America Can’t Afford to Ignore the Vast Whiteness of Soccer
One year ago Wednesday, a small, then-waterlogged village on the Trinidadian coastline served as the backdrop for American soccer鈥檚 terrible, horrible, no good, very bad day. With tired legs cemented firmly in a muddy pitch for 90 minutes, the U.S. men鈥檚 national soccer team tried, and failed, to qualify for this past summer鈥檚 FIFA World Cup. Now known in soccer circles as 鈥淐ouva,鈥 after the aforementioned village, the collapse, for the United States, marks the lowest point in the sport鈥檚 last two-plus decades.
Just one day before the world鈥檚 biggest party kicked off in Russia, though, the United States was a lifeline: the rights to host the tournament in 2026. (Well, 75 percent of it.) Participation in a World Cup, alone, offers several things: a chance for soccer to be relevant in an American landscape still dominated by other sports, the opportunity to welcome the next cohort of aspiring young stars into our expansive youth system, and an influx of sponsorship dollars to keep the whole operation running. Hosting a World Cup offers the same鈥攊n multitudes.
But experts have not to expect a dramatic spike in youth participation. Two things stand in its way. First, soccer in the United States has a much stronger this time around; growth rates will inevitably be smaller with a less-modest starting point. And second, and more important, youth soccer in the United States isn鈥檛 built to accommodate or sustain growth. That is, it鈥檚 exhausted the population of white children from well-off, suburban families who鈥檝e long filled its ranks. Without finally paving pathways for children from traditionally underserved populations, long from 鈥渢he world鈥檚 great democratic game,鈥 the U.S. soccer system will never enter the next stage of growth.
Reaching peak success in the mid- to late 1970s, the old North American Soccer League (NASL) poured resources into a comprehensive network of grassroots youth soccer programs鈥攖he precursor to today鈥檚 network鈥攂efore folding in 1984.
This work constructed quite the runway to the 1994 World Cup: Between 1981 and 1991, participation in high school soccer increased by more than 83 percent. In the years immediately following the competition, soccer had secured its position as the second-most popular team sport for Americans under the age of 12 (7.7 million annual participants) by 1995, behind only basketball (9.7 million).
Its followers, though, weren鈥檛 the ethnic minority groups, based predominantly in urban areas, that had quietly championed the sport in the United States in the preceding decades. Rather, they were white suburbians who, after effectively distancing themselves geographically and economically from cities in the post-war era, sought further differentiation. Culturally, they embraced cosmopolitanism, and with the blueprint already having been laid by the NASL, soccer, as one sociologist , and its 鈥渋ndeterminate signification made it available for 鈥榙ifferent uses.鈥欌
Put more bluntly, youth soccer was ripe for appropriation.
Now, fast-forward to today, where that reality has played out. Data that, at least locally, access to competitive youth soccer diminishes as poverty rates rise. Majority-minority neighborhoods possess comparatively fewer opportunities than majority-white ones. And physical distance is the first thing standing in the way.
According to a of sport for development organizations, transportation is one of the largest barriers to access, with respondents 鈥渞eferring to long travel times, insufficient means of transportation, and safety in transport as significant concerns.鈥 And for players who progress through the ranks and into more competitive environments, the demands of travel grow exponentially.
Beyond geographic barriers, the 鈥溾 structure sees families shell out thousands of dollars each year, for everything from uniforms to personal trainers. As a result, many more are priced out. (It鈥檚 worth noting that this issue is far from unique to soccer. Youth sports, by the latest estimates, a $15 billion industry. Local governments are even trying to .)
All the while, participation has 鈥攐谤 , depending on your 鈥攐ver the last few years. Fortunately, reversing course isn鈥檛 impossible鈥攁nd neither should it require too forceful an argument.
Above all, it鈥檚 a moral imperative. Integration of children from different backgrounds through sport social inclusion. Participation in any sport from a young age is with improved physical health, psychological health, and academic performance. And, moving all the way to the top of the pyramid, there鈥檚 a case to be made for any national team to closely the population it represents.
Some grassroots organizations have already started chipping away at the issues within their own communities. One solution, for example, sees a meet children from low-income families after school, provide tutoring services and a healthy snack, and bus them straight to practice. Another has seen a and a carve out safe places to play within urban environments.
A non-profit in , and a club in , each provide no-cost, competitive opportunities for children and teens of low-income families. The and introduce the sport to newcomers through unstructured 鈥渇ree play,鈥 building small fields in inner-city neighborhoods.
At the national level, a precedent for such change has already been set. Over the last decade or more, USA Swimming has made it a priority to low participation among minority participants. Through the help of research, outreach programs, and mentorship programs for non-white coaches, African-American membership increased by 55 percent, and mixed-ethnicity membership by 77 percent, between 2004 and 2015. These efforts gained widespread attention in 2016, when Simone Manuel the first female African-American swimmer to win an individual Olympic gold medal.
A leadership change at the helm of the whole system offers some reason for cautious optimism, too. Carlos Cordeiro, the newly-elected president of the U.S. Soccer Federation, campaigned on a platform that making soccer 鈥渕ore accessible and affordable for youth, especially in our cities and underserved communities.鈥 Cordeiro those sentiments as recently as July鈥攁lready showing more interest in the matter than his predecessor of 12 years. (For reference, his Diversity Task Force webpage looked something .)
Soccer in the United States is at a crossroads. Layered over long-standing exclusionary practices, and reinforced by discriminatory federal housing, economic, and social policies, today鈥檚 commoditization of youth sports has left soccer even further beyond the reach of children from underserved communities, despite the fact that drumming up interest among and encouraging participation of young children is critical to the sport鈥檚 long-term success stateside. (The of the U.S. Soccer Federation, after all, is 鈥渢o make soccer, in all its forms, a preeminent sport in the United States.鈥)
At all levels, the system has ignored plenty of sound reasons to level the playing field. With the 2026 FIFA World Cup looming large, it鈥檚 now reached a point at which it needs to change, if for all the wrong reasons.