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Originally posted by Unregistered View Posthttp://www.fifa.com/worldcup/videos/...s-2402417.html
"Brazil's best football players come from the favelas and in turn football provides them with a way out of difficult surroundings. "
We are not the rest of the world so why do we keep trying to copy it? when need to find what can work within the confines of our soccer culture, resources, geography etc.
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Originally posted by Unregistered View PostHere it's somewhat different - in the US getting an education and hard work is seen as a way out of poverty. The American dream and all that. Certainly not for all, but more common than not. Few parents would entrust their child's education to a soccer team. With our pay-to-play system shutting out most disadvantaged kids of course college will be the focus for most, not a pro career. Even if they can go pro, MLS or slugging it out initially at a low level in Europe, salaries are pitiful. If you were talking NBA/NFL/Baseball salaries we might have a different scenario.
We are not the rest of the world so why do we keep trying to copy it? when need to find what can work within the confines of our soccer culture, resources, geography etc.
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I don't disagree with you, but what about iceland. Population of 250,000 approx. No grinding poverty to escape. Yet they held their own at the Euros.
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Originally posted by Unregistered View PostI don't disagree with you, but what about iceland. Population of 250,000 approx. No grinding poverty to escape. Yet they held their own at the Euros.
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Take a look at the FIFA rankings vs the populations - plenty of other smallish countries (and often times not exactly wealthy) in the top 25. People bit** and moan that for all the money spent on soccer and our huge population we should be doing better. But if you're spending money on mostly cr*p training, guess what you get? Cr*p results.
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Originally posted by Unregistered View PostI don't disagree with you, but what about iceland. Population of 250,000 approx. No grinding poverty to escape. Yet they held their own at the Euros.
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Originally posted by Unregistered View PostThe Iceland FA built turf fields by every school and 11 indoor facilities. That would be like the population of Cambridge or Newton having 3-4 indoor facilities built by USSF that can be used for much less than renting a private indoor field. You have to have started your UEFA B to coach U8, and must have completed it to coach U10+. Imagine being able to take your kid to practice with a decent coach and not have to drive(walk) further than your nearest school, then imagine that it is the same for every kid in your area. Since the fields are funded by the FA, parents pay less and what they do pay goes into paying coaches. No poor souls get stuck with volunteer parent coaches such as myself. Their average kids get the same quality of training as their talented kids. It is not something that we can replicate on any scale with our size, competing interests, and the funds available for USSF or any other soccer organization in the US.
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Originally posted by Unregistered View PostQuality training over quantity number of players. US does less even for the so-called elite level.
1) training and games do not encourage creativity
2) widespread nepotism and back scratching which leads to inadequate player and coach selection
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Bolts 16s 0 NYCFc 2
Both goals scored in first half. NYCFC brought in their subs entire 2nd half
Dissapointing game of 2000s vs 01s/O2s. NY had mostly 01s and 02s ( four 00s) but had most of the possession.
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