The recent failure of the United States Men’s National Team to qualify for next year’s World Cup has generated a lot of discussion about what went wrong and what is wrong in the U.S. soccer system.
Among those chiming in is Michael Lippert, a retired local club and high school coach who owned the Soccer Center gear and apparel store until it closed this year. He recently made two blog posts about what he thinks is wrong with soccer in the U.S. and how he would fix it.
Lippert and Kentucky Youth Soccer Association Technical Director Adrian Parrish generated a Twitter thread discussing it, and Lippert recently was a guest on EPL 1300 with Matthew Laurence. The show amazingly offers local soccer talk on WLXG 1300 AM. The Lippert episode is no longer available online, sadly.
Lippert’s first blog: “What’s Wrong With U.S. Soccer You Ask? Everything,” pulls no punches.
“Our first problem is… the kids. … our world is different today. Back then I didn’t have Xbox, YouTube, internet, iPads, smartphones or SnapChat to take my attention. I had to focus my attention on socializing with my friends through sports and school. There were no other ways to connect. That connection to soccer was powerful and stimulated my passion for the sport.”
He also takes a shot at how soccer is organized in this country, including locally.
“Our next problem is the youth system. Shocking right? AYSO, US Club, USYSA, ODP, ECNL, Development Academy, etc… they aren’t working together to improve the game. They are competing for players, selling that their approach is better.”
In Lippert’s follow-up post, “The Solutions. The Only Thing That Is Constant Is Change,” he argues for a massive consolidation of soccer in the U.S., and a unifying strategy. And he wants to make it more affordable.
“Our 1st goal should be to reduce this cost and make it affordable for every family. So how can do that? Well here we go… First, we have to change the structure of US Soccer. We don’t need to start over, just modify and realign. We have to consolidate branches or re-purpose them.’
There will be a lot of people who might not agree with everything Lippert says, including me. But it’s great that this kind of discussion is taking place locally.
Parrish recently joined Coach Reed Maltbie, a California coaching expert, speaker and author, for his “Shot Happens” podcast.
An intro to the segment on CoachReed.com states: “Adrian also talks about the elephant in the room, and that’s the transition between rec soccer and travel soccer. If our rec coaches are not developing our players from the earliest age and instilling a love of the game, the academies are already a step behind by losing possible players or forced to reteach basics. As Adrian shares, this does not mean we professionalize the younger kids, but rather give our rec coaches the materials and teaching they need to be competent teachers.”
Listen to the podcast here: http://coachreed.com/podcast/shothappens/shot-happens-adrian-parrish/
And check out the Lippert-Parrish Twitter conversation below:
What’s wrong with US Soccer you ask? Everything. https://t.co/JVQrbfxrbs
— Michael Lippert (@melippert18) October 13, 2017
Not disagreeing with some of your points, but what you quoting involves the players of tomorrow. What went wrong with the team of today?
— Adrian Parrish (@kysoccerdoc) October 13, 2017
When you talk about changing youth and HS players thats the future. The team that was trying to qualify went through a different pathway
— Adrian Parrish (@kysoccerdoc) October 13, 2017
So what your saying is we will continue to fail if we keep the youth game the way it is. But the current crop may not of gone that pathway
— Adrian Parrish (@kysoccerdoc) October 13, 2017
I said nothing about plans. Your points are valid but the team that failed probably went through a different system than that of today’s
— Adrian Parrish (@kysoccerdoc) October 13, 2017
Without looking up stats & doing research I’d have to say no. How has it been the same scouting system when staff has changed?
— Adrian Parrish (@kysoccerdoc) October 13, 2017
In clubs & at the youth level. Do you realize the life span of the NYT coaches and scouts it’s a revolving door, minus Ramos & Hackworth
— Adrian Parrish (@kysoccerdoc) October 13, 2017
Half of the 12 years I have been here we have not had a solid TD in this region. So how is that recycling the same people?
— Adrian Parrish (@kysoccerdoc) October 13, 2017
Correct
— Adrian Parrish (@kysoccerdoc) October 13, 2017
The staffing structure needs reviewing. That’s why I said they will think inside to out.
— Adrian Parrish (@kysoccerdoc) October 13, 2017
Explain you’re reasoning and views on that when we agreed a few minutes ago that this country needs more due to its size?
— Adrian Parrish (@kysoccerdoc) October 13, 2017
So I’ll quit and just let all the coaches do what they want with no guidance. I’m sure this tweet will make plenty of people happy
— Adrian Parrish (@kysoccerdoc) October 13, 2017
Its not about telling you how to do your job. Its about guiding, it’s about being a link as for the state DOC’s reporting not for me to say
— Adrian Parrish (@kysoccerdoc) October 13, 2017
Eliminate it and let everyone do what they want to do. Heck it works for most youth clubs.
— Adrian Parrish (@kysoccerdoc) October 13, 2017
My point is if you can't qualify why it is important, then that is a sign it is not needed. Last thing this country need is more oversight
— Michael Lippert (@melippert18) October 13, 2017