Originally posted by Bill Moravek
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You are correct as well in terms of the youth coaching being poor...but..at the end of the day...the bigger problem is that these kids do not play on their own in pick up games..and have older players to emmulate. Furthermore they do not have the hunger..the passion. How can you have these things when you are growiing up in Suburbia..and everything is handed to you on a silver platter? It is not possible. They have no passion for anything unless it is playig a cimputer game. The point is..the vast majority of the US's players come from this group of people and environment.
It's not obligatory to grow up poor in order to have hunger and passion for the game. Look at the Italian team that just hoisted the World Cup. Few, if any, came up through the ghetto. In fact, most of them grew up with comfortable middle-class lifestyles.
The growth of the game in the U.S. suburbs is hugely responsible for our progress over the last 20 years. And some of our suburban-raised players (Caligiuri, Wynalda, McBride, Donovan, etc.) have scored some of the most important goals in our country's history.
Would it be better to have more players from other races, ethnic groups and social classes brought into the fold? Unquestionably. But why so much griping about something that has helped us make so much progress?
And ask yourself this question: Where would the sport be in the U.S. today if it hadn't taken hold in the suburbs as it did? Where would you see it being played?
It would only exist in small enclaves of immigrant groups in big cities. That's where. Just like it was up until the 70s. No World Cup on TV and no professional league.
No thanks.
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