| Or Sterling, Franconia, or Herndon. Anyhow, we should end this troll, honey pot topic. |
Not just Northern Arlington. Parkview, Manassas Park and Charles city cancelled their American football varsity season due to lack of enrollment. The demographics have chanced and also parents are becoming more concerned with concussions and other health issue related to football. |
Not sure a good thing... |
This is exactly right. N Arlington is a unicorn if kids there have a true (not parent generated) natural preference for soccer. |
| Lolz. North Arlington Futbol Culture. |
Parent generated for sure |
|
My kids attend a N Arlington elementary school and soccer isn’t played that much. The Principal did outlaw it and balls for awhile citing too many injuries.
But, basketball has by far always been the predominant sport at recess—even for the travel soccer kids. |
I think what this misses is that U.S. is a diverse country and there is a large soccer first population (tens of millions) of recent Latin American, African, and European immigrants. There are also a good number of multi-generation Americans whose favorite sport is soccer - played competitively when younger, just grew to like the sport etc.. U.S. is not a uniform place where you can just say soccer is 3rd or 4th most popular sport so it is 3rd or 4th in every boy's mind. |
|
Soccer is the 2nd most played sport in the U.S. for youth -- behind basketball. Estimates of course, but the numbers are somewhere between 2.0 and 2.4 million kids/yound adults playing soccer each year. That is so high, because young kids play it as their first team sport, and girls/women play it into adulthood.
Football is still the number 1 overall high school sport for boys. Overall, the numbers would go -- Track and field, football, and then soccer. Football is about 1,000,000 in high school, but that is really just boys. Soccer is about 800,000 for boys and girls. |
|
We signed our young kids up for soccer because it is an accessible sport (not much equipment or special fields required) and it is one you can get pretty good at no matter your eventual size and shape.
I think that explains a lot of its youth popularity. Add to that the multi-cultural nature of DC and its popularity is even more obvious. At the same time, youth football participation is on the decline, in part because of head injury concerns. And I think many kids raised on the pace of video games find baseball a bit slow. |
| Most popular sport with young kids |