El lado oscuro del fútbol estadounidense



Mire ESTO a continuación: Detrás de escena: 👉 Estamos construyendo la comunidad más grande del 🌏 para el fútbol universitario. Únete suscribiéndote, todavía estás temprano.

Camisetas de futbol Echa un vistazo a nuestra variedad de camisetas de equipos de fútbol. Camisetas de entreno y partido de clubes nacionales y selecciones internacionales.

20 opiniones en “El lado oscuro del fútbol estadounidense”

  1. 🇪🇦 My son played soccer in elementary school. There, he was taught that soccer was primarily a team sport and that he shouldn't hog the ball. Since he played well, at age 10 he joined a "serious" team in the provincial league. They always told the children, and their parents too, that out of a thousand kids, only one would end up playing professional soccer, but in the lower divisions, and that only one in 10,000 would reach the first division. My son was only on that team for two years because he got bored. Although he was always a starter in the school league, he was a substitute on the provincial league team. He still plays soccer well as an amateur and works in Texas. He says it's crazy there; all the children of his colleagues at the company where he works play soccer, but it's a status symbol. Kids there don't play soccer at recess, in parks, or in the streets. When I was little, I used to play football using the arches of a Gothic church doorway as goalposts, and kids still play there while their parents have a beer on the terrace of the bar in the square. The biggest problem with your young child playing football on a team is having to take them to practice on Saturday mornings. You don't have to pay anything, and sometimes they even give you the equipment for free.

  2. MLS has the real potential to rival the European powerhouse leagues. It just the academy, coach quality, training quality, pay-to-play system, and limited growth are holding back the system. We could have our own version of kylian mbapee, erling halaand, viciuns jr, cristional ronaldo, neymar jr, etc…… These great players are coming from poor family background.

  3. City league teams made up of kids who can’t afford pay-to-play soccer are just as good as most club teams—trust me. If you really wanted to, you could pull together the best 16 non-club kids in any city and compete with, or beat, the top pay-to-play team. I remember joining a club team at 10 years old my dad was excited that I'd be playing with better players, and the coaching would help develop our skills. After the first game my dad told me some of these kids on your team are beginners they aren't even as good as the kids you play with at home after school. Many of these are just the best kids from the recreational league who came out for tryouts that could afford it.

  4. Soccer is not special. The U.S. has lots of sports, and youth development works just fine. High School and College provides "free" infrastructure, funding, logistics, fanbase, culture, community that most sports need. Soccer is not special. My son's Little League Baseball was not paid for by the L.A. Dodgers or MLB. My Pop Warner Football was not paid for by the L.A. Raiders or NFL. SOccer is not special.

  5. That's why the USA will never win the world cup. If USA acted like France they could win the world cup. To many talented players are over looked because of money.

  6. So, understanding the issue..ok….what about include in the video few solutions for those poor youth players living in Canada and US? Find a college / university in Europe? Move to Brazil? Invest the money in summer camps and try-outs in Europ? What's next?

  7. Honestly it’s stupid how they have EA,e64, Npl, nal and many more and they never get seen by scouts which is honestly disappointing and sad

  8. Lmao paying to play in the us is dumb af…. Just take your money and move to another country… the earlier the better. That way your kid grows up in football culture and don’t get left behind

Comentarios cerrados.