Quote:
Originally Posted by sweep single
The thing is in America the best athletes don't play soccer. Soccer is a fall sport, and if you are an athletic kid in America you play football in the fall(and probably year round training by the time you're about 13). With the concussions who knows, parents are frowning on football more and more, maybe some elite athletes will take up soccer. Problem is they don't see it as very lucrative. Specialization is also a problem, kids are picking one of the big 3 sports and training year round.
getting the best athletes isn't the problem. In Soccer, the best pure athletes are rarely the best players. Someone like Gareth Bale is a complete freak, but he's not the norm by any mean.
The bigger issue is widening the scope of players in the general youth development and also creating a general shift in cultural attitudes about what it will actually take to create elite level footballers. That doesn't happen overnight.
While Soccer isn't as lucrative as American Football, Basketball, or Baseball yet, it can absolutely provide a higher quality of living for a lot of people in the US. The MLS has a ton more money in it than it ever has and it should continue to grow.
People keep acting like we are at a crisis point right now, when it couldn't be further from the truth. That's not to say that the US can't improve, it's just that if we really do a proper self assessment we will realize that we are actually in a much better spot now than we were even 6 years ago, much less 15, 20, 30 years ago and the sport will continue to grow at a sustainable pace.
Here's the thing, being beaten by Colombia twice and getting waxed by Argentina aren't necessarily bad things. The US just doesn't face real competition all too often and hopefully this will lead to the US playing in the Copa America more often and with real sides like they did this year.