coach both genders at all levels of the sport. In addition to a national rankings program for colleges and high schools, the NSCAA offers an extensive recognition program that presents nearly 10,000 individual awards every year. A coach must be a member of the NSCAA by October 1, 2007 in order to be eligible for his/her team or players to be eligible for national awards (Boys and Girls Teams, All-Region and All-American honors).
The NSCAA also fulfills its mission of coaching education through a nationwide program of clinics and week-long courses, teaching more than 3,000 soccer coaches each year.
For more information, including application for membership visit the NSCAA at www.nscaa.com/membership.php or contact your Minnesota Representative: NSCAA Boys - Phil Johnson at johnsonph@stillwater.k12.mn.us; NSCAA Girls - Greg Juba at gjuba@sowashco.k12.mn.us.
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NSCAA Code of Ethics
At its mid-year meeting in 2001, the NSCAA Board of Directors approved the following Code of Ethics and Conduct, which was implemented immediately. It is provided here as a service to our members.
- Soccer is the players’ game. The paramount concern of coaches is the holistic development, welfare, enjoyment and safety of their players.
- Coaches bear responsibility for teaching their players to strive for success while playing fairly, observing the Laws of the Game and the highest levels of sportsmanship.
- Coaches shall treat officials with respect and dignity, and shall teach their players to do the same.
- Our opponents are worthy of being treated with respect. Coaches will model such respect for opponents and expect their players to do likewise.
- In both victory and defeat, the behavior of a coach shall model grace, dignity and composure.
- Coaches shall adhere to the highest standards and the regulations of the institutions they represent: clubs, schools, sponsoring organizations and sports governing bodies.
- Coaches have a responsibility to promote the interests of soccer, including treating media with courtesy, honesty and respect.
- Coaches shall model inclusive behavior, actively supporting cultural diversity while opposing all types of discrimination, including, but not limited to, racism and sexism, at all levels of soccer.
- Coaches are responsible for taking an active role in education about, and prevention and treatment of, drug, alcohol and tobacco abuse, both in their own lives and in the lives of their players.
- Coaches shall refrain from all manner of personal abuse and harassment of others, whether verbal, physical, emotional or sexual, and shall oppose such abuse and harassment at all levels of soccer.
- Coaches shall respect the declared affiliations of all players, and shall adhere to all guidelines and regulations on recruiting established by the governing bodies having oversight of their teams and leagues.
- Coaches shall seek to honor those who uphold the highest standards and principles of soccer and shall use appropriate protocol to oppose and eliminate all behavior that brings disrepute to the sport - violence, abuse, dishonesty, disrespect and violations of the Laws of the Game and rules governing competition.
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