Anonymous wrote:There are a lot of Latino clubs in the area that are much more affordable than other clubs and serve this purpose. A lot of those kids end up in MLSNext/ECNL clubs come U13.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Wouldn't it be nice if fields were free, lights were free, coaches were free, referees were free, uniforms were free, leagues were free...
Someone should create a club that offers all these services at a low cost and try to compete! I'm sure it will work just like "the rest of the world" and people will just flock to them.
Such defeatist thinking to actually think that because that's the way it's been it should continue to be.
Even though it obviously is a failed model.
The obviously only thing that's causing the richest country in the world to be the only one with unaffordable soccer is mentality.
It can't be resources.
How ignorant is it to think the wrong way is the only way.
Solutions only happen when you remove intellectual dishonesty, acknowledge the root causes and commit to resolve.
Anonymous wrote:Wouldn't it be nice if fields were free, lights were free, coaches were free, referees were free, uniforms were free, leagues were free...
Someone should create a club that offers all these services at a low cost and try to compete! I'm sure it will work just like "the rest of the world" and people will just flock to them.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:I suppose it’s nice to wonder what if but that’s just not the culture here. Exclusivity and competition are baked into American culture. It’s good and bad for sure. It’s nice to wonder what it would be like if corporate culture don’t favor who you know and only rewarded merit and the good of the community. Or college admissions. Or if exclusive country clubs let everyone in no matter how much money you have. But there is zero chance it happens
Exclusive country clubs are all around the world.
Expensive exclusive elusive pay-to-play soccer is solely and strictly a US phenomenon.
Anonymous wrote:I suppose it’s nice to wonder what if but that’s just not the culture here. Exclusivity and competition are baked into American culture. It’s good and bad for sure. It’s nice to wonder what it would be like if corporate culture don’t favor who you know and only rewarded merit and the good of the community. Or college admissions. Or if exclusive country clubs let everyone in no matter how much money you have. But there is zero chance it happens
Anonymous wrote:Wouldn't it be nice if like the rest of the world our youth soccer (aside from professional academies) was based on local neighborhood community teams that did selections and participation based on talent and skills?
Affordable to all families.
I'm assuming clubs in DC, Silver Spring, Manassas, Wheaton would be top dogs in the DMV