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[quote=Anonymous][quote=Anonymous][quote=Anonymous][quote=Anonymous][quote=Anonymous][quote=Anonymous][quote=Anonymous][b]No one in the world has figured out how to develop high level professional players.[/b] With cutting-edge innovations like QoP-based Tables, strategically coned-off endlines to supercharge intensity, and size 4 balls optimized for skill and speed, MLS NEXT™ is breaking barriers and redefining the future of the sport. No one has cracked the code for producing elite professional players—until now. The NEXT generation starts here! 🔥⚽[/quote] If ur being sarcastic u doing a poor job. Otherwise it’s wild how ignorant you are. Literally all of Europe and South America do this for a living. Ironically, it’s in those places where YOUTH soccer ain’t a business and only the truly best get to enter the system and then get developed by experts. I’d sit this one out, if I were you. Bonus point: explain how a teenager like Lamine Yamal already has a national European cup with Spain and a few domestic titles before turning 18 if “ No one in the world has figured out how to develop high level professional players”[/quote] Dude lamine is a prodigy in a million. Watch his u12 videos he was already above and just kept that way never slowing down in terms of skills and performance.[/quote] Freddy Adu was our last prodigy, right? How’d his career pan out? Asking for a friend. By the way, Lamine’s training from U10 until he hit the first team comprised of 5-6 days/weekly. And no, it wasn’t just 90 mins each time. Of those 5-6 days 3 or 4 of them were double sessions. 2 hrs in the day and another 2 hrs after school. After his club training guess what… probably the most important piece of the puzzle… take a deep breath for this one ok? he played in the streets, the town plaza, and in school yard during recess with his buddies and ZERO adult joysticking. Sit down and learn for once. [/quote] OK. so he joined is first club when he was 4 and joined Barcelona (La Masia) at 7. And trained 5-6 days a week with multiple double sessions. But it was "ZERO adult joysticking" in the other times that made him the player he is. Talk about slanting a narrative to what you want to see. [/quote] Praying to God you’re not a soccer “coach” or director in DMV. Your post oozes stupidity everywhere. [/quote] That's what makes your first post so funny. It is so internally contradictory to be laughable and then you insult an imagined reader. You literally said, with authority, that he's been training with professional coaches since he was a young kid and sometimes for 4 hrs a day, 5 to 6 times a week and then said "the most important piece of the puzzle" was "play[ing] in school yard during recess with his buddies." It's hilarious. So keep it up and tell us how kicking the ball around at lunch is the "most important" thing to turn a player into Lamine Yamal. [/quote]
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