I watched most of the game yesterday and I’ll repeat what I’ve seen on here. Heavy first touches, bad passing, etc. It was a tough watch to be honest especially considering they needed to win and there were just so few scoring opportunities.
Now, I keep seeing people say that there are like barely more people in Uruguay than Iowa, stuff like that.
I know people have banged on youth soccer and stuff like that. I have 2 kids playing competitive sports in the metro, and while I think Iowa is behind other places when it comes to soccer I think there is a little perspective required here.
- My kids play competitive soccer, basketball, and baseball. Again we’re in the metro. You’d think there would be a ton of kids playing… there aren’t. My oldest is 14U. He plays for Rush, and we basically alternate playing Ames, Sporting, VSA, and maybe one of the two big clubs on the eastern side of the state all year. When it comes to State Cup you know it’s either going to be VSA or Sporting winning it every time. There’s really about 6-8 truly competitive teams in Iowa.
- They started playing club baseball this year. CIS is the main tournament organizer in DSM, and most weekends between 7U and 14U there are 200+ teams in these tournaments. There are more kids playing baseball in one tournament on each weekend in the DSM metro than there probably are soccer players at every level.
- My middle kid played basketball for Attack, and they played in a tournament in Omaha last winter. 500+ teams in that tournament. There were probably 5k-6k players competing in one weekend there.
- I know the first comment soccer people will say here: The cost of youth soccer is out of control! False. It’s right in line with top club programs for basketball, baseball, etc. Competitive high level sports is expensive, period.
- I think a bigger problem is there isn’t the structure there yet when it comes to the game. There isn’t the cultural heritage yet. There aren’t enough parents that know soccer well enough to teach there kids and give them a good foundation. There aren’t enough good coaches. There are barely enough refs to even keep things going. You know how many games I’ve AR’d? The kids on the team call me Bad Call Bryce because I’ve been doing it enough I’ve got a dang nickname.
- I mean this sincerely we really need communities investing in rec programs. There are kids who would play but the rec coaches so many times can be truly bad. We’ve had some great ones but It’s truly a flip of the coin here.
- Lastly, the clubs charge what they do because they need to pay their coaches and the fees for them renting fields. It’s not like these coaches are getting paid a lot, I promise you they aren’t and these clubs are absolutely not getting rich. But there are immigrant communities in the metro that do have that cultural heritage and love for the game that are underserved. I don’t know how to do it but man I’d love to get some of these men and women coaching, and some of these kids into the programs. But the cost, transportation issues, etc. make it really difficult.
Anyway these were some thoughts. I think USA soccer is growing and that’s great. I have grown to love the game. 20 years ago the idea that I’d rather turn on a rando soccer game vs. a rando football game would have been inconceivable to me, but I’m there. I’m just saying my experience over the winter and the spring really has opened my eyes to just how far there is to go to get soccer on par with some of these other sports when it comes to participation and organization.
Sorry, this got really long.