ALARM !!! Soccer Dieing In America

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blueangel
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ALARM !!! Soccer Dieing In America

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https://www.nytimes.com/2018/07/14/spor ... &smtyp=cur

Youth Soccer Participation Has Fallen Significantly in America
July 14, 2018

Over the past three years, the percentage of 6- to 12-year-olds playing soccer regularly has dropped nearly 14 percent, to 2.3 million players, according to a study by the Sports & Fitness Industry Association.Nicole Craine for The New York Times

CHICAGO — With its gables, turrets and iron railing, U.S. Soccer House — as the mansion housing the U.S. Soccer Federation is known — looks more like a fortress than the headquarters of a major sports organization. It is fitting: The federation is on the defensive.

It is bad enough that the men’s national team failed to qualify for this summer’s World Cup, a fact the federation was reminded of daily as the tournament in Russia dazzled global audiences on its way to crowning a new champion Sunday.

The real threat, however, to its mission to make soccer one of America’s pre-eminent sports is here at home, where youth players are abandoning the game in alarming numbers.

Over the past three years, the percentage of 6- to 12-year-olds playing soccer regularly has dropped nearly 14 percent, to 2.3 million players, according to a study by the Sports & Fitness Industry Association, which has analyzed youth athletic trends for 40 years.

The number of children who touched a soccer ball even once during the year, in organized play or otherwise, also has fallen significantly.
In general, participation in youth sports nationwide has declined in the past decade, as children gravitate to electronic diversions and other distractions.

Yet in recent years, while soccer continued declining, baseball and basketball experienced upticks, buoyed by developmental programs begun by Major League Baseball and the National Basketball Association.

“Soccer is the fastest growing sport in urban schools,” said Ed Garza, the former mayor of San Antonio. “It’s part of the cultural dynamic.”Ed Garza
“It’s lost more child participants than any other sport — about 600,000 of them,” said Tom Farrey, executive director of the Aspen Institute Sports & Society Program.

As he pointed out, that’s enough to fill every stadium on any given match day during the 2026 World Cup, which the United States will host with Mexico and Canada.

The decline has been felt everywhere: recreational leagues in longtime soccer hotbeds here; high-profile traveling teams from Maryland to California; programs targeted at Latino and immigrant populations in South Texas. High burnout rates from pushing children into travel soccer too young as well as the high costs of programs have also contributed to the lower numbers.

Lisa Sparrow has seen the sport lose kids up close. She’s a regional commissioner of the American Youth Soccer Organization, known as AYSO and one of the federation’s members, in suburban Evanston, Ill. For $190, children compete in a 16-game season; financial aid is offered. Everyone gets balanced playing time, and the league’s emphasis is on having fun and embracing virtues like good sportsmanship rather than winning.

Still, her league lost 250 players — or nearly 19 percent — from 2016 to last year, she said, and registration is trending downward for 2018.

“There is so much competition out there that there’s been talk about bringing everyone under one program,” Ms. Sparrow said.

Some left to sample other sports, she said, and others were lured away to travel teams such as neighboring FC United, for which parents pay up to $2,500 for a nearly year-round schedule. But as the proliferation of club and travel teams has expanded into the preteen levels, and sometimes even younger, many players get discouraged.

“We put them in tryout and team situations before they are psychologically and emotionally ready,” said Chris Moore, chief executive officer of the U.S. Youth Soccer Association. “So if you can’t make a travel team some kids may say, ‘what’s the point,’ and quit playing altogether.”


“My family would not have been able to afford to put me in soccer if I was a young kid today,” said Hope Solo, the former goalkeeper of the 2015 Women’s World Cup championship team.Geoff Robins/Agence France-Presse —
Getty Images

The exodus of players in youth leagues has drawn recriminations over clubs and leagues that have pushed and profited from a “pay-for-play” model that has turned off parents and kept out talent from poorer, under served communities.

“My family would not have been able to afford to put me in soccer if I was a young kid today,” Hope Solo, the former goalkeeper of the 2015 Women’s World Cup championship team, said at a conference in New York last month. “That obviously alienates so many communities, including Hispanic communities, the black communities, the rural communities and underrepresented communities. Soccer, right now, has become a rich, white-kid sport.”

U.S. Soccer Federation officials acknowledge that the sport is losing players at a time the federation itself is undergoing critical transition. Ryan Mooney, the federation’s chief soccer officer, said strengthening participation was the foundation of building elite national teams.

“The quality of what you put in is the quality of what you get out,” Mr. Mooney said.
This year, Carlos Cordeiro was elected president of the federation to succeed Sunil Gulati, who declined to run for a fourth term after the men’s team failed to qualify for the World Cup for the first time since 1986.

Mr. Cordeiro has promised to increase the numbers in youth soccer by making it more affordable and more inclusive.

Currently, American households with more than $100,000 in annual income provide 35 percent of soccer players, according to the Sports & Fitness Industry Association, compared with 11 percent from households earning $25,000 or less.

Brad Rothenberg, who co-founded Alianza de Futbol to develop amateur soccer among Latinos, said U.S. Soccer had invested little in identifying talent in Latino and African-American communities. Over the past decade, his organization has held more than 300 events across the country for young players and has sent dozens of them to club teams in Mexico.

In 2016, however, Mr. Rothenberg, whose father, Alan, was once the president of U.S. Soccer, said the federation told him not to promote its brand to the 250,000 Latinos who attend the club’s events, partly because Alianza had not produced what the federation thought was an elite player, partly because it was not a member of U.S. Soccer.

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ohenhen1
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Re: ALARM !!! Soccer Dieing In America

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Is it true that you have to pay to be a part of club soccer?

I know I paid to be a part of the Colorado Foxes back in the days.
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Re: ALARM !!! Soccer Dieing In America

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Can attest to this. If you want to play competitive, you have to be part of a club team and the fees are pretty high... In my area, some teams pay close to $6,000 a year (Developmental Academies). But the talent is abundant in the "lower" tier where you find more hispanic and non-caucasian immigrants. But it is pay to play. You have teams where all they do is scout talent from other teams and create a super team just for tournaments. You have teams where you have most of the families subsidizing the fees of another kid just to win.

US soccer is going the AAU way and it is taking the fun out of the game. MLS clubs have DA academies and it is pretty much a franchise to make money. So you might play for LA Galaxy-CityA but it's just that. Unless you play for THE LA Galaxy academy in Carson, forget about it. Kids as young as 6-7 are put through this
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Re: ALARM !!! Soccer Dieing In America

Post by Kabalega »

I heard Perisic's parents on 60 minutes on Sunday.

The dad is a soccer coach but he didn't allow the kid to play in academies, because they are useless and got him out of the US to Europe early.
I have asked a lot of kids over the years and found out that many quit because organized soccer takes the fun out of it.

Kids learn by playing i.e. having fun.
“If your opponent is of choleric temper, seek to irritate him. Pretend to be weak, that he may grow arrogant.”- Sun Tzu
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ohenhen1
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Re: ALARM !!! Soccer Dieing In America

Post by ohenhen1 »

juventuss wrote:Can attest to this. If you want to play competitive, you have to be part of a club team and the fees are pretty high... In my area, some teams pay close to $6,000 a year (Developmental Academies). But the talent is abundant in the "lower" tier where you find more hispanic and non-caucasian immigrants. But it is pay to play. You have teams where all they do is scout talent from other teams and create a super team just for tournaments. You have teams where you have most of the families subsidizing the fees of another kid just to win.

US soccer is going the AAU way and it is taking the fun out of the game. MLS clubs have DA academies and it is pretty much a franchise to make money. So you might play for LA Galaxy-CityA but it's just that. Unless you play for THE LA Galaxy academy in Carson, forget about it. Kids as young as 6-7 are put through this
Now that is just stupid.
Winners do it the right way.

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