High school soccer is something that has long been a controversial topic in youth soccer circles--and one that makes many people turn up their nose. The complaints are many, and many of them are currently true:
* The Laws of the Game are ignored.
* Many of the coaches are retreads, who know little about the modern game.
* Too many games, too much focus on winning at all costs, very little focus on development.
* Inappropriate focus on physical fitness (and training regimens that are more appropriate for the cross-country team)
* Over-emphasis on bootball, less on technical soccer.
As a result, the pecking order for progression into NCAA or professional soccer seems to be:
* Elite academies and programs (including MLS DAs, certain ECNL clubs for girls, etc.)
* ODP and similar (fading in importance)
* Ordinary club soccer, particularly premier divisions.
* High school soccer.
A lot of conversation in the soccer community seems to focus on how to further marginalize the high school game. DA prohibits participation in HS. OYSA and ECNL accomodate it, but generally consider it to be a lesser level of soccer. It's defenders often defend it for it's social aspects in ways that make it sound like rec--representing your school is fun, playing with your friends and classmates is fun. (And it is fun to do these things).
For that reason--I'm going to make a suggestion.
HS soccer shouldn't be denigrated. It shouldn't be marginalized. It shouldn't be put down.
Instead, it should be fixed--and given that many club coaches double as HS coaches, the club community is in a position to do so.
If you look at football, basketball, and baseball--the HS game is extremely important to the development of players in these sports. Why?
* Playing for school and classmates, rather than an empty sideline with nobody but parents, is indeed a major incentive.
* Not long ago, soccer was a novel sport, one that most people cared nothing about. Football and basketball were kings, soccer was as popular at HS as the chess club. And the number of coaches in the country that understood the game well was very limited.
* Times are changing now. Soccer is becoming very popular as a generation of parents who learned to love the game are now passing it on to their kids. The growth of the MLS, and the easy availability of top-rank European soccer on TV, is turning more and more of the US into soccer culture.
* One of the biggest complaints about club soccer is the pay-to-play nature of the sport. HS sports are far less expensive for participants--there generally isn't the travel involved (other than long bus rides).
* Soccer is far less expensive for school districts than football.
* Concerns about CTE have presented a threat to American football; many parents (including yours truly) won't let their kids play (organized tackle) football for that reason.
* The HS model does work for other sports. Perhaps soccer is different--there is a distinction often discussed between tactical soccer (playing to win) and pedagogical soccer (playing to teach) that doesn't seem to exist for other sports; you don't often hear of basketball coaches refusing to run fastbreaks because "kids need to learn to play the halfcourt game". The problem with bootball is that it's bad soccer--this is mainly an issue because there are lots of bad teams that don't know how to defend it, so it frequently works at lower levels of the game.
Of course, high-quality high-school soccer might pose a threat to the pay-to-play business model, especially at the older age groups; so it's entirely possible that various directors of coaching might have a vested interest in keeping the scholastic game second-class. And there is a longstanding US cultural prejudice, often reflected in some of the anti-Timbers rants in this forum, that pro sports teams have no business involving themselves in youth sports (whereas club academies are the norm in the rest of the world).
But we ever get to the point where the Friday homecoming game is played with a round ball rather than a pointy one, and the "captain of the football team" is a striker or midfielder or keeper, not a quarterback, then that will be a big sign that the US has arrived as a soccer country.
* The Laws of the Game are ignored.
* Many of the coaches are retreads, who know little about the modern game.
* Too many games, too much focus on winning at all costs, very little focus on development.
* Inappropriate focus on physical fitness (and training regimens that are more appropriate for the cross-country team)
* Over-emphasis on bootball, less on technical soccer.
As a result, the pecking order for progression into NCAA or professional soccer seems to be:
* Elite academies and programs (including MLS DAs, certain ECNL clubs for girls, etc.)
* ODP and similar (fading in importance)
* Ordinary club soccer, particularly premier divisions.
* High school soccer.
A lot of conversation in the soccer community seems to focus on how to further marginalize the high school game. DA prohibits participation in HS. OYSA and ECNL accomodate it, but generally consider it to be a lesser level of soccer. It's defenders often defend it for it's social aspects in ways that make it sound like rec--representing your school is fun, playing with your friends and classmates is fun. (And it is fun to do these things).
For that reason--I'm going to make a suggestion.
HS soccer shouldn't be denigrated. It shouldn't be marginalized. It shouldn't be put down.
Instead, it should be fixed--and given that many club coaches double as HS coaches, the club community is in a position to do so.
If you look at football, basketball, and baseball--the HS game is extremely important to the development of players in these sports. Why?
* Playing for school and classmates, rather than an empty sideline with nobody but parents, is indeed a major incentive.
* Not long ago, soccer was a novel sport, one that most people cared nothing about. Football and basketball were kings, soccer was as popular at HS as the chess club. And the number of coaches in the country that understood the game well was very limited.
* Times are changing now. Soccer is becoming very popular as a generation of parents who learned to love the game are now passing it on to their kids. The growth of the MLS, and the easy availability of top-rank European soccer on TV, is turning more and more of the US into soccer culture.
* One of the biggest complaints about club soccer is the pay-to-play nature of the sport. HS sports are far less expensive for participants--there generally isn't the travel involved (other than long bus rides).
* Soccer is far less expensive for school districts than football.
* Concerns about CTE have presented a threat to American football; many parents (including yours truly) won't let their kids play (organized tackle) football for that reason.
* The HS model does work for other sports. Perhaps soccer is different--there is a distinction often discussed between tactical soccer (playing to win) and pedagogical soccer (playing to teach) that doesn't seem to exist for other sports; you don't often hear of basketball coaches refusing to run fastbreaks because "kids need to learn to play the halfcourt game". The problem with bootball is that it's bad soccer--this is mainly an issue because there are lots of bad teams that don't know how to defend it, so it frequently works at lower levels of the game.
Of course, high-quality high-school soccer might pose a threat to the pay-to-play business model, especially at the older age groups; so it's entirely possible that various directors of coaching might have a vested interest in keeping the scholastic game second-class. And there is a longstanding US cultural prejudice, often reflected in some of the anti-Timbers rants in this forum, that pro sports teams have no business involving themselves in youth sports (whereas club academies are the norm in the rest of the world).
But we ever get to the point where the Friday homecoming game is played with a round ball rather than a pointy one, and the "captain of the football team" is a striker or midfielder or keeper, not a quarterback, then that will be a big sign that the US has arrived as a soccer country.
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