Yes, what he theorized is interesting but I'd buy it more if he had addressed how America has had both BY and SY. Instead, he noted how America is BY without addressing that it used to be SY fairly recently which just might affect the data set a lot. And when you look at the lowest months they just happen to be the lowest of the BY and SY systems. |
read the article "back to our hypothesis of a strong influence from youth development programs, I’d like to offer an ulterior explanation: financial impact. Unlike most European and South American countries, the US youth development structure is based on a “Pay-to-Play” model, which relies heavily on financial compensation from the players. In other words, it is a LOT more expensive to play for a youth team in the US than most other countries. The large yearly financial costs can deter many children from joining youth teams. " |
Keep reading Unlike most European and South American countries, the US youth development structure is based on a “Pay-to-Play” model, which relies heavily on financial compensation from the players. In other words, it is a LOT more expensive to play for a youth team in the US than most other countries. The large yearly financial costs can deter many children from joining youth teams. So, while the US also uses the calendar year to determine age groups for youth players, the inevitably smaller pool of children willing/able to pay for youth soccer may cause the more balanced distribution we have witnessed above" |
Of course you would. Whatever you can think of to support your faulty hypothesis. Doing the actual work would hard. |
No clue what. you're trying to relay |
You're doing the same because you want to argue that RAE doesn't apply in the US because of pay-to-play, so you don't want to consider flaws in his argument. You're emotionally tied to it. |
All the bold part does is prove that the author believes $$$ is the reason America is different than all other countries. |
It's what he said about the US age registration system -- which was more complicated than just BY for those players. It's a potential flaw that should be explored. |
I do think rae is trash But the author thinks America is distributed evenly because of P2P and $$$ influencing who makes it to the highest levels. |
He made an oversight in not knowing that the players mostly played when the youth leagues were SY. Kind of a big deal. |
He offered he didn't extrapolate. Words matter. |
Whatever he didnt blame RAE |
Yes, it's the author's best guess at that moment. He's pretty much inviting for others to question/offer other theories. |
Degrees aren't for leaning on, like a stool while working at the mall, there for waving like a flag at a victory day parade, baby! |
This might be more helpful ... He said "may" So, while the US also uses the calendar year to determine age groups for youth players, the inevitably smaller pool of children willing/able to pay for youth soccer may cause the more balanced distribution we have witnessed above" He also called for more research on this specifically. Financial Impact: Investigate the impact of financial stability, particularly in the US, on becoming a professional soccer player. Utilize features such as income of families, location, etc. to determine if financial limitations contribute to the observed birth trends. |