- May 13th, 2014, 6:47 pm
#454284
Until recently, it was the opposite for basketball. Kids here had a significant advantage over kids playing Europe. Then you saw Europe coach centers to shoot, something that wasn't being done here. Shortly after those kids started growing up and playing professionally, the talent gap between US basketball players and Europe basketball players shrinked, considerably.
For the most part, our youth leagues consist of kids who couldn't play at football or basketball, and soccer is their backup. On top of that, the coaching is just horrendous, compared to our European counterparts. Until that changes, MLS will never be near the competitiveness of the Premier league.
JakeP50 wrote:I don't think more Euros and Latinos helps long term, eventually they would just go back to supporting their club from back home. Just like transplants within the States they don't change teams when they move, most of the time. I think with the growth of soccer the way it is right now, I give it 5-10 years before MLS is competing with the Premier League for American viewers.MLS quality won't get better until our youth leagues get better. There are plenty of kids here playing soccer, but I would say that coaching is the biggest problem. Kids playing U12 in Europe have close to the skill level of kids playing U18 here.
Until recently, it was the opposite for basketball. Kids here had a significant advantage over kids playing Europe. Then you saw Europe coach centers to shoot, something that wasn't being done here. Shortly after those kids started growing up and playing professionally, the talent gap between US basketball players and Europe basketball players shrinked, considerably.
For the most part, our youth leagues consist of kids who couldn't play at football or basketball, and soccer is their backup. On top of that, the coaching is just horrendous, compared to our European counterparts. Until that changes, MLS will never be near the competitiveness of the Premier league.



- By Humble_Opinion