Por qué el fútbol en Estados Unidos NUNCA tuvo una oportunidad | Una historia confusa



En términos de fútbol, ​​el departamento masculino de la Federación de Fútbol de Estados Unidos alguna vez fue visto como un perdedor emocionante, con una popularidad incipiente y una falta de recursos y profesionales. Pero los que estaban allí, morirían por la bandera en el campo. Este ya no es el caso. Este vídeo no trata de amontonar la miseria de los partidarios del USMNT. Este trata más sobre sumergirse en la historia loca, intrincada, a menudo impresionante, pero frecuentemente cómica, de la Selección Nacional Masculina de Estados Unidos. 00:00 – Introducción 01:53 – Milagros y oportunidades perdidas 07:52 – Naturaleza salvaje 13:33 – Siempre el desvalido 18:44 – Turbulencia 23:57 – ¿Sistemas manipulados? Transcripción y fuentes: Twitter: Spotify: Música de fondo: @pinkxo (Prod Pink) Productor: Tinashe Chipako ——————- Todo el material sin licencia utilizado en este video se considera uso legítimo para comentarios, críticas y fines educativos. No se pretende infringir los derechos de autor. Si usted es o representa el propietario de los derechos de autor de los materiales utilizados en este video y tiene algún problema con el uso de dicho material, envíeme un correo electrónico a information@footballiconic.com y lo solucionaremos.

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33 opiniones en “Por qué el fútbol en Estados Unidos NUNCA tuvo una oportunidad | Una historia confusa”

  1. What do you mean football never stood a chance in America? Brazil, Argentina and Uruguay have won 10 World Cups between them, and three of the top 5 players of all time (Pele, Messi, Maradona) are from American countries. Or did you mean it never stood a chance in the USA? In that case, you're right.

  2. It's not the money, I have sons and daughters, I had to pay as much for my daughters as for my boys. The probem is in thevUS the best athletes dream to play football, basketball and baseball, that's all. Girls have the advantage that in the rest of the world nobody cares about women's soccer. I grew up in Argentina, I live in San Diego. By the way, one of my daughters is playing professional soccer in the Netherlands

  3. THere are so many issues with US football but it tends to boil down to two things:

    1) Youth development.

    as everyone knows, youth develoment in the US is abysmal. In south America and Europe, clubs heavily invest in their young talents from the age of about 6 or 7. this then pays dividens whern they reach their lates teens and start playing for their respective clubs. the US has the opposite – there is no investm,ent and players must fund themselves. Look at Pulisic, Americas best player had to travel abroad and dig into his slavic roots to train because Americas youth development was so poor.

    If you do not start develpoing your players young, they will never truly thrive.

    2) The CONCACAF bloc.

    This is highly determental to the US for one big reason – it locks the US out of playing any of the worlds true heavyweights with the exception friendlies. The US never plays the likes of Argentina, France, Italy, Germany, England, Brazil, The Netherlands, Spain or Portugul until it comes to the world cup and then, like clockwork its the quarters and out.

    This leaves the US with a false sense of its own strength as it compares itself to the likes of Mexico… MEXICO who would struggle to even qualify for the euros. The bar by which the US measures its own strenght is abysmally low. Take the last world cup, i saw panel after panl say how the US would steamroll a group containing England, Wales and Iran.

    A Euro finalist, an Asian champion and a team who is known for putting up a fight against giants.

    And the US through it would steamroll the group…. this perception is part of the problem. The US is a big fish in its own very small pond unaware of the sharks in the ocean.

  4. 𝚃𝚑𝚎𝚢 𝚍𝚘𝚗'𝚝 𝚑𝚊𝚟𝚎 𝚐𝚛𝚊𝚜𝚜𝚛𝚘𝚘𝚝𝚜. 𝚁𝚒𝚌𝚑 𝚔𝚒𝚍𝚜 𝚙𝚊𝚢 𝚝𝚘 𝚙𝚕𝚊𝚢. 𝚆𝚑𝚊𝚝 𝚍𝚘 𝚢𝚘𝚞 𝚎𝚡𝚙𝚎𝚌𝚝?

  5. At risk of repeating a comment and it looks like YouTube had a problem posting it, there's a reason that nobody talks about regarding as to why soccer is underdeveloped in the US. Now, I have nothing against soccer, as long as I don't have to watch it. However, there's something nobody talks about; MONEY.

    The average salaries for professional soccer players just don't stack up to the other sports. The numbers come from Google, so take them with a grain of salt, but here's how they stack up;

    NBA = $11 million
    MLB = $5.5 million
    NFL = $1.1 million (the caveat being position players sometimes get paid way more than other players on the 53 man roster)
    NHL = $2 million

    The average MLS salary? $350,000 The rookie NBA salary is just over a million dollars. Players from the US going overseas to earn big bucks is the exception, not the rule. It's difficult to get a kid from the inner city to dedicate their lives to a game, they have no prospect of becoming rich playing. Which is why our best athletes don't play it. This is the reason why the US has a large youth participation rate, but by the age of 12 or 13 they abandon soccer for other sports. There's also a snobbery around soccer in the US as it's grown largely in more affluent white areas, and it's become a sport adopted by urban hipsters who want to remind you that they're smarter than you are, and go out of their way to tell you at every opportunity "you wouldn't understand soccer, and it's call called futbol".

    Granted soccer is more popular now than it was in the 70's when I was a kid, but now it's become more like the Olympics where we show up, wave a large flag and say "Yeah, we love swimming… SEE YA IN FOUR YEARS!".

  6. Originally Mister Rogers thought the game soccer involved socking people! See, he doesn't like seeing people get hurt but that's not how the game is played! That's not how soccer is supposed to be!

  7. Many goal are not kicked in . Maybe if you called it Foot-head Ball ??
    There are probably retired soccer players with neck injuries & CTE from hitting the ball with their head – on purpose . USA Networks will never say anything bad about soccer . They want the Latin audience too much .

  8. Mi comentario en español, aunque USA tuviera cultura futbolera y le inyectara mucho dinero al futbol, no lo haria automaticamente un campeón del mundo, es muy dificil ser campeón en un deporte realmente global, no dominarian como lo hacen en el basket porque mucho tiene que ver con el talento natural, es cosa de ver a Inglaterra que se termina una generación dorada y literalmente la reemplazan con otra generación dorada y no pueden ganar mundiales, solo ganaron la del 66' y en ese tiempo el fútbol no era tan global como hoy. Si USA se dedicara al fútbol sería una potencia pero no muy diferente a las casi otras 12 potencias más que hay. Aunque sería bueno que USA, China e India se pusieran más serios con el fútbol y ser más protagonistas igual a otros paises para hacer del fútbol un deporte mucho más entretenido con mucha cantidad de potencias.

  9. A major difference between professional American and international soccer is the intense competition in America for the public's entertainment dollar. If the American game isn't more entertaining then American football, basketball, baseball, etc., then the bucks won't be there to develop the world-class teams it takes to win big. . The 1994 world cup team was a hugely entertaining team, after that our teams as a whole have played a boring game with only an occaisional standout star (Dempsey, Donovan) to brighten it up.

  10. US Youth won’t change till:
    1. Youth don’t have to leave the US to finally break out. If players like Cavan and Pulisic are that unique then they should have broken out here, not had to get signed by other clubs to break out

    2. Homegrown rights are destroyed. Allow clubs to scout and sign any player in any zone

    3. Get rid of playoffs and just have the league and a MLS/USL/Liga MX in season tourny. Teams have no need to showcase and win as they just need to make playoffs. Start some type of relegation as well, even if its top 1/3 of each league get tourny bids for next year. Start somewhere

    4. Most important piece, a coach like Pep comes in and helps establish a culture and style of play like La Masia. Teams like LA, Inter Miami, and FC Dallas are sitting on gold mines. No reason for those 3 /4 clubs to not have dominant world class programs. With Beckham and Messi, Inter Miami might be trying to establish that. I could see Beckham trying to persuade Xavi or Guardiola to help

  11. The only thing that matters is the pay to play model. That is the beginning, middle and end of why the USA will always be shit domestically and internationally. This model doesnt exist in literally any other top 30 footballing nation. This is the reason why we lose to teams like Trinidad and Tobago who have a population over 200 times smaller than the USA, Switzerland with 37x smaller population, Panama with 73x smaller population, etc. I could go on. The pay to play system only leads to having the richest players playing for us, not the best. The worst part? Its unfixable.

  12. My dad was a walk on to the UWGB men's soccer team. The captain went on to play for the US Olympic team in 1972. Horst Stemke never got to play professional soccer and coached his local high school team.

  13. It's simple your feeding program for USA soccer sucks, hate to say this soccer in the US targets the upper class or well to do. Here is a thought why dont you go to the inner city build your foundation there where do you think, the NBA and NFL does ijs just think if you had someone like the size of LeBron James, or Steph Curry skill set USA soccer would be scary ijs

  14. '94 was a nice feel-good story, but failing to get a goal on Brazil even after they went a man down just proved that we weren't that good.
    '98, we were just plain unlucky. The Iran game was torture to watch. So many chances, and our shot hits the post… again… and again… and again… and again… and again. We should've won that running away. Regardless, there was zero realistic chance of advancing from that group. After the predictable takedown by Germany, the best case scenario would've been beating Iran and tying FR Yugoslavia, which would've still put us behind the latter 5 points to 4.
    '02 was just an ungodly mess. The most brazenly corrupt officiating I've seen in my life, all the while everyone danced and laughed about the "home field advantage" (easily the most disgusting fan behavior I've personally witnessed in my life). If we were ever going to accomplish anything, it would be this ridiculous year, but I'm still not convinced we could've beaten Germany even without the missed handball.
    And of course, everything since has been reversion to the mean.

    I ask this again: Should we really be expecting any better? We go for sports where 1. a powerful offense is actually allowed to put points on the board, 2. offside is fair, intuitive, easy to recognize, and CONSISTENTLY ENFORCED, and not a means of rewarding bad defense, and 3. the players use their hands. There's just something deeply unsatisfying about the sport to our sensibilities, and no amount of florid prose about "the beautiful game" is going to change that. Seriously, I think we'd have a better chance of fielding a world-class rugby or synchronized swimming squad.

  15. Baseball is not a sport it's a pass time. NFL Football is actually handball and backyard wrestling (pass time). Basketball is the only real American sport which has football/soccer parallels to it.

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