One of the arguments on both the men’s and women’s side has been we underperform despite the large player pool because we don’t have a culture with high Soccer iq and soccer is not as popular as gridiron football and basketball. The solution we sometimes hear is its growing and hey look at that Latino community: that’s a good base to start.I'm still fuzzy on the math as to how some of you imply that we don't (and won't) have good enough players on our 23 women roster to compete internationally, so we need to scour the poor neighborhoods to change that, when we have more women playing soccer in the US by a longshot over any other country and its the most popular girl's sport in our country. Sure we may not get every potentially great soccer player, but we can't find 23 others when we have by far the largest pool to choose from? If player identification is a problem, how does having a larger pool improve that? Is it because you believe we could have 23 Messi's instead of just 23 DeBruyne's. I guess its possible that we miss out on that once in the lifetime talent that completely changes the entire team, although even Messi didn't have that impact on Argentina....except arguably once.
I'm all for improving opportunities for underprivileged talent, but I'm not convinced that that would change the overall quality and results of our national team.
I agree there’s an equity argument. I think there is something to be said about the argument in soccereconomics that poorer communities create better soccer players because those players don’t have much to lose by going off the academic track. But I agree it doesn’t move the national team needle because in the end I’ve concluded soccer iq is also poor in the Latino communities, hence mexicos recent struggles.
I think the main benefit is it illustrates we have a problem on both the girls and boys side that certain talent is getting locked out because of the cartels that control, for reasons other than merit, who gets to access to higher level soccer. The boys mitigate that by having an academy system that assesses players by development. The girls do not which means they have only the imperfect siv of ecnl with all the problems of pay to play soccer including the obsession for winning.