By Randy Vogt

Having started playing youth soccer in the 1970s, then taking up the whistle in 1978, I have seen many changes on the youth soccer landscape:

The Girls
Mia, Julie, Kristine and Brandi and now Abby and Alex plus their teammates have been excellent role models and their amazing success on the field has translated intomillions of girls taking up soccer. When I started refereeing, girls teams were only 25% of the sport while now approximately half the players registered in youth soccer are girls. All while thenumber of players has increased exponentially.

The Teams
It was simpler back in the 1970s as we had intramural teams and travel teams and all the players were fromthe same school district. Then came travel team players switching teams that corresponded to the rise of free agency in the major American pro sports. Now seemingly every team wants to call itselfpremier. If “premier” means the very best teams, the moniker is a bit of a farce. I refereed two undefeated teams in a premier league under US Club Soccer recently and both teams struggledto put four passes together.

The Players
Only with Latino kids did I ever see children and teens play pick-up soccer outside their youth team, and not under thesupervision of a coach, prior to the 1994 World Cup. That has all changed, perhaps partly through all the soccer that kids can now watch on TV.

See a game and many are now going to thefield later to practice a move. What has greatly improved in players during the past four decades is their tactical awareness and dribbling ability. Unfortunately, some of the older youth players,mainly on the boys side, now go down very easily when touched. Again, all the soccer they are seeing on TV. It’s similar to when I refereed in Italy a generation ago as I could tell that thosekids watched a great deal of soccer on TV.

The Games
It used to be that if you had teams from different cultures playing against one another, the game would oftenbe problematic. For example, many Anglo teams hated it when the teammates on the opposing Latino team spoke Spanish to one another. Now, it’s much more accepted by the Anglo kids, a growingnumber who speak Spanish, as players from different cultures are learning to get along.

The Fields
Many youth soccer games during the 1970s were played on footballfields and those fields were long and narrow — 120 yards by 55 yards or so. Not the best size for a good game. Then came the rise of soccer field complexes and now artificial turf fields, all withappropriate field sizes. Turf is a good solution for overused, inner city fields that were reduced to dirt but I prefer a good grass field to a turf field. It’s a different game on turf as theball moves much faster.

The Money
College soccer’s way too short season has not changed the hold that the college game has on youth soccer. I rarely hear aparent talk about how their kid will play pro soccer one day but often hear parents talk about how their kid will win a soccer scholarship. I’m not a parent so I am not an expert on the moneyspent on youth players but I see trainers on the touchline for nearly all travel team games nowadays.

I believe that part of the rationale for trainers is to help kids get thatscholarship. The money has even increased in a local CYO program near where I live. The registration fee for 8-year-olds per season used to be $50 and it’s now $150 as the money now includes atrainer fee. The money that I earn from refereeing has increased as well because the number of games played during the year has increased. But the increase in referee fees since the 1970s (at least inNew York) has roughly corresponded to the inflation rate.

(Randy Vogt has officiated over 8,000 games during the past three decades, fromprofessional matches in front of thousands to 6-year-olds being cheered on by very enthusiastic parents. In his book, “PreventiveOfficiating,” he shares his wisdom gleaned from thousands of games and hundreds of clinics to help referees not only survive but thrive on the soccer field. You can visit the book’s websiteat www.preventiveofficiating.com/)

Join the Conversation

1 Comment

  1. Indeed artificial turf should only ever be a last resort. It makes for ugly soccer. And as both a sporadic official and a goalkeeper, I loathe the fact that they all have 20,000 different lines in 18 different colors.

Leave a comment