Originally posted by Unregistered
View Post
Pointing out that many youth soccer clubs, especially competitive ones (which often have players who live a considerable distance from the training ground), pose significant difficulties for some families--even if the club fees are subsidized.
Now what to do about it, I'm not sure--practices and games need to be sometime, and there will always be someone for whom it's inconvenient. In some cases, the difficulty isn't correlated to economics, but to other things--religion (I know lots of talented kids who don't do competitive soccer because they aren't allowed to play matches on Sunday), parents who need to work weekends, language barriers (not so much the kids, who pick up English quickly in school, but the parents), etc. And even for those families whose parents work 9-5, who can drive Junior to practice, pay the dues, and are willing to book a hotel room for a Spring League game in Bend--it's a big commitment.
But for many skilled kids, getting into the "pipeline" is impossible because of various circumstances.
Comment