Everton's American potential

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I spent five years in my early 20s refereeing youth football over here in the U.S. The thing about the sport over here is the age where kids leave the sport for something else. Sure, it's by far the most popular youth sport here. Everyone takes their kids to play, but "just for fun." There are tons of leagues for kids aged 5 through 12 or so, but the coaches (for the most part) don't know squat about tactics and sometimes don't know squat about fundamentals. So, you can get a kid who play youth soccer (football) for six or seven years, but who really doesn't know anything about the game except "Pass it to Timmy, because he's good and he'll score and we'll win."

And for many of these kids, they hit age 12 (which is when they go to Middle School, and that's their first real experience with organized schools sports) and jump to American football or they start playing baseball year round or just stop playing alltogether.

What we need to do is find a way to teach your everyday rec coach about the intricacies of the sport. We need more coaching clinics, in other words.

Another thing, most of the football is played in suburbs, where there is all the room needed for fields. There is a massive percentage of the youth population in inner cities who can never play because no one can find a pitch on which to play. People cop out and say there's no room, but that's bogus because there's always room for little league baseball fields.

I was watching Fox Football Fone in a few weeks ago, and there was a guy on there talking about a youth academy in the western portion of the U.S. (can't quite remember where) ... that's a good start.
 
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One more thing about the academies. There's a current here that's very afraid of schools built around sports. Many people (media, politicians) condemn those schools for their academics-second attitude. Schools like Mount Zion (a high school in N.C. where the NBA's Tracy McGrady went) and Oak Hill (known for cranking out NBA stars like Carmelo Anthony) catch a lot of flack for their reputation as being solely a place where a young athlete to go who can to prepare for a possible career in basketball.

So, there's already a climate over there against academies that are centered around sport, so to get football/soccer academies is already fighting an uphill battle.

The way I see if, if a kid shows promise at being a phenominal mathmaticial, no one has a problem with him going to, for example, the North Carolina School of Science and Math. But if a kid shows the abilities to score goals at will on a football pitch, people would freak out at the idea of sending him to a football academy. It's a little hypocritical, if you ask me.

Well, I've gone waaaay off topic now, I'm sure.
 
American Footie

It's barely on the sports radar here. The MLS actually surprises me that it's survived this long but even with the MLS, the most recognizeable stars are imported - Beckham, Chuatemoc Blanco (Chicago) etc... The Americans that can play are overseas - Altidore, Edu, Dempsey, Howard, Friedel, Oneywu...

While the youth play is strong and widespread, there is no infrastructure to support consistent development of world-class players primarily, in my opinion, because there's no money to be made in the US with soccer. When MLS teams play in tournaments, they play clubs from Uruguay and the Caribbean -there's no appeal in that compared to playing teams from La Liga, the Prem or Serie A.

Besides, as Americans, we get taught from an early age that there is no such thing as a tie / draw. We play to win - we play extra innings, we play sudden death overtime. We don't like ties. I would venture most Americans think of soccer as - "Why should I watch - it's going to be a 0-0 tie anyway." Unfortunately, that's a big hurdle to get over.

Rant concluded.
 
Who was that whopper who came on here and said that American's were more athetic and even though they don't know what football (soccer) is nevermind know how to play it, they could still be moulded into a world beating side. Who was that, he was quality.
 
I said that in american football at 2 positions there were better athletes, the defensive back and wide receiver. But I do not know about a more athletic world beating side. I never said that. but with the population size here and the ability to put out world class athletes in every other sport.
There is no reason that with a grass roots approach and cultivation of a youth/ reserve set up the US can not put out top players on a more regular interval, other than goalkeepers.
 

What? The defensive back and wide receivers are better atheletes than footballers? What a load of crap. You get all your players dressed up in all kinds of protective gear and every 10 minutes they run for the ball. There are that many stoppages in your game it's an absolute doddle to maintain fitness. But in the English football game players can run for 90 minutes with barely 15 minutes at half time to take on fluid.

World class footballers are not developed from scratch, they are naturally gifted.
 
not referring to fitness levels...I am not pgheverton. I played goal keeper for U-15 US NT and in college I know we are athletes
 

american or not I think it merely is about which sport the best athletes go into... in America it is American football and basketball. In UK it is football and rugby.
Would you agree?
 
american or not I think it merely is about which sport the best athletes go into... in America it is American football and basketball. In UK it is football and rugby.
Would you agree?

No I don't agree at all. The greatest athlete this country has produced was a rower. The best you guys have produced was a swimmer, the best the Jamaican's produced was a runner.

It's nothing to do with the sport, it's to do with the performance in whatever support they do.
 
No I don't agree at all. The greatest athlete this country has produced was a rower. The best you guys have produced was a swimmer, the best the Jamaican's produced was a runner.

It's nothing to do with the sport, it's to do with the performance in whatever support they do.

Interesting you should say Steve Redgrave is the best athlete to be produced from this country. I mean, he did have Matthew Pinsent and co to help him. Many great talents have emerged from this country, Daley Thompson, Tessa Sanderson, Linford Christie are just several from track and field.
 

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