Tuesday 1 March 2011

Commentary: Championship Not Enough For Wilmer Cabrera's USA U17 Squad (Goal.com)

On Sunday, the United States U17 squad captured their first official CONCACAF Championship in team history. However, the trophy was less than fulfilling, given what the U.S. team showcased on their path to the championship.

In other words, results at this age are not enough, or at least less important than development. When tasked with coaching one of these development ages, the core of the team should show qualities such as: comfort on the ball, proper technique when receiving and passing, and a fundamental understanding of position and spacing on the field. Something for the players to fall back on when their superior athletic abilities decrease as other players mature.

Simply put, that is not the case with this team. While the field conditions in Jamaica were awful, there is no excuse for simple technical elements of players’ abilities being jarringly absent.

For instance, most of the players (specifically head coach Wilmer Cabrera’s outside backs) improperly received the ball throughout the tournament, even under limited pressure. A scout at a Development Academy game this weekend explained the obvious problem: The players are trapping the ball with the outside of the foot, which closes the angle and limits the field for the player.

Instead, the player should open his hips and receive the ball with the instep of the foot so the field is open and the chances to play the ball forward are multiplied by what the player can now see in front of him.

These are elements of the game that most European and South American coaches expect from even their youngest players. It is something simple, and when you are watching a game, its absence sticks out like an Eskimo in Miami.

This is not to suggest that all of the American youngsters are lacking in technical ability. There are a handful of youngsters who - given the right situation - could develop into some potent players.

For instance, Alejandro Guido demonstrates the consistency and skill-set of a player capable of making the jump to the next level.

The problem is that the rest of the team is not pushing him or any other player to make that leap - the proverbial step from playing against mediocrity to playing against the best in the world.

Instead, this team is taking reps against inferior competition to demonstrate their superior athletic abilities as opposed to working on other avenues of the game to help them at the next level.

Increasingly, the next level is moving further away from Bradenton, where the U.S. U17 team is based. Of the players who stuck with the program during the last cycle (2009) and played at the U17 World Cup, only two are shoe-ins for the U.S. U20 squad for this year’s qualifying cycle – Juan Agudelo, who played sparingly at the U17 level, and Perry Kitchen.

The U.S. captured the title, but flaws were exposed in the youth coaching system along the way


U.S. U20 coach Thomas Rongen spent most of his time during the last two years looking elsewhere for talent. The separation between the two coaches' philosophies is making the U17 team almost an unnecessary toil for players.

As a matter of fact, there will be Development Academies - namely D.C. United and Derby County - that produce the same amount of players for the U.S. U20 World Cup team as Cabrera and the U.S. U17 2009 World Cup team.

This alienation of the program from the rest of the U.S. soccer structure is relatively new. In previous years the U20 squad and the Olympic team both heavily depended on the talent produced by Cabrera’s age group. The 2009 U20 World Cup squad had five players from the 2007 U17 World Cup team.

However, opportunities for players are diversifying the path from the grassroots clubs up to the professional ranks. Rongen’s insistence on an all-professional squad makes the journey of Bobby Wood more significant in the future than Stefan Jerome.

Wood went from the Irvine Strikers to 1860 Munich via a connection with the German club. He worked his way up from the youth programs to the reserve team and then to the full team. Now, Wood figures to be an important piece for Rongen at the U20 level without ever appearing with the U17 team.

The U.S. captured the title, but flaws were exposed in the youth coaching system along the way

Jerome, on the other hand, spent two years in Bradenton with Cabrera’s program and staff. He was one of the starting forwards for the U17 team during the last cycle. Now, he is playing with Sigma Olomouc in the Czech top flight. Since his first call-up with the U20s shortly after his graduation from Bradenton, he has disappeared from Rongen’s radar.

Obviously, Cabrera does not always get the best players at this age for his program as some explore other opportunities, including Sebastian Lletget and Joseph Gyau from the last cycle - two players who played with the team during qualifying but not at the World Cup.

However, the point remains that while Cabrera has demonstrated some ability to identify and select talent, there are still players in his program who are not receiving the proper coaching for this level. These are minor issues that snowball into larger fundamental problems as the players progress to the professional level. At the end of the day, that needs to be the goal of the U17 program – to produce players ready to play at the next level, not just win CONCACAF Championships.

J.R. Eskilson is the Youth Soccer Editor at Goal.com. You can follow him on Twitter @NCAAsoccer.

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