A Simple Thing To Do To Become a Pro

By Jason | March 9, 2008 4:14 am |
Categories:
Soccer Central,Soccer Tips

When I overhear people talking(soccer players) about playing or being pro, I have to always think to myself–”Take it Easy, don’t get mad they are young”. Do you know why?? The reason is that many of these kids don’t even know the level of work they have to do to become even a semi-pro, let alone a pro. They dream about getting free shoes, or Nike/ Adidas sponsorship. Its a lot harder than everyone else thinks.

I remember I went to this Keeper school over this last summer. At the end they had you write down 3 goals: What you want to accomplish right now, What you hope to accomplish, and what your dreams are for the future. Out of all my fellow keepers, I think I had by far the most realistic dreams: Play soccer for as long as I can at the best level possible. Some guys wrote down stupid stuff like playing in the English Premier, La Liga, the list goes on and it got more annoying after talking to each person.

The Coaches responded to everything we wrote but talking to them was a whole different thing. One of the Coaches gave me the best thing to remember and its the most Simple thing to remember when thinking about being pro:

“When you wake up every morning, you need to ask yourself, how bad do I want it and what am I going to do to make myself better than anybody else. If someone else on any team is more fit, has more endurance, or is faster than me, then I have to work 10x as hard as that person. Honestly it is something simple which will make you pro if you do exactly that and prove it by your work ethics.”

So There you have it. But here is some realistic layman’s terms:

  • Work out harder and more than all your teammates.
  • Beat all your teammates easily.
  • Get your mile, 2-mile times down to a track team level.
  • Practice soccer everyday, whether its with a team or individual training.
  • Play soccer year around, meaning, never stop.
  • Play on as many teams as allowed or with a competitive enough team that plays enough to cover as many as 2-3 teams worth.
  • Never tell yourself you are the best.

Finally, this is how pros make it to be pros. They have that desire to become the best and be the best. If your willing to do all this, then by all means, boast and be proud of yourself when you’re there-standing on the pitch and playing for a professional team-until then please be modest. I don’t know everything, but if I were to give my best answer for the ever so complicated question of: How do you become pro? That would be my answer with other commentaries.


The Guide to Finding Success in America

By Jason | February 5, 2008 3:56 am |
Categories:
Soccer Central

For many young people in America, finding success is very hard. For one thing, the game is a lot different here and how it is carried out. The level of professionalism and play is different as well. For instance, in every where else except the United States like in Europe or South America, pro teams are scouting out players at a very young age for their academy system. It works like this:

  • Play for a amateur club team
  • Get noticed by a pro club team
  • Get put on that pro team’s academy program
  • Get noticed by the Senior club-hence-The Real Deal

In America we do the mumbo jumbo of playing for a rec league, play city-league, play club, maybe Police League in the middle of that, maybe ODP, then finally get on a college team. Weird and confusing structure indeed.

MLS

Here’s how to find success. If I were a parent or adviser to a parent of a child who really wanted to go pro. I would tell them to play as much soccer as possible…literally. I would advise the following:

  1. Find a good city team – (ages 6 – 18) AKA Sunday League-these teams practice maybe 1 or 2x a week plus games on Sunday. Not very hard, just getting them used to it. You could probably find 2 teams in a Sunday league–one the same age and one the level up. The more soccer the better.
  2. Find a good Club team(10 – 18) – Club teams are organized travel teams. The highest level is Premier or division 1. A person needs to be here by high school.
  3. Join Olympic Development Program – district, region, state, hopefully national!
  4. Go to as many clinics as possible i.e. camps, college camps, college ID camps, etc. etc.
  5. By the latter years of high school, join a local semi-pro team or a team that competes every year in the United States Open Cup – while this team probably won’t win this cup, the exposure is good enough.
  6. By the time you or your player is a Senior at high school, this player should have played almost everywhere and experienced a lot of soccer.

Hopefully at the end of that whole long ride and commitment, you or your player will have a scholarship at a 4-year University or maybe even be a draft pick – I think there were 4 guys just out of high school in this year’s MLS Superdraft… Wow – Dream that!



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