O’Sullivan:
By John O’Sullivan-------------We have
a huge problem in American soccer.
Currently soccer is the most popular
introductory sport in our country, with 20 percent of American 6-year-olds
playing. So what’s the problem?
The problem is that as soon as we sign
them up, we start losing them! According to
research conducted for the Aspen Institute’s Project Play Initiative,
we lose 30 percent of those kids by age 12! Overall soccer numbers among 6- to
12-year-old kids are dwindling, from 5.6 million in 2008 to 5.0 million in
2013. Our current system costs us millions of players between the ages of 6 and
17.
That is a big problem, and at its root
is a push for early specialization, with its year-round commitments, higher
fees, and an over-organized, competition-focused youth soccer environment.
Throw in a lack of support and coaching education for the coaches at the point
of first contact with the game – usually volunteer moms and dads with great
passion, but little experience – and the result is that we have stolen the game
from our kids.
So they quit.
Now I realize this is a bold
statement, but stay with me here.
Every time I am in a conversation
about early specialization in soccer, the following statement is made in some
form or another: “Everywhere else in the world they only play soccer; it worked
for Messi, Ronaldo and Neymar, so don’t tell me it is bad for my
kid.”
Sadly, that
statement is used as validation to ignore boatloads of scientific,
psychological and medical advice when it comes to raising young athletes.
That advice says specializing in a team sport, even soccer, prior to puberty
can cause a litany of issues and is no more likely to guarantee future success
then specializing later. The evidence is pretty conclusive.
So why do we think specialization is
bad here, compared to Europe and South America, where seemingly everyone
“specializes?” I believe it is a case of mistaken identity.
When we compare the U.S. model with
other countries that are producing the type of players we envy, we are confusing
early sport-specific specialization with early sport engagement. The subtle difference between the
two is not simply semantics. In fact, it can change the course of your child’s
sporting life, and is worthy of an in depth discussion.
When I say “early specialization in
soccer,” I would define this as the participation in soccer, and only soccer,
at an age prior to puberty, in a practice-focused, highly-organized,
adult-led environment. I am talking specifically about a hypothetical
8-year-old who only plays and practices soccer in an organized environment,
because that is all he likes/has time for/is able to commit to. This has become
quite common, sadly, and it’s not healthy.
Early engagement, on the other hand,
is a player-centric, free-play oriented introduction to a sport. Be it street soccer, beach soccer or
pickup games in the park, it is play in a variety of child-led games on
different surfaces, with different restrictions. It combines large doses of
free play with smaller doses of organized instruction. It is centered on the
enjoyment of the game, rather than deliberate practice in pursuit of a
long-term goal. It
increases intrinsic motivation and ownership of the experience. It
is what we might see more often in American basketball in city parks, and as
I have written about here, the research on the tremendous value of
play cannot be overstated.
The Messis, Ronaldos, and Neymars of
the world were early sport engagers, not specialists. They played whenever they could. They
played wherever they could. They were exposed to a variety of both unorganized
and organized structures. Do you think they were thrown into a practice-only
environment when they were 7 and drilled to be technical geniuses? No.
As Neymar’s futsal coach so aptly
stated: “My role was to give him freedom, not block his talent and try to
improve his technical abilities. I didn’t need to teach him how to dribble…”
Even Neymar
himself said, “I used to pick up the ball, set up the furniture and
go around dribbling anything that popped in front of me. I felt complete with
the ball at my feet; there is no other way to describe it…I loved to play.”
The world’s elite soccer players come
from early engagement environments far more often than early specialization
ones.
But sadly, here in the U.S., we tend
to devalue play, and overvalue adult-led practice, so much so that my friend Mark
O’Sullivan says “even the kids are starting to believe play has no
worth.”
Far too many parents and coaches think
straight lines and lots of cones are the key to a good practice, while sport
scientists and skill acquisition experts tell us that randomized chaos is
actually more effective for learning. Far too many “paying customers” don’t
want games based activities with freedom to fail; they wan’t joy-sticked
players and controlling coaches fixing every problem in pursuit of a win.
They want specialization, and not
engagement, becasue they believe that is the path to long-term success.
Now before anyone goes jumping for joy
here, saying, “my kid is not a specialist but an early engager, so I am in the
clear,” we must realize that early engagement can have many of the same
physical issues as early specialization does. In this article
by Dan Coyle, author of The Talent Code, he presents
evidence that children who specialize at a young age are:
- Twice as likely to get injured, many of these issues resulting from overuse
- Less likely to participate in sports as adults
- Are less coordinated and physically fit.
Simply because elite players come out
of other countries at a good clip does NOT mean that the research-identified
pitfalls of early specialization do not exist there. They do, they are rampant,
and those who choose to play only one sport from a very young age are gambling
that the very small chance of a payoff (professional-level play) happens before
they get injured or quit. It is not as though throughout the world no one
gets hurt, no one burns out, and no one has any if their soccer dream does not materialize.
So in a nutshell, whether you follow
the early engagement or early specialization path, there is an increased risk
of physical and psychological issues.
Yet soccer is an early introduction
sport, meaning that for a player to have aspirations of playing at a high level
he or she must begin prior to puberty. We often speak of the “Golden Age of
Skill Development” in soccer, that period from age 8-12 where kids are most
sensitive to developing the technical skills and movements needed to play at a
higher level.
If your child wants to play high-level
soccer later in life, he or she must engage with the game early on, and develop
technically prior to their growth spurt during puberty. That is without question.
So how do we balance the perils of
specialization with the fact that great soccer players need to start early and
play a lot?
This is where multi-sport
participation prior to age 12 comes into play. Developing an athletic
foundation helps to prevent many of these physical issues, as well as the
burnout and dropout caused by focus on one sport so young.
What I am hearing from coaches
throughout the world is that kids are not as “naturally” athletic as they used
to be. Years ago, children developed all around athleticism through PE class in
schools, ample free play, and in some countries, multi-sport participation.
Today, PE programs are being cut for more class time, free play is virtually
non-existent in many places, and kids are being forced to specialize far too
young. It is a dangerous combination, and it shortcuts the early engagement and
multi-sport phase that so many top players credit for their foundation and love
of the game. And it is not just an American problem.
Even at Manchester United, according
to sport performance coach Tony Strudwick, the overall
athleticism, body control and gymnastic movement ability that used to come from
street soccer and free play is not as prevalent. This athleticism now has to be
developed. To do so, as Strudwick directly stated at the recently completed
NSCAA Convention in Philadelphia, “U-12 and younger players should engage in
multi-sport participation.”
Wait a second. This is a PhD in sport
science in charge of elite player development at Manchester United, the club
that is in the top two in the world for producing professional players, saying
what? Play multiple sports? Did I hear that right?
You did. He is NOT saying play only
three months of soccer and you will be great. He is also NOT saying play two or
three sports 5 days a week during the same season. What he is saying is you do
not need to play soccer all 12 months, and playing other sports while taking
breaks from soccer (and players should have time off) is a good thing both
physically and psychologically.
The reason that Strudwick and others
like him are calling for more overall athletic development at the youngest ages
is that the demands of the modern game require a far greater degree of
athleticism then the game used to. Players train more, play more, travel more,
and in the modern counter attacking game, are required to cover huge distances
at top speed at critical moments.
Those who are not athletic enough
cannot meet the training or playing demands, and get injured too often to fully
develop. Playing other sports helps to develop the athleticism needed to
sustain the rigors of modern soccer.
But this is not the only reason
specialization is bad for your child, and bad for the game in North America.
Here we have even more compelling
reasons to get away from the early specialization environment than our world
competition does. Let’s explore a few of the other differences between the
environment facing a young American player and his or her counterparts
throughout the world.
Because in reality, we are comparing
apples and oranges.
The American Player Development Model
vs. the World
Culture
In the US, soccer is one of many
sports that kids have access to. Soccer is one of many sport choices, so we need a model that
fosters not only early involvement but continued participation, and forcing
kids to specialize in costly soccer programs does not do that. Also, due to our
relative affluence, the physical and emotional costs to attain elite status
outweigh the benefits for many players. They actually have a lot to lose by
going all in, as they can make a better living in other sports, or outside of
sport.
Throughout the world, in most
countries there are far fewer choices when it comes to sports. The best athletes will naturally
gravitate to soccer, and do not necessarily have or want a fall-back sport.
There will be more opportunities to play pick-up. The list goes on and on, but
in short, they have far less to do to keep their best potential players
interested in advancing in soccer, and many of those players have little to
fall back on if they do not make it as a player. It is worth the risk to go all
in.
Cost
Most soccer in the U.S. is pay to play. The better you are, the more you
pay, at least up until age 12 or so when you might move into an MLS-sponsored
academy program. Our system is set up to identify, train and promote only
those who can afford to pay, not those who have the most potential to develop.
By promoting early specialization, we indirectly promote increased competition
at younger ages, tryouts, cuts, as well as increased costs. These barriers
to entry are and will continue to be devastating to the growth and development
of the game.
Throughout the world, soccer is free. Whether it is government funding to
youth sports clubs, street soccer, or professional clubs funding their
academies through the sale of players and professional level revenue, the only
barrier to entry is your ability to play, and your ability to get seen. If you
are good enough, you are in.
The best players may make choices
about moving and schooling, but the entire system is designed to identify and
train the best players. The better ones move up the ladder to top clubs, while
others can continue to develop at their local club, free of charge, and usually
at their own pace.
Player Development Model
In the United States, as much as no
one likes to admit it, we have a team-focused development model. Our obsession with winning continues
to trickle down to younger and younger ages. There are now some states that
have tryouts for 6-year-olds’ teams and U-9 state championships. Aside from
increasing costs, when you have tryouts, tiered teams and state championships
at U7-10, you turn away from individual player development and focus on the
results and advancement of teams. The more you win, the more paying customers
you attract. In essence, winning keeps the doors of the business open, and
this places individual player development secondary to team success.
Throughout the world, clubs have a
financial incentive to develop individual players. Lower-tier clubs fund their
operations by selling promising young players to big clubs. Even elite-level
clubs, while perhaps only promoting a few players to their own first team, sell
dozens of players on to other clubs, which in turn funds their academy and even
the purchase of first-team players. While a professional club may tout a
cup-winning youth side, the development of individual players is what keeps or
costs coaches their jobs and keeps the academy operation in the black.
In summation, the current American
model is team-centric, excludes players and diminishes our player base by
placing financial and commitment burdens on our players and families at far too
young an age. When you combine this with a lack of early engagement in the
game, replaced by enforced specialization, you do not have a model that will
develop elite world players.
Requiring soccer specialization prior
to age 12 will not fix these differences. In fact, it will likely exacerbate
them. But there is a
way forward.
In Part II, I will lay out a simple
plan that can create a culture of early sport engagement in the U.S. that will
not only benefit individual players, but will contribute to the health of our
clubs and the growth of the game in our country.
I think we all can get behind that
concept in a general sense.
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