El terrible problema que está destruyendo el fútbol juvenil estadounidense



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34 opiniones en “El terrible problema que está destruyendo el fútbol juvenil estadounidense”

  1. I’m South American, and here football is like a religion, but we have the disadvantage of being poor. I didn’t finish watching the video, but I’m clear on why the U.S. doesn’t produce more players. Yes, the promotion and relegation system that exists in the entire football world helps, but 90% of top players come from big clubs. You mentioned Bellingham, but he’s the 1% exception.

    Besides, the U.S. uses the same development format in almost every other sport and still produces great athletes. In South America, things are worse: there’s no money, there’s corruption, bad fields, extreme climates, and a thousand things someone from the U.S. can’t even imagine.

    For me, the key to producing players is street football—something the U.S. doesn’t have. In basketball, yes, but in football nobody plays in the streets, and the greatest players in history grew up playing in the streets of South America. Europe was the one that started formal youth academies; here it’s always been from the streets straight to professional football.

    So if there isn’t a strong football culture there—if kids don’t gather to play on free fields—football will never truly develop. The other solution is to develop football in schools. The U.S. has one of the best school systems in the world: big schools, great free sports fields, etc., something we don’t have in South America. You could take advantage of that to develop talent.

    You also need to change your approach to sports. In basketball and other American sports, players usually come from college leagues. In world football, players should already be in the reserve team by age 15, and debut professionally by 17. In football you can’t wait for players to go to college, play a couple of years, and then go pro at 23. By 28 a player is already at his peak, and after that most start to decline. In other sports you mature at 30; here at 30 you’re already thinking about retirement.

    And yes, you should create a second division and reduce the number of teams in the first division. If you’re already not producing talent, why would you have 30 clubs? I think they might even increase it, but all that does is lower the league’s level. It should be a maximum of 20 teams in one national league—not split in two—and a second division also with 20 teams. Unless you use the college league as a second division, but then you’d have to pay players to make them take it seriously.

    Another option is that the U.S. adapts football to its own style, like it does with other sports, but I’m not sure that would actually work.

    What I do know is that the U.S. has huge potential. You’re a sports-loving country, and you have everything you need to dominate football, but it’s a process—it doesn’t happen overnight. To start, you need to support your clubs more and build a football culture. But for a league that was created just 30 years ago, you’re growing really fast.

  2. Man, this was tough to watch because it explains the whole problem perfectly it’s not the kids, it’s the system. Pay-to-play, pointless tournaments, parents losing the plot on the sidelines… it’s no surprise the U.S. keeps producing athletes but not actual footballers.

    I’ve been reading a ton about youth development for a book I wrote called Academy Gold, which looks at how proper academies operate around the world, how they scout, how they develop players, and why some clubs consistently produce talent while others don’t. Videos like this make it painfully obvious how far the U.S. model is from that kind of structure.

    If anyone’s into the bigger picture of how good academies should actually work, the link to the book is in the description.

  3. We know the issue, but what is the solution? I think there are two poins: 1) all professional clubs (not MLS) create a country structure about leagues, relegation and promotion. Let me give an example. A State creates a State League 1, League 2, League 3, etc. Top 3 of league 3 goes to league 2, bottom 3 from league 2 goest to league 3, and so on. Then a National League 1 (20 teams), League 2 (20 teams), League 3(20 teams), and League 4(league 4a, 4b, 4c, 4d, 4e) (10 teams each). Same idea of relegation and promotion. But, to be in League 4 you must win the State League 1. Also, the 5 winers of league 4 move up to league 3, bottom 5 from league 3 move to league 4. This structure will guive the teams the ability to develop, at least, a U17-U20 academy, due to sponsorship, fans tickets holders, and a small fee for the academy. Of course it involves the club to pay fees for the League to ensure administration and referees, etc. But it is a start. 2) For clubs without a professional team, hard to find resources to keep the team rolling. Parents fee is basically the only source of money. Considering that, to inprove quality you need to invest in coach training, relying only on volunteers will not help. For this point I still do not have a clear view on how to solve it in a short term. Any toughts?

  4. In Germany my parents paid about $30 per year to my club. They never had to pay for anything other than my cleats. Transportation to games was provided by the club because traveling together also creates team spirit and is more efficient. Then, your season is only within your county, the exception being the cup when you make it out of your county.

    Then, they have a State team for each age group that consists of the best players in your state. Those are really good players that often end up in the 1st or 2nd Bundesliga. And the players from the different State teams make up each age group's national team.

    I coached in the US as well. I made it one season. I couldn't believe how much my time was wasted, and frankly the kid's time, too.

    This and that we don't have real leagues and every State and often County does things differently, in addition to having franchises instead of clubs, is why we will never seriously compete for the worldcup. There is no short term incentive to do things for a long term change, so I doubt it will ever change. The people in charge are monetarily incentivized to not let that happen.

  5. I’ve spent 15 years trying to play and compete and only the rich can get any type of anything 😂 there’s rich kids mom making their kids or teen go to practice while I have two jobs and or bills and I take my butt to work bc I love the game and I have passion , most kids are just showing up wishing something will happen 😂 I wish my parents were rich so I can compete but sadly I’m alwsy last or just a mediocre player just bc I didn’t start at 8 or I just play horrible 😂 I mean it’s hard to even find a team that even gives you a chance

  6. In most European countries football academies are also being destroyed because big clubs from the top leagues poach the most promising kids for pocket change at ever younger ages. UK academies and those of big clubs like Barcelona and Ajax are doing great, the academies of small clubs are not because they only get training costs for the best players and lose money on the majority of youths who don't end up as pros.

  7. My 11yo daughter is a GK for her travel team. I can say that a position specific training schedule falls on me as a parent.

    At practice they rarely have her put gloves on, and she just does ball handling skills with the rest of the team. 2 problems with that- she doesn’t get reps in, but neither does her team.

    10 minutes before the game the coach puts her in the goal and has the team take 30-50 shots on her from close range. I bet you can’t guess how many games they won this season.

  8. This is why I tell friends that know little about the sport with the next World Cup coming next year that the US will never come close to touching a World Cup trophy. I’m a parent of 3 and my oldest son is in the US soccer system now and I have seen everything you talked about. It’s insane how expensive it is. This IS a pay to play system and we will never see once in a lifetime talent come out of the country because capitalism turned the world’s game into a privileged only game. We scream so much about being “number 1 in the world” and we can’t even compete in the true world stage 😂 what a joke here.

  9. Thanks for this video. As a parent with a child in this US Soccer system, I'm incredibly frustrated at the costs involved for anything higher than ECNL RL, even though he's been scouted for higher levels. The ROI just isn't there, and most the parents in my region are working second or third jobs just to give their children an opportunity.

  10. You think like an American and that’s why you started off looking at the club systems. The USA will never catch up to Europe or South America because their kids can play football every day for hours with their mates in the park or on the beach before ever needing a “club” or coaching. American kids that like soccer usually don’t have enough local friends to play for fun so they have to join clubs and get driven to practice. Even if you forget about the financial side, the amount of playing time and development the Euro/ SA kids can get just in their local parks outweighs the Americans kids by multiple. And in the cities a lot of those kids playing in the park are very good players.

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