on top of this, most people don't appreciate the moves players make inbetween touches or understand the roles other players playAND the short attention span of fans of that culture that think the game must be wack if there are only a few goals
on top of this, most people don't appreciate the moves players make inbetween touches or understand the roles other players playAND the short attention span of fans of that culture that think the game must be wack if there are only a few goals
I don't know man...if you add in that nature of black/latino culture in USA soccer, it'll be a wrap.Our culture doesn't support the sport enough to produce "great soccer players".
This argument seems to have, as always, delved into this nature/nurture debate, with people seemingly siding with one or the other. I tend to think that it's likely a mixture of the two.
While athleticism may not be the defining factor in soccer....temperament is one of the most important aspects to any sport. Sure, maybe Lebron and Westbrook wouldn't have made it as soccer players, but I disagree with anyone that believes that Americans as a whole not viewing soccer as a worthy athletic pursuit, therefore, it's "most sporty" individuals not viewing it as such either, doesn't place a significant ceiling on our players. Maybe it's not football/basketball taking out "most athletic" people...maybe they are just taking our most competitive....
Skills are learned, sure. But the the willingness to dedicate so much of yourself to what is essentially a child's game may be an attribute that one is born with. And those people tend to look elsewhere in the US. A better way to put it might be to say that those people are being pushed elsewhere in the US.
I'm just saying that I do believe that there is a quantitative cap on ANY countries ability to produce top tier athletes. Even if we placed significantly more resources into soccer....there is eventually going to be diminishing returns if the people involved are stretched too thin.

Basically, once black kids start taking this shyt seriously, its a wrap.
USA training resources are unmatched by most of the world.
Precisely.Yeah, this is why I don't get it when people try to bring up African nations or Brazil when they question whether not African Americans would excel at soccer. They are neglecting one major difference between African Americans and black people from other parts of the world, most high schools in the US have weight rooms, even if it's crude ones.
These high flying dunkers and ridiculously fast kids in football got that way through natural ability yeah, but also using the weight room. America puts out heavier/bigger athletes that retain their speed & agility.
at people acting like athletic ability isn't important when most of the best football players of all time combine athletic ability and great skill. Like Pele, Maradona, Messi, Ronaldo, C. Ronaldo, Thierry Henry, etc were no amazing athletes known for pace/speed and quickness. Like Ronaldinho was not the most athletic and most skilled player on the field when he was in his prime. That '98 world cup and 2000 Euro french team was full of fast, big athletes with high level skill. Same with many of Brazil's team. You can tell who on this thread are not athletic by the way they shoot down the advantage that athleticism can bring to the game of football.http://blogs.wsj.com/dailyfix/2014/06/18/soccer-not-a-level-playing-field-for-girls-in-brazil/
Still, you just have to look at the numbers to see that not all is well. According to a global survey by FIFA, women made up for less than 1% of the two million registered soccer players in Brazil in 2006—they don’t even appear to have done a more recent study on women’s participation in soccer. In comparison, almost 40% of the registered players in the U.S. were women. While in the U.S., the majority of the players were under age 18, in Brazil the opposite happened. The U.S. had six times more women’s soccer clubs in 2006.
How can Brazil, a country that lives and breathes soccer, shut out girls like this?
“The problem is purely cultural,” says Luciane Castro, a sports journalist and member of a commission formed by Brazil’s sports ministry in 2012 to find ways to improve the visibility of women’s soccer in the country.
“We live in a macho society, where not only men, but also women, including mothers, tell girls at a young age that soccer is a boy’s thing.” Ironically, Brazilian women made up 53% of the country’s viewership of the 2010 World Cup.
“The problem with women’s soccer in Brazil is lack of infrastructure and investment, not only at the national level, but also locally,” said Daiane Bagé, a member of Brazil’s national team, who saw many friends at Santos become unemployed overnight.
Even in a more developed country like England, women were banned from playing soccer until 1971.
Yeah, this is why I don't get it when people try to bring up African nations or Brazil when they question whether not African Americans would excel at soccer. They are neglecting one major difference between African Americans and black people from other parts of the world, most high schools in the US have weight rooms, even if it's crude ones.
These high flying dunkers and ridiculously fast kids in football got that way through natural ability yeah, but also using the weight room. America puts out heavier/bigger athletes that retain their speed & agility.
nobody said that. Who are you arguing with?at people acting like athletic ability isn't important when most of the best football players of all time combine athletic ability and great skill. Like Pele, Maradona, Messi, Ronaldo, C. Ronaldo, Thierry Henry, etc were no amazing athletes known for pace/speed and quickness. Like Ronaldinho was not the most athletic and most skilled player on the field when he was in his prime. That '98 world cup and 2000 Euro french team was full of fast, big athletes with high level skill. Same with many of Brazil's team. You can tell who on this thread are not athletic by the way they shoot down the advantage that athleticism can bring to the game of football.
More and more idiotic posts about "our best athletes play other sports :derp: ".
Have y'all seen any of the African teams? Some of these guys look like cornerbacks in the NFL, yet the continent of Africa has not had an African nation represented in the finals of the World Cup.
IT'S NOT ALL ABOUT ATHLETICISM. That rhetoric is an arrogant line of thinking, and coincides with the deep-rooted belief that the "strongest, fastest, biggest" are always best.
Spain, who dominated the international scene for the past 6 years barely have any speed, strength, or height. Literally, they have 2 guys that are taller than 6' (Busquets and Pique), yet they still have been dominant. The best player in the world in Messi is 5'7 on a good day.
IT'S NOT ALL ABOUT ATHLETICISM.
and I bet this school got an all black football team. we have a school like this in socal called notre dame and all they do is recruit inner city kids. how come they can't offer scholarships to the mexicans for soccer, is all Im sayin. mexicans are ALWAYS at the park playing soccer the way black kids are playing basketball. makes no sense. maybe all the scholarships are used on the inner city kids for basketball and football, I dunno.
Outside of watching Team USA on TV, what experiences do you have with the sport? (Serious question)Ok...Fine......Once we get the technique down at an early age, and you couple that with the athleticism.........Now whay yall gon do?