You don't know high school or collegiate athletics. "You NORMALLY cannot be a student athlete if you aren't a GOOD student " That was a joke right! LOTs of student athletes not such good students. This is a soccer forum so the pendulum definitely swings toward the sport. true there are a lot of more serious issues in the nation , but that is a different forum.If you can play, you can play. The reality most likely is that despite their love of the game, the author's Croatian friends probably weren't as good as he thinks. With pickup up games, Tiffany leagues, AYSO, YMCA, and other avenues there are plenty of opportunities to play soccer and develop as a player for very little cost. My understanding is that at least in California there is very little cost to playing high school sports. If you are good, you can get seen. And you normally cannot be a student athlete if you aren't a good student.
There are lots of serious issues that we as a nation face and need to address; fixing a perceived problem in youth sports seems pretty low on the list.
And thats perhaps the problem. There are a lot of cheap options for players to develop, however the big "prestigious"(Expensive) platforms have done everything on their power to block those cheap options from ID those players that are on those cheaper options.If you can play, you can play. The reality most likely is that despite their love of the game, the author's Croatian friends probably weren't as good as he thinks. With pickup up games, Tiffany leagues, AYSO, YMCA, and other avenues there are plenty of opportunities to play soccer and develop as a player for very little cost. My understanding is that at least in California there is very little cost to playing high school sports. If you are good, you can get seen. And you normally cannot be a student athlete if you aren't a good student.
There are lots of serious issues that we as a nation face and need to address; fixing a perceived problem in youth sports seems pretty low on the list.
Listen to the Hercules Gomez interview with Bob Bradley (on an ESPN podcast). Bradley was adamant and I agree, kids are not being missed. The good kids from the free, Friday night city heights league in San Diego on dirt with tacos for sale in the parking lot get picked up in 2 seconds and play (for free) for Surf or Nomads or whoever. AYSO younger games have Albion scouts sitting there.
Good kids aren't being missed.
I think the problem we have (which is the same problem Europe has or South America) is that a kid who may just be ok at 13 years old doesn't warrant a free spot at Surf but with better coaching and competition could turn out to be outstanding. But because that kid can't afford to be in that program (and isn't yet good enough to get a scholarship) he/she misses out. But that isn't a US soccer thing. That is true for AAU basketball, high level baseball, gymnastics, swimming...whatever.
Nothing killed using HS as a recruitment tool. It's never been a huge draw for coaches. Before ECNL and DA there were still huge tourneys where college coaches could see hundreds of players in a short time span. HS or free/cheap leagues have never drawn huge scouting interest. There's always been tourneys and paid leagues where the concentration of good players is higher. Furthermore, I don't know one story of an elite kid who played only local cheap club and high school and was missed. At some point along the way they were passed along to a bigger stage or got seen at some event somewhere.
Listen to the Hercules Gomez interview with Bob Bradley (on an ESPN podcast). Bradley was adamant and I agree, kids are not being missed. The good kids from the free, Friday night city heights league in San Diego on dirt with tacos for sale in the parking lot get picked up in 2 seconds and play (for free) for Surf or Nomads or whoever. AYSO younger games have Albion scouts sitting there.
Good kids aren't being missed.
I think the problem we have (which is the same problem Europe has or South America) is that a kid who may just be ok at 13 years old doesn't warrant a free spot at Surf but with better coaching and competition could turn out to be outstanding. But because that kid can't afford to be in that program (and isn't yet good enough to get a scholarship) he/she misses out. But that isn't a US soccer thing. That is true for AAU basketball, high level baseball, gymnastics, swimming...whatever.
Nothing killed using HS as a recruitment tool. It's never been a huge draw for coaches. Before ECNL and DA there were still huge tourneys where college coaches could see hundreds of players in a short time span. HS or free/cheap leagues have never drawn huge scouting interest. There's always been tourneys and paid leagues where the concentration of good players is higher. Furthermore, I don't know one story of an elite kid who played only local cheap club and high school and was missed. At some point along the way they were passed along to a bigger stage or got seen at some event somewhere.
I think the Croatians were as good as he thinks. They just didn’t didn’t have the infrastructure to keep it going. I think it’s true that those players from Sunday leagues are being scouted and found and playing and are good, but there is no long term support from the league and the family’s can’t pay for everything even though some or most is covered. There’s still travel, time = money.If you can play, you can play. The reality most likely is that despite their love of the game, the author's Croatian friends probably weren't as good as he thinks. With pickup up games, Tiffany leagues, AYSO, YMCA, and other avenues there are plenty of opportunities to play soccer and develop as a player for very little cost. My understanding is that at least in California there is very little cost to playing high school sports. If you are good, you can get seen. And you normally cannot be a student athlete if you aren't a good student.
There are lots of serious issues that we as a nation face and need to address; fixing a perceived problem in youth sports seems pretty low on the list.
Mission Bay HS's Christina Burkenroad was almost missed. The only thing that got her into college was the fact that her HS coach knew the coach at CSUF, called him up and suggested he take a look.