Jul 08
Looking South, The Shifting Focus of the U.S. U-20s
The Youth System in the ‘States has always been a bit of a sore subject. We have 300 million people, 3 million of who play youth soccer, yet we struggle to create the talent necessary to compete for the ultimate prize in International soccer, the World Cup. Those who follow U.S. Soccer closely tend to look to the youth squads to see how the national team will look in the future. While most players who play for the U-17s, U-20s or U-23s will never be serious contributors to the full national team, the stars of those teams tend to make the jump fairly quickly, Jozy Altidore, Charlie Davies, and Stuart Holden are good examples of that.
It may have gone fairly unnoticed with all of the interest in the World Cup, but there has been a major shift in selection for the U.S. U-20s, which is an indication of a shifting philosophy.
In may, the U-20s participated in the Cor Groenewegan, an international tournament in Holland. The roster had 9 Americans playing abroad, 4 in MLS, 4 from college, 1 from USL, and 2 from the Development Academy. For recent times, this is a fairly normal team makeup. Americans Abroad, MLS, and College supply the lion’s share of the players. The more interesting news came more recently, when Thomas Rongen released his roster for a domestic camp in California.
This roster had 10 from college, 8 from Mexico, 3 from the Development Academy, and 1 from Brazil, Costa Rica, and Portugal a piece. USSF has often been criticized for ignoring the Hispanic population, but the makeup of this squad suggests that USSF has learned from their past mistakes.
At Copa Chivas, a tournament in Mexico that the U-20s participated in, the U.S. competed against their peers from Mexico and around the world, and were largely bested. The ultimate embarrassment came when the U-20s played Tigres, a team that had 8 players eligible to play for the U.S., and were beaten on a goal by Moises Orozco, an American himself.
Rongen and USSF learned from their mistakes and have since mined Mexico for the best talent they had previously been ignorant of.
This Year’s World Cup squad had 5 players with any ethnic ties to the hispanic community in America. It is quite possible, considering that USSF is finally taking notice of the wealth of talent available from the hispanic community, that the makeup of future World Cup teams will change drastically. This new interest will also hopefully avoid issues like that of Edgar Castillo, a player who was ignored by the U.S. youth system, and found his way onto the Mexican National team shortly thereafter (Castillo obviously switched allegiances later, but he was initially ignored). It also will bring a new type of player to the team, as players who have played in Mexico often tend to be more technical and creative than their counterparts.
For too many years, USSF has been ignoring the soccer-mad Hispanic community. This recent shift though will do nothing but improve the player pool, and add talent and depth. USSF has finally got it right, and in the years to come, the National Team will reap the benefits of USSF’s new philosophy on youth team selection.
–Max Zeger
Follow me on twitter @mcmz403 for news, banter, and opinion.











July 9th, 2010 at 10:16 am
[...] we wondered where the new talent for the US national team would come from. This piece looks at US Soccer’s shift in focus to America’s Hispanic players. The Washington Post argues the US will need to better balance younger and older players. Thomas [...]
January 5th, 2012 at 3:18 am
e-code for zometa…