Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Whenever I hear "phenom" to describe a soccer player, I can't help but think of Freddy Adu
Me too. I also love how the Pulisic family kept it low key and nobody had really heard of Christian prior to Dortmund and many soccer people still hadn’t until his USMNT. They were very modest and the parents always said early on that they wouldn’t know how he would turn out until he was done maturing.
People that go nuts for kids under the age of 16, I worry.
This girl is obviously incredibly talented. Her parents took her out of school as kid so she could practice soccer 8 hours a day. Pulisic only had Christian practicing 2 days a week early on and he went to school. They weren’t pushy parents. It came from him.
Anonymous wrote:Whenever I hear "phenom" to describe a soccer player, I can't help but think of Freddy Adu
Anonymous wrote:Whenever I hear "phenom" to describe a soccer player, I can't help but think of Freddy Adu
Anonymous wrote:She's ok. Might be able to make FCV's 05 DA team. /s/
Olivia Moultrie is only 13 years old, but she is already embarking on a career as a professional soccer player.
According to Andrew Keh of the New York Times, Moultrie signed an endorsement deal with Nike and a representation pact with Wasserman Media Group. As a result, she's no longer eligible to play collegiately, which is notable given she already made history two years ago by accepting a scholarship offer from the North Carolina Tar Heels.
Keh noted Moultrie, then 11 years old, was the youngest girls soccer player to publicly accept a scholarship offer.
"It's just a shift in women's sports," Moultrie's agent, Spencer Wadsworth, said while revealing the offer the teenager received from Nike was worth more than the four-year scholarship. "You see it more and more now where women's soccer is catching up to the men's side, and there's more opportunities for them."