In Oregon (maybe in all of the US), we have a lot of Brits coaching our kids. Are we doing it for the right reasons? Why aren't there more Mexican coaches? After all, we have a larger population of Hispanics here.
One argument I have heard --- and these are generalizations!--- is that we Yanks know we need help and, at the Premier level, we are willing to pay for the expertise. The Brits who do this for a living are not bashful about tooting their own horns and they convince clubs and parents that they are good. That accent helps.
Hispanic coaches, on the flipside, are relatively quieter and don't know how to position themselves politically at the clubs, so they don't become premier coaches. There may also be some subtle prejudices at work here too, but I hope that is not the case.
As a result, our kids are being taught the British style of soccer rather than encouraged to do more creative plays. Etc., etc., or so the story I've heard goes...
What are the thoughts on this?
One argument I have heard --- and these are generalizations!--- is that we Yanks know we need help and, at the Premier level, we are willing to pay for the expertise. The Brits who do this for a living are not bashful about tooting their own horns and they convince clubs and parents that they are good. That accent helps.
Hispanic coaches, on the flipside, are relatively quieter and don't know how to position themselves politically at the clubs, so they don't become premier coaches. There may also be some subtle prejudices at work here too, but I hope that is not the case.
As a result, our kids are being taught the British style of soccer rather than encouraged to do more creative plays. Etc., etc., or so the story I've heard goes...
What are the thoughts on this?
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