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A few years ago I was involved in presenting a coaching
clinic at the WAGS Tournament (in the Washington
DC area). It is probably the most prestigious female
tournament in the United
States.
We were up bright and early arranging the coaching clinic
area with banners, flags, erecting small-sided goals and marking the practice
areas for the coaches' clinic later that day.
Not a player was to be seen as the games were not to start
until 9.00 a.m., but there was one lady pacing up and down chain smoking. I got talking to her and asked what she was
doing here so early. She told me her
daughter was playing a 10.30 a.m. game and this was her (daughter's) big chance
to show her abilities in front of the many college coaches who attend the WAGS
tournament each year. She was obviously
under great stress and not having seen much of that kind of situation
first-hand it made a lasting impression on me.
The article below first appeared on-line in Soccer America's
Soccer College Reporter and should bring a sense of perspective, but I think
not. We all can dream.
Soccer scholarship chase: fact & fiction
Tuesday, Apr 8, 2008 10:00 AM ET
SOCCER PLAYERS AND THEIR FAMILIES spend thousands of dollars
each year on youth soccer in pursuit of athletic scholarships, but just what
are the odds? According to NCAA figures released recently by the New York Times, there is 1.4 women's scholarships for every 100 high school
players and half that - 0.7 scholarships for every 100 high school players - on
the men's side.
The figures show that $78.2 million in women's soccer scholarships was awarded
in 2003-04 - the last year information is available - putting soccer third
among all women's sports behind only basketball and track & field. The
value of a women's soccer scholarship - how much each player earned on average -
was $8,404, putting soccer 13th among all women's sports.
As for men's soccer, it ranked fifth among all men's sports with $51.6 million
spent on athletic scholarships but it was far behind the two giants, football
($367.3 million!) and basketball ($126 million). The value of a men's soccer
scholarship was slightly higher than a women's scholarship - $8,523 vs. $8,404 -
and ranked eighth among all men's sports.
"The youth sports culture is overly aggressive, and while the opportunity
for an athletic scholarship is not trivial, it's easy for the opportunity to be
over exaggerated by parents and advisers," NCAA President Miles Brand told
the New York Times. "That can skew behavior and, based on the numbers,
lead to unrealistic expectations."
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