| No one cares about your kindergartener. |
Thanks for sharing |
| This is not secret advice lol! They are all told to work on both feet. |
| My son is a left-footed defender and he has made every soccer team he has ever tried out for (only 4 teams total). |
| They sure are! If you google this question you will see that left footed players are over-represented at the professional level. I doubt anyone has studied this question at a lower level, say MLS Next, but I would bet good money that left footed are over represented in most high level leagues. |
Also over represented in baseball. Something that is rare becomes an asset because it’s different than what they expect. |
| 100% left footed players get more attention. It's a major advantage. |
High level teams? Mediocre teams? |
| Players really should have both left and right feet. Otherwise, players will not be as fast due to their need to hop. |
| Yes. |
Being able to shoot and kick long passes with both feet is common after the age of 12. |
| In huge group tryouts, I don't know that the left-footedness stood out at the time. However, my left-footed daughter (only lefty on her team) gets assigned to the left almost exclusively (as fullback or winger). She does OK on the right side (though likely worse than a right-footed teammate) but on the left side, she seems much more comfortable getting down the left side and crossing into the box to the center forward/midfielder. I think her teammates and coach appreciate her comfort level on the left and she enjoys playing that side. Speed and reaction time are also important since she is usually up against fast right wingers (when she plays fullback). The one downside is that she didn't get rotated through positions as much as other teammates because her left-footedness was perceived as such an advantage on the left. |
| It is coach dependent. I know of one coach who loves a lefty (and has at least 5 on the team) and another coach who avoids a lefty |
| Why avoid? |