Discover and read the best of Twitter Threads about #ReformUSSF

Most recents (3)

Financially MLS teams have zero incentive to run good academies.

They can acquire young players without having to pay compensation to the developing club, they have a draft, American MLS players are severely contractually restricted, and there is no punishment for being bad.
Developing good young players in house is a positive in top leagues where salaries are high because the players are less expensive.

MLS teams pay American players low salaries and they do not have transfer fees attached to them...
Why spend big money developing players when comparable players with the same salary costs are available with zero transfer free on the player marketplace?

If you arent super confident that you can make money selling pre-Academy slots to parents to turn a profit on the system...
Read 7 tweets
The term "recreational" soccer was created by people who didnt want the sport to be as competitive as the traditional American sports.

It was intentional.

"Travel" soccer was created by those who wanted to take it serious.

It was coopted by those who saw they could $ off it
Every level of soccer governance has failed when it comes to the children who play the game in this nation.

"Rec soccer" is used as a pejorative nationally.

Basically every single player starts in some sort of "rec" program.

If you take "rec" too serious you are ostracized
"Why dont you go play club?"
"This isnt what rec is for!"
"Why are you so serious?"

Well... the kids deserve the best that we can offer them no matter who they play for first and foremost.

That is a fact.
Read 10 tweets
For those around #ProRelforUSA #AUnitedFront #ReformUSSF

The concerns about MLS owners & USSF, etc. favoring (white supremacist) fascists and European Christian right politics are unfortunately more valid than many had thought it was.

There are reasons why it's the case structurally. Some of it has to do with single entity structure but there are broader things that take from the sports business concentration issue (and monopoly in general).
The first is that with some failures in the last major anti-monopoly push (and the only modern one that worked), pro sports promotions were able to use market power to sting competitors in their own sports (or force mergers).
Read 30 tweets

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