The United States has failed to qualify for the 2018 World
Cup. The dust has begun to settle, the factions have separated into their
theories as to why this sporting disaster occurred. The issue appears to be the
need for a massive systemic shift in American(&Canadian, because our
leagues are in both countries) soccer. There are hundreds of topics that can be
discussed, will be discussed and should be discussed from the flawed
weekend-warrior youth setups of traveling soccer, to poorly coached church and
municipal league teams, kids not simply “playing” in the yard or street or park
as they do elsewhere, practice times and number of sessions for youth teams
being inadequate, school-boy soccer being a total mess, high school soccer
being a sprint of 18 matches inside 2 months, college being much the same,
flawed academies, poor coaching education, promotion\relegation incentives for
competition, and on….and on…and..You get the point. It’s a system-wide problem.
There is only so much ink to spend at one time, so rather than go through it
all in one long, annoying article, this will be a multi-day feature, broken up
into several parts, outlined below:
October 12: Youth Soccer Issues
October 13: Pro Soccer Issues
The youth soccer business is one of the biggest sporting
business ventures in North America, and its also one of the most flawed. Every
week, millions of kids are “playing” in church, municipal and traveling leagues
and tournaments. Parents have paid their dollars to sign up little Johnny Doe
to knock around some ‘footy with his friends in the local church or town
league, or forked over thousands for little Johnny Doe to get “training” and “exposure”
from “experts” on traveling teams. Shall we analyze this? Yes. Let’s.
Church and municipal leagues can prove to be a great entry
point to the game and serve as a fine youth development system in many areas, specifically
rural areas where competition might be 150 miles away, if organized properly
and staffed with coaches whom are dedicated to recognizing that when kids are
in those situations, it is not about winning, but teaching skill, allowing
creativity and focusing on the repetition of motion necessary to create a
player skilled on and off the ball in the long term. Too often, these leagues
are un-organized, under-staffed with volunteer coaches and too often staffed by
a Dad who doesn’t know the game and just read “Soccer for Dummies” and screams “Score!
Kick it! Win! Win!”. Too often, there is not enough practice time available or
scheduled, and teams gather together on Saturday morning for one match a
weekend, surrounded by parents equally clueless as the coaches, screaming at
their children to “Kick it! Win! Win! Win or die!”
This is not just the case in the church and municipal
leagues. Traveling soccer is also a part of this poison. It is well marketed as
a “higher class” or “better level” of competition. It is well marketed with “Exposure
tournaments” and “challenge classics”. Coaches who sat through the joke of a
licensing course or played a little D3 or even a D1 and think they have done it all and
still know next to nothing in most cases are out there flaunting their USSF
3.14159265(I love Pi) badge to the un-informed soccer mom or
dad-who-wished-Johnny-played-football-instead. The result is thousands of dollars
flushed down the drain every year by millions of parents for what amounts to
one or two training sessions a week and a boatload of weekend travel with half
a dozen matches bashed into a Saturday and Sunday, draining the kids mentally
and physically to the point where by game..TWO…It’s a worthless endeavor for
everyone but tournament organizers and profiting youth systems that are
participating. Traveling soccer is just as flawed as the church and municipal
system.
High school and college soccer are equally flawed. The
concept of soccer being a “Fall Sport” or a “Spring Sport” is not how you
develop a soccer player. Soccer is an all year sport. High schools that play in
the Fall are permitted, at most, 30 days of organized practice time prior to
the season in most states. The season is then a sprint of 3 games per week for
7-8 weeks, then the playoffs. In New Jersey, theoretically, if you fail to make
the playoffs, this is your season: Practice starts August 15. Season starts
early September. 18 games maximum allowed by the state. Fail to qualify for
post season. Season over last week of October. Two months. If you qualify for
the playoffs, maybe you get to a full three if you make the state final. That’ll
give you maximum, in Jersey, of maybe, MAYBE, 25 or 26 games…In 3 months.
Players bodies are battered by the end of the season, and injuries mount fast.
Then balls are put away for 10 months. 10 MONTHS. Sure, there’s “traveling”—Which
keeps battering the body with the 6 game weekends. School soccer is equally flawed
on its coaching level. It’s too long
been seen as an “activity”. Coaches are often teachers. This makes them nearly
impossible to remove, specifically in public schools. Some of them simply do it
because of the stipend. College is
nearly exactly the same. Maybe, if you’re lucky, you get to Thanksgiving if you’re
in the national final, then that’s it. Sure, there’s the NPSL and PDL, which
provide another “Pray nobody gets hurt” type of summer sprint, but is that
really the best way to build soccer players? It leaves quite a bit of individual
time or complete shut down time. The NCAA, NAIA and the rest have to change this ASAP or we will continue to fall behind. Only so many academy players are on MLS rosters. There are thousands of college soccer players that need more practice time, more game time, all year long. We'll produce more pros that way, both at home in our leagues and overseas as well. The more players out there, the deeper the talent pool.
The high school and college seasons needs to mirror the
European pro seasons, and there is no reason it does not. Sure, people use the “multi
sport athlete” phrase in high school. Soccer players need to play soccer. All
year. A better format, I propose, would be, as mentioned, to follow the
European or Global model. Train 4-5 times per week, play one match on weekend.
Some will say “oh weather in the north”. My answer: Go the Polish, Russian, etc
route. You train all of August. Season begins September, running through first
week in December. Games shutdown from December until mid-March. Training
indoors 2-3 times per week during the winter while allowing injuries to heal.
Season begins again in March and runs until last week of May. June and July are
down time or individual training time to prepare and heal for the next year.
We are not supposed to use “I” in journalism, formal
historical writing, etc… but this is the type of article where personal stories
seem appropriate. I played church league soccer and municipal soccer,basketball
and baseball in my youth.
Municipal baseball
was a disaster. I was eight years old and attended only one practice. The coach
spent 90 minutes screaming at us all to “run faster” or “dive” or “slide” and
was over-the-top, in-your-face to the point that I told my father I wouldn’t be
back for the game on Saturday and when I explained why, he didn’t question my
decision. Baseball was ruined for me as an 8 year old. I played some in high
school and got by using knuckleballs and changeups, until Point Pleasant Beach
lit me and a friend of mine up for 20+ runs in a JV game.(We won…Yes..We scored
over 20 runs after surrendering 20 runs and I recorded the last out on a fly
ball---In right field—Where the coach put me after coughing up 10 runs in the
last inning).
The parish soccer and basketball went much better. Speaking to soccer, specifically, coaches
from Kindergarten thru 8th grade could care less who won or lost, it
was more about teaching the sports and raising skill levels each year, but I believe
myself and my friends were blessed with volunteer fathers that KNEW the game,
truly KNEW the game. They were not former pros. Not a one held a USSF
3.14159265 license. They did, however: live, eat, sleep and breathe soccer all day, every day. My father was my coach all the way through 8th grade. From 5th
grade forward, it was systematic from the coaches. We never focused on
wins and losses. The score didn’t matter. Almost all of the teams trained 4 times a week for
120 minutes. We played once on Saturday. Practice was made enjoyable but
educational. We would spent 60 minutes working on skills. Cone drills, passing,
how to properly head a ball, moving off the ball, learning to communicate on
the field, etc.. and the last 60 minutes would be spent in active playing,
though we would be stopped to have more instruction or be corrected on errors.
The man who refereed these games told the coaches that the parish games were
more competitive than the traveling games he officiated. The difference in the
two was perspective and coaching, he said. The fathers coaching us in the
parish league made a conscious decision to say “It’s not about winning.” My
father never once muttered the term “Win” or “Victory” to us. Instead it was “Communicate”,
“Vision”, “Movement”. This echoed through the whole system, even if the coaches
had different playing styles. One coach grew up in Scotland and employed the
long ball. My father did it the Dutch way, a little bit of “Total Football”, we
all knew every position. The end of the day, we all learned and came to love
the game. It’s a passion that everyone I’ve kept in touch with from that league
still has. The results of that collective philosophy were impressive within our
age group: Out of the 80 or so kids on the teams, 60+ of us were multiple year
varsity players in high school, most were 3-4 year starters, almost a dozen played
college soccer and they even produced a pro out of the group. The faucet got
turned off in town when they stopped coaching us after the 8th grade
and didn’t go back to a 4th or 5th grade level, as
business lives and families began to ramp up as the fathers were climbing the
NYC\NJ corporate ladder. The league hasn’t produced, to my knowledge, that
depth of talent since then—Almost 20 years ago. There’s your “Lost Generation”. No USSF 3.14159265 course and traveling side can prepare you to do what those fathers did, because soccer was a lifestyle to them, and became one for many of us.
Yes, we all want little Johnny Doe to have fun, but we also
need to make sure that if little Johnny pans out long term somehow, that Johnny
can compete with Jose Rodriguez from Panama who lived, ate and slept soccer the
first 18 years of his life and broke into the starting XI at FC Tauro and moved
to a better side outside Panama at 21 and playing for their national side by that point… All while Johnny was off knocking about
at a college for 3 months a year, summering in the PDL or NPSL trying not to
get hurt and then having a few beers and chasing girls at football games or
frat parties in the off season.
At almost 2,000 words, the surface has not even been
scratched on youth soccer. We did not discuss pay to play, access to the game
in poor urban AND rural areas of the country(Everybody focuses 100% on the
urban poor..Nobody focuses on the rural, and we need to help them too, in dozens of ways,
different yet the same as the urban poor—We need to help Belpre,Ohio develop
players just as much as we need to help the Bronx develop talent, because you
never know where the next national team star comes from--This will get its own article. I've seen soccer in the Mid-Ohio Valley. Parkersburg and Belpre are more organized than just about anyone I've seen as far as municipal and organizational soccer.)
We have to tackle the
philosophical, tactical and many other coaching an development related issues
issues. This could hit 100,000 words and still not be done…With youth soccer.
However, this is a short take, with a personal story to it. Tomorrow, it’s the
pro game that gets tackled, albeit in 2,000 words. It’s not the whole story. It
is not the whole debate. It’s just the beginning. It’s simply talking points.
We ALL have to change. US Soccer Federation, MLS, NASL, USL, PDL, NPSL,
colleges, high schools, youth traveling sides, municipal and church teams,
coaches, volunteers, parents, broadcast media, written media, fans. This is our
wakeup call. It’s time to evolve US soccer again. If that means a new head at
the top, a new national team coach, foreign player rules in the pro game,
ownership roster philosophies in the pro game, pro\rel, whatever it may be that
is a topic of discussion…We have to discuss it all. Everything should be in
play right now because right now, at this moment: WE'RE NOT GOOD ENOUGH. WE'RE NOT TOUGH ENOUGH. WE'RE NOT SMART ENOUGH. WE. MUST. CHANGE.
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