Ok. So I decided to do a little research on youth soccer in England and Germany and guess what. You pay to play. The way you pay varies from club to club and there are tons of clubs in those two countries. Some clubs in smaller towns have the "youth league" which is less expensive and then they funnel the better players to the youth club teams. Some are in the National League or 3rd tiers. These are smaller towns but even then there is a cost to be on that team that comes with eventual travel. I do not know if the players on these "club teams" are assets and can be sold to larger clubs if they are good enough. Germany has clubs like many of ours in America where again they join a team and pay "membership" which again sounds like fees or dues but it is a payment.
How many European kids actually make it to a true Academy. The rest are paying to play a game they love.
Admittedly, I gave up after England and Germany so I can not answer for countries such as Italy or Spain or Brazil or Chile or Russia or Nigeria or list any other country. But cities and counties need funds to keep the grass green and clubs need qualified directors and uniforms that mimic Man City are not free so I believe pay to play is here for a bit and not just in America. By the way Canadian Hockey is pay to play and they seem to be pretty good.
With that said I think these countries have a better scouting network and a smaller geographical region to scout players and possibly move assets from club to club. Yes these German kids that develop and are being developed are considered assets as they can be sold to larger clubs or receive solidarity payments down the road. So maybe in that case changes need to be made in scouting and how these youth clubs are viewed by our governing body. Christian Pulisic was not developed by the DA. His youth coach deserves credit as does NIKE ID2 for identifying him at u14. If we can funnel more money to clubs then they can invest in the coaching and training and maybe development in improves
Before you all pile on and say that I believe in pay to play, the answer is yes and no. I wish it was less expensive as I have two playing club soccer. I do believe my coach is a good coach who believes in the foundation of the game and is not in it just for the win. I believe in his style and his passion and his knowledge and thus I am willing to pay coaching fees as the club does not pay for him to coach. Do we win every game "nope", every tournament "nope" do my kids love the game "yep" and are they having fun and learning "definitely". I day dream like all of us to see my son walkout on a stadium field and my daughter to play D1. If if doesn't happen (and may probably won't), I can live with myself and the decisions we made around this sport .
How many European kids actually make it to a true Academy. The rest are paying to play a game they love.
Admittedly, I gave up after England and Germany so I can not answer for countries such as Italy or Spain or Brazil or Chile or Russia or Nigeria or list any other country. But cities and counties need funds to keep the grass green and clubs need qualified directors and uniforms that mimic Man City are not free so I believe pay to play is here for a bit and not just in America. By the way Canadian Hockey is pay to play and they seem to be pretty good.
With that said I think these countries have a better scouting network and a smaller geographical region to scout players and possibly move assets from club to club. Yes these German kids that develop and are being developed are considered assets as they can be sold to larger clubs or receive solidarity payments down the road. So maybe in that case changes need to be made in scouting and how these youth clubs are viewed by our governing body. Christian Pulisic was not developed by the DA. His youth coach deserves credit as does NIKE ID2 for identifying him at u14. If we can funnel more money to clubs then they can invest in the coaching and training and maybe development in improves
Before you all pile on and say that I believe in pay to play, the answer is yes and no. I wish it was less expensive as I have two playing club soccer. I do believe my coach is a good coach who believes in the foundation of the game and is not in it just for the win. I believe in his style and his passion and his knowledge and thus I am willing to pay coaching fees as the club does not pay for him to coach. Do we win every game "nope", every tournament "nope" do my kids love the game "yep" and are they having fun and learning "definitely". I day dream like all of us to see my son walkout on a stadium field and my daughter to play D1. If if doesn't happen (and may probably won't), I can live with myself and the decisions we made around this sport .