{"id":232,"date":"2026-06-08T23:40:04","date_gmt":"2026-06-08T23:40:04","guid":{"rendered":"https:\/\/cityflowjournal.com\/?p=232"},"modified":"2026-06-08T23:40:04","modified_gmt":"2026-06-08T23:40:04","slug":"why-the-us-sucks-at-soccer","status":"publish","type":"post","link":"https:\/\/cityflowjournal.com\/?p=232","title":{"rendered":"Why the US sucks at soccer"},"content":{"rendered":"<div>\n<p>As the United States prepares to host the World Cup for the second time, it\u2019s worth grappling with an uncomfortable fact. The Yanks are highly unlikely ever to become a footballing power \u2014 at least not playing any version of \u201cfootball\u201d that doesn\u2019t involve gladiator pads and concussion-inducing helmets. And the reason has almost nothing to do with tactics or a shortage of home-grown talent. Rather, its footballing struggles come basically down to money, and how the beautiful game has been ravaged by those most American of innovations: ruthless capitalists and competitive suburban parents.<\/p>\n<p>Read more <a href=\"https:\/\/cityflowjournal.com\/?p=230\">Can America ever escape race?<\/a><\/p>\n<p>Hosting a World Cup normally confers an enormous advantage. The bookmakers shorten the odds on Germany, Spain, Italy, or Brazil the moment they\u2019re handed the world\u2019s most popular sporting tournament. Yet America\u2019s chances currently sit at 60-1, lagging behind both Japan and Morocco \u2014 nations that have never lifted the trophy, from continents that haven\u2019t either. Thirty years after America first staged the event, the world\u2019s richest country is still a long shot on its own turf.<\/p>\n<p>For the diehard US soccer fan, it wasn\u2019t supposed to go this way. In the late Eighties, when FIFA first awarded the tournament to the US, the sport was routinely degraded as \u201cun-American\u201d by the country\u2019s sports media. For decades, commentators had mocked it as a \u201cgirl\u2019s sport\u201d played by \u201cskinny boys\u201d too timid for the nation\u2019s manly and militaristic alternative. Meanwhile, the rest of the planet remained equally baffled by America\u2019s ultra-violent, heavily padded \u201chand-egg\u201d offshoot of rugby.<\/p>\n<p>Until recently, indeed, this mutual incomprehension gave soccer a peculiar charge inside the US itself. For Gen Xers and Millennials, the game felt rebellious and punk precisely because mainstream America neither liked nor understood the allure of <em>f\u00fatbol<\/em>. As for the dullards \u2014 so the self-flattering story went \u2014 they liked helmet-ball for its very ferocity. Before there was MAGA, there were the Nascar fans who voted for George W. Bush and stuck Dallas Cowboys decals on their lift-kit pickup trucks. They listened to Rush Limbaugh and sports-talk radio and mocked the \u201csnowflakes\u201d who played soccer as they planned their next study abroad trip.<\/p>\n<p>As with all stereotypes, there was indeed something to these narratives. In the early 2000s and 2010s, just watching the Premiership in an American bar felt somehow like flipping conservative voters the proverbial bird. We were a different kind of America, the kind that understood the world beyond our borders. Soccer fans were the hip, educated, urban men and women who appreciated craft beers and flew Real Madrid flags in their backyards. Soccer served as a class marker and culture-war indicator long before it became a national pastime for wine moms and heavily tattooed tech bros.<\/p>\n<p>As with most of the 20th century, there was a moment when liberal America imagined all this would resolve itself in their homeland\u2019s favor. Shortly after the US reached the quarterfinals of the 2002 World Cup \u2014 dispatching not only Mexico but also Lu\u00eds Figo\u2019s Portugal \u2014 it became fashionable to call the country the sleeping giant of world football. Reporting on wannabe American soccer hooligans in the mid-2000s, as I did early in my career, the notion that the US would eventually reach the heights of Brazil and Germany was indeed seductive.<\/p>\n<p>Give the West\u2019s largest nation a sport that was rapidly becoming its most popular youth activity, fold in tens of millions of new Central and South American immigrants, then add the presumed superiority of African-American athletes, and the US was thought to command one of the deepest soccer talent pools on Earth. Once the Bo Jacksons and Deion Sanders of the next generation chose soccer over football and baseball or basketball, so the thinking went, American dominance was destined to follow.<\/p>\n<p>Yet despite the fact that it\u2019s easier than ever to watch the big European games on American TV, this just hasn\u2019t happened. Forget the betting odds: only the most delusional members of the \u201cAmerican Outlaws\u201d club, as Team USA fans style themselves, believe their boys can so much as reach another quarterfinal, let alone lift the World Cup trophy on 19 July. Some perspective is owed here. Only eight nations have ever held the World Cup trophy, so it\u2019s not so surprising that America has failed to crash the party. There are other problems too. The Yanks, for all their wealth and new attention to the sport, still increasingly field a squad of questionable provenance: at least five regular starters were born and raised in Europe, hold EU citizenship or dual passports, and learned the sport at European academies. Major League Soccer, for its part, may have grown from a laughing stock into a genuine business. Yet in sporting terms it remains a fifth- or sixth-tier league \u2014 one that attracts the world\u2019s best only as a lucrative retirement home.<\/p>\n<p>Read more <a href=\"https:\/\/cityflowjournal.com\/?p=227\">Death and glory at the Isle of Man TT<\/a><\/p>\n<p>Unsurprisingly, as with everything in the States, these problems come down to money. To see how, it helps to revisit the most ambitious attempt to explain American soccer\u2019s backwardness. Back in 2001, the scholars Andrei Markovits and Steven Hellerman published <em>Offside: Soccer and American exceptionalism<\/em> framed around Werner Sombart\u2019s famous question: \u201cWhy is there no socialism in the United States?\u201d They argued that the same cultural forces kept football marginal. Nativistic Americans, the authors found, prefer individualistic and militaristic games that mirror the country\u2019s political culture. The premise was sharp even if the execution was not. The book often reads as verbose and sluggish where, given the topic, it should have been as brisk as an Mbapp\u00e9 run down the left flank. Who could make a topic like soccer practically unreadable? Academics, that\u2019s who.<\/p>\n<p>In the early 2000s, the scholars\u2019 thesis at least matched the evidence. Now, though, football is popular from sea to shining sea, yet the national team still languishes. Landon Donovan \u2014 the finest player the country has produced \u2014 recently put the blame on American soccer\u2019s youth system. His complaint centers on the win-at-all-costs mentality that seemingly grips the system. Parents and coaches, Donovan argues, \u201cget obsessed with winning just as much as the coaches do because they\u2019ve been told that\u2019s what\u2019s going to get their child to college and professional \u2014 and it\u2019s all bullshit\u201d. In truth, of course, children don\u2019t need to be the next Pel\u00e9 in kindergarten; they just need to develop a feel for the game that scoreboards can\u2019t reward.<\/p>\n<p>It\u2019s here where the money comes in. Youth sports in America are now a $40 billion industry \u2014 and private equity has quietly captured a great deal of it. Firms such as Juggernaut Capital have rolled up hundreds of local clubs into national conglomerates; 3STEP Sports, backed by Juggernaut, controls more than 1,500 events serving more than two million athletes a year. The tactics are the familiar ones of private-equity extraction: junk fees, long contracts, mandatory and expensive travel circuits. What was once an affordable neighborhood activity has been re-engineered into a maximum-extraction machine, with elite youth club soccer now costing many families upwards of $5,000 a year per child.<\/p>\n<p>The footballing consequences are precisely what one would expect. In nearly every successful footballing nation, the sport remains rooted in working-class life: children play informally and constantly, and the most gifted are then handed to expert coaches for technical training. But just as with the country\u2019s dysfunctional healthcare and university systems, American youth soccer puts profits and protection for entrenched bureaucrats first, and outcomes a distant second. It filters for the affluent rather than those with the most ability \u2014 the cost of participating has climbed some 46% in just a few years, and lower-income children now play high-level youth soccer at roughly half the rate of their wealthier peers \u2014 and then hands the survivors off to mediocre coaches who are rewarded for winning under-12 tournaments rather than developing players to their full potential.<\/p>\n<p>Markovits and Hellerman argued that American soccer developed along totally different lines from the country\u2019s more mainstream sports. Given the tremendous strength of US nativism, early on soccer was seen as dubiously foreign: both in origin and application. (As late as 2014, Ann Coulter was arguing that the growing popularity of soccer reflected the moral decay of the country.) Yet as that early hipster fandom implies, the opposite ended up happening. Study-abroad trips are expensive, and far from becoming a blue-collar pastime like basketball, American soccer ultimately remained the purview of white suburbanites. Though the US has grown the technical capacity to compete at international soccer, those in charge of running our youth system have optimized the program to extract maximum revenue from bougie parents \u2014 hardly conducive to honing talent.<\/p>\n<p>Altogether, then, out from the dugout the real American exceptionalism emerges \u2014 the nation\u2019s perennial institutional corruption and un-abashed mammonism. The US didn\u2019t fail to fall in love with soccer because Americans hate immigrant games. Over the past 30 years, it did indeed fall in love with <em>f\u00fatbol<\/em>, only to then do to the game what it does to almost everything else, turning a public good into a luxury for the wealthy alone. Soccer might be a sport that\u2019s harder to make individualistic in the way Americans are accustomed to. But, given proper time and attention, the country\u2019s notorious knack for enterprise has found a way of making it as money-grabbingly American as the Superbowl.<\/p>\n<p>A nation that demonizes politicians who promise public childcare \u2014 and that financializes childhood itself at every turn \u2014 can\u2019t be surprised when it struggles to manufacture world-class strikers. The raw athletic talent is almost certainly lurking out there, in the immigrant neighborhoods and the public parks. It\u2019s just that we\u2019ve built a machine to price those kids out. Then, we wonder, every four years, why the sleeping giant never wakes.<\/p>\n<p>Read more <a href=\"https:\/\/cityflowjournal.com\/?p=225\">Russell T Davies is stuck in a purity spiral<\/a><\/p>\n<\/div>\n","protected":false},"excerpt":{"rendered":"<p>As the United States prepares to host the World Cup for the second time, it\u2019s worth grappling with an uncomfortable fact. The Yanks are highly unlikely ever to become a footballing power \u2014 at least not playing any version of \u201cfootball\u201d that doesn\u2019t involve gladiator pads and concussion-inducing helmets. And the reason has almost nothing [&hellip;]<\/p>\n","protected":false},"author":1,"featured_media":231,"comment_status":"open","ping_status":"closed","sticky":false,"template":"","format":"standard","meta":{"footnotes":""},"categories":[83],"tags":[],"class_list":["post-232","post","type-post","status-publish","format-standard","has-post-thumbnail","hentry","category-world-cup"],"yoast_head":"<!-- This site is optimized with the Yoast SEO plugin v27.6 - https:\/\/yoast.com\/product\/yoast-seo-wordpress\/ -->\n<title>Why the US sucks at soccer - \u0421ity Flow Journal<\/title>\n<meta name=\"robots\" content=\"index, follow, max-snippet:-1, max-image-preview:large, max-video-preview:-1\" \/>\n<link rel=\"canonical\" href=\"https:\/\/cityflowjournal.com\/?p=232\" \/>\n<meta property=\"og:locale\" content=\"en_US\" \/>\n<meta property=\"og:type\" content=\"article\" \/>\n<meta property=\"og:title\" content=\"Why the US sucks at soccer - \u0421ity Flow Journal\" \/>\n<meta property=\"og:description\" content=\"As the United States prepares to host the World Cup for the second time, it\u2019s worth grappling with an uncomfortable fact. 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