Aradhus wrote:thegreekdog wrote:I read an exchange between two ESPN writers that had little to do with soccer, except that the one guy noted that big countries like the United States don't have good soccer teams (for example), while smaller countries like the Netherlands do. Why is that (he posited). He thought it was because smaller countries take care of and hone their players.
Well lots of small countries have shit leagues and teams. There are lots(way too many for me to list) of factors that come in to play. I know Holland has a really great setup, one of the most respected, when it comes to young kids. They have acadamies set up and they bring them in at a young age and hone their skills. I'm sure money comes into play. Maybe government funding to improve facilities for kids and provide coaches. When Scottish pundits talk about the state of Scottish football that's all they every talk about. The kids aren't getting the support, the funding, the access to facilities and trainers, etc, and unless that changes the quality of players produced in Scotland will never improve. Back in the day Scotland produced a lot of great talent, but that was before countries spent money on introduing infrastructure to help produce kids with talent, something Scotland didn't do, and now we pay the price for it. We never qualify for the big tournaments. On the rare occasions that scottish teams do well in European competitions the teams are filled with foreigners.
The guys at ESPN were talking about soccer at first, and then they switched to American football, with two ideas being bandied about:
Idea #1: There are plenty of awesome (American) football players that don't get a shot or are incarcerated, etc. (which makes sense to me).
Idea #2: If the dangers of concussions in (American) football begins to trickle down to non-professional, pre-collegiate football (high school, pop warner, etc.) will there be (American) football players left in 50 years?
I do agree though: money and time spent are what makes great players (in my opinion).
It was an interesting discussion. Anyway, sorry for the derail.