To be fair, the PP you are harshing on is not wrong. The US has produced several world class keepers, most of whom are not as good with their feet as their counterparts from Spain, Germany, etc. Being an amazing athlete with great hands is a lot more important than having outstanding technical foot skills for a keeper. For kids who think they want to play in goal I agree it's best to stay a soccer field player for as long as possible, and also to play basketball as seriously as time allows. |
Solo was a forward through much of her youth and high school career. Other than that, of course, you're right. Solo just has other issues. |
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Way too young to specialize, but bad travel coaches will exploit your child's preference. Your kid won't be given the out of goal field time every young goalie needs to learn the game.
Plus, every so often thr nets get bigger with the new season. Your child's goalie days can be finished if she isn't big enough for the next stage. Good chance she will be discarded at that point. My DS enjoyed goal, so I get it. But not all coaches treat young goalies well. |
US keepers are not celebrated the world over. There isn't a single US keeper that was playing at a consistent CL level club since Tim Howard correctly was dropped and sold from manchester united 13 years and never was looked at by a cl level club ever again. A sweeper keeper is not a brand new concept - lev yashin, grocics, van der sar, higuita - i won't go on - you probably don't know half of those names - but needles to say - the idea has been there for 50 years. The fact that you equate it with a hitting pitcher makes me hope that you are no where near youth soccer development. Otherwise there will be more taylor twellmans being made and less cristian pulisic's. |
| Honestly most kids at that age who want to specialize in goal don't really want to be playing soccer. |
Wait -- huh? How's that? |
Nobody really trains goalies at that age, if they tell you they do you should run away. You should look for a team that focuses on development of field players, not goalies. On game day they ask who wants to play goal and your son might be the only one to volunteer, few kids want to do it... especially after getting shelled against some good travel teams. |
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This is the most ridiculous thread I've ever seen.
If a kid want to play goalie, let him play goalie. All the kids on my sons team hate being stuck at goal...they'd love this kid. Who cares if he's not setting himself up to be the next keeper for the US team? |