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Is Pulisic a one-off or is US soccer on the rise?
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Unregistered
Originally posted by Unregistered View PostYes this is a running theme. Coaches who preach one thing but fold like chairs the moment they may lose a game. All that "philosophy" gets tossed out the window.
I coached against Abbey Villa for years and they would stick to their guns with nice football when struggling, but they would lose players every year.
Any decent coach can teach the right way, but only the high profile winners get the accolades (JD, CB, NB, etc…) right or wrong.
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Sadly coaches can only keep their jobs when they have winning records. Why? Because clubs know that keeps a constant flow of new paying customers coming in the door. No one has the patience to develop players over a span of multiple years. Everyone wants results NOW. Other nations that have improved their game did it over many, many years, with a well thought out road map of how to get there. That also required leadership and buy in. We dont' have leadership here and will never have buy in either when there's money to be made
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Originally posted by Unregistered View PostSadly coaches can only keep their jobs when they have winning records. Why? Because clubs know that keeps a constant flow of new paying customers coming in the door. No one has the patience to develop players over a span of multiple years. Everyone wants results NOW. Other nations that have improved their game did it over many, many years, with a well thought out road map of how to get there. That also required leadership and buy in. We dont' have leadership here and will never have buy in either when there's money to be made
1) Childhood in the US has changed over the last 50 years. Years ago kids normally got together and experimented with different sports spontaneously, often the popular ones they saw on TV but played from a child’s perspective without regard to all the rules and formalities. Only after maybe years of informal play did a kid get signed up for a formal team with uniforms and coaches. Then they would learn the finer points of the game, but they would have the free play, creativity, and love of the game as their foundation. These days kids have no free play time. They are immediately introduced to the game on a formal team where all these concepts that work at the pro level don’t translate to young kids. They are judged on their performance and told constantly when they are doing this or that wrong. All the fun is taken out of the game. Is it any wonder so many quit sports? Soccer is a game, that’s all it is. Overseas, even in developed European countries, they let kids be kids and they don’t put them on a formal team with a coach and concepts that are beyond them as their first introduction to the game. That’s a BIG reason that we aren’t as good in soccer.
2) We think of soccer as a foreigner’s game and that has held us back. While soccer started in Europe, it was widely played in the US over 100 years ago. There was even a pro league called the American Soccer League back in the 1920’s that was popular. For a whole bunch of reasons, soccer fell out of favor and the sport became vilified as a foreign sport. The US lost about 50 years of development that a lot of the world didn’t. Then just as the US was getting back into the game in the 1970’s and 1980’s, the pro game in Europe started to change with big money/TV rights and that’s accelerated since then. The US is playing major catch-up at all levels. It’s crazy to think you can miss half a century of soccer history and development and compete with 100 year old European clubs with billions of $. That’s why our promising players HAVE to go overseas right now.
3) Our soccer culture is youth-centered instead of adult-centered. In most countries, there is a pro or semi-pro senior (U-20 and up) team at club level and everything flows from that. The youth teams only serve to feed that senior team. In the US, our clubs pinnacle is around U-16/17 with the goal being college. Sorry, but college is just a developmental dead-end. You’ll see players who want to really improve going pro and skipping college more and more. Until clubs become more adult-centric, the US will always be behind.
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Originally posted by Unregistered View PostI think all these posts miss 3 very important points:
1) Childhood in the US has changed over the last 50 years. Years ago kids normally got together and experimented with different sports spontaneously, often the popular ones they saw on TV but played from a child’s perspective without regard to all the rules and formalities. Only after maybe years of informal play did a kid get signed up for a formal team with uniforms and coaches. Then they would learn the finer points of the game, but they would have the free play, creativity, and love of the game as their foundation. These days kids have no free play time. They are immediately introduced to the game on a formal team where all these concepts that work at the pro level don’t translate to young kids. They are judged on their performance and told constantly when they are doing this or that wrong. All the fun is taken out of the game. Is it any wonder so many quit sports? Soccer is a game, that’s all it is. Overseas, even in developed European countries, they let kids be kids and they don’t put them on a formal team with a coach and concepts that are beyond them as their first introduction to the game. That’s a BIG reason that we aren’t as good in soccer.
2) We think of soccer as a foreigner’s game and that has held us back. While soccer started in Europe, it was widely played in the US over 100 years ago. There was even a pro league called the American Soccer League back in the 1920’s that was popular. For a whole bunch of reasons, soccer fell out of favor and the sport became vilified as a foreign sport. The US lost about 50 years of development that a lot of the world didn’t. Then just as the US was getting back into the game in the 1970’s and 1980’s, the pro game in Europe started to change with big money/TV rights and that’s accelerated since then. The US is playing major catch-up at all levels. It’s crazy to think you can miss half a century of soccer history and development and compete with 100 year old European clubs with billions of $. That’s why our promising players HAVE to go overseas right now.
3) Our soccer culture is youth-centered instead of adult-centered. In most countries, there is a pro or semi-pro senior (U-20 and up) team at club level and everything flows from that. The youth teams only serve to feed that senior team. In the US, our clubs pinnacle is around U-16/17 with the goal being college. Sorry, but college is just a developmental dead-end. You’ll see players who want to really improve going pro and skipping college more and more. Until clubs become more adult-centric, the US will always be behind.
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Originally posted by Unregistered View Post1-1 at the half. Mexico dominating possession and finding a lot of chances.
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Originally posted by Unregistered View PostF—— that! Second half USMNT came out swinging. Pulisic scores the deciding pk and Horvath comes off the bench to save a bunch including a pk. They looked like they wanted to go up into the Mexican stands and pick a fight. 130 minutes of fight! USA 3 Mexico 2. Concacaf Final winners, baby!
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Originally posted by Unregistered View PostDisgusting behaviour by the fans and the players and coaches too. Homophobic chants, hitting players in the head with objects, abusing the referees, fans running onto the pitch....did I miss anything?
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Unregistered
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Unregistered
Originally posted by Unregistered View PostApparently you’ve never been to a Mexican game. It was held in Colorado, but could have been Tijuana.
They will play matches where they can sell tickets.
That’s why S. Dakota won’t get any games (if anybody is still living there after covid)
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Unregistered
Originally posted by Unregistered View PostWhy not more American supporters?
They will play matches where they can sell tickets.
That’s why S. Dakota won’t get any games (if anybody is still living there after covid)
My take is that this is all good for soccer in the US. Latinos have a love for the game. The more that come, the more soccer grows. Within 2-3 generations, the loyalty to their ancestor country wanes and they will support the American side. Countless nationalities have done it. It’s what makes this country great.
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The Atlanta MLS franchise has done a nice job building support in the local community, which is heavily African American. Hispanics are obviously huge supporters of the sport and most cities have a strong presence of that fan base. Not surprising Mexico had a big turn out - CO has a large # of Hispanics - and it was a big match. Building a fan base for the sport overall will take time. Fans only have so much time and $ to allocate and unseating the top 3 sports won't happen overnight. Some international wins would help but without qualifying that's not happening any time soon
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