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Wyatt's avatar

You touched on the athletic issue - really think it boils down to our best athletes not playing soccer.

Another overlooked aspect is the instincts that are developed by watching sports from a very young age. The average American knows a decent amount about football/baseball/basketball strategy and split second decisions make a huge impact. We’re a pretty “dumb” soccer country.

Joe Dirik's avatar

The root cause of the problem is how we deal with youth soccer. The U.S. youth soccer program hinders international success by operating as a corporate business rather than a merit-based talent pipeline. The ecosystem suffers from three systemic flaws:

(1) The Pay-to-Play Model: Elite youth clubs require thousands of dollars annually in fees and travel costs. This economic barrier excludes working-class and immigrant communities, pricing out the demographics where organic soccer culture and passion are highest;

(2) Winning Over Development: Because clubs rely on parent tuition, they prioritize immediate trophies over long-term technical growth. Coaches favor early-maturing, physically dominant children, while smaller, highly technical "late bloomers" are sidelined; and

(3) League Fragmentation: The youth landscape is fractured into a confusing "alphabet soup" of competing organizations (MLS NEXT, ECNL, USYS). This dilutes talent, preventing the best prospects from consistently playing against one another.

While MLS clubs have introduced fully funded, free-to-play academies to scout underserved areas and bypass these financial barriers, their geographical reach is limited. The vast majority of American youth remains trapped in a system that favors socioeconomic status over raw athletic talent.

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