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Youth soccer participation DOWN 14%
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Understandable outcomes.
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The birth year shift is the root cause. You have 4th graders playing with 5th graders now. Kids want to play with their friends from school. It keeps kids involved when the going gets tough.
US Soccer is no the sharpest tools in the shed.
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Originally posted by Unregistered View PostThe birth year shift is the root cause. You have 4th graders playing with 5th graders now. Kids want to play with their friends from school. It keeps kids involved when the going gets tough.
US Soccer is no the sharpest tools in the shed.
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Originally posted by Unregistered View PostTruth is it's just not that popular in the USA. It grew while it was cheap to play but it's become a high-cost factory trying to turn out superstars that don't exist. When the fun goes away, the players go away.
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Originally posted by Unregistered View PostI agree that the birth year shift has hurt participation, at least in the short term.
The article hit a lot of important issues, but ignored the age change. Problem is I have little faith in USSF taking any steps to make real changes. There's a money guy in charge now - form investment banker who never played the game.
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Participation is down in many sports, not just soccer. Shocking I think no one, participation is highly correlated to household income. As participation costs rise fewer can afford to participate. Also a reason - too much intensity at younger ages, along with forcing ids to pick one sport at an early age
"Experts blame that trend on what they call an “up or out” mentality in youth sports. Travel leagues, ones that can sometimes cost thousands of dollars to join, have crept into increasingly younger age groups, and they take the most talented young athletes for their teams. The children left behind either grow unsatisfied on regular recreational teams or get the message that the sport isn’t for them, Farrey said....."
MLB Commissioner Rob Manfred, the keynote speaker, said he had spoken with the NBA, NFL and NHL commissioners and they agreed, “the best athlete is a kid who played multiple sports.” But pursuit of a college athletic scholarship has “reshaped” the youth sports landscape, Farrey said, and placed an earlier emphasis on winning and elite skill development that often forces children to select one sport at an early age. That has pushed hypercompetitive selection processes into younger age groups — some basketball analysts rank the nation’s best kindergartners — and ravaged traditional recreational leagues whose purpose is to get kids playing rather than winning games."
https://www.washingtonpost.com/news/...=.519f55b348e2
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