PIKE SOCCER CLUB & FUSION USAi NEWS  

Wednesday, October 31, 2012 

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Greetings! 

 

It was another great season of USAi Rec and USAi Rec Plus soccer.  Our travel teams are still playing season end tournaments, including USAi's Fusion Fall Classic this weekend.



If you've already signed up to volunteer for Fusion Fall Classic 2012, Thank you!  If you've not.....there's still time and yes, we still need your help.    You may volunteer even if your child is not in the tournament.  Rec and Rec Plus families are welcome.  Our high school players can give back to the Club by being a Parking (Welcome) Person, a Risk Manager (Field Marshal), or a Concession worker.  We will sign the student's community service form. 

 

When you volunteer to take a shift or 2 for Fusion Fall Classic 2012, you may select the specific volunteer task, date, and time that best suits your ability and availability!  Sign up is on line for all shifts at: http://pikesoccerclub.ivolunteer.com/fusionfallclassic2012_001

 


This winter we will continue to work to improve all 4 USAi Soccer Complexes.  One of our fellow soccer dads "offered" to help aerate the fields with his construction company's equipment.  Another soccer dad is going to paint the 2 barns at Avon Soccer Complex.  


It is never too soon to register to play Rec and Rec Plus spring 2013.  Register online www.USAindy.org big discounts for early birds.

 

USAi Pike Soccer Club and USAi Fusion Soccer offer Indiana's best Rec academy designed and coached by Vince Ganzberg, former Indiana Director of Player Development and USAi Director of Recreation Player Development.  This program includes age group training sessions, Mentor Matches, and Academy training sessions, each included in your child's one low tuition.

 

If you give to United Way of Central Indiana, you may designate all or some of your donation to the children of USAi by writing "Pike Youth Soccer Club" on your donation card.  This is a very popular way to donate to a worthy not for profit via your employer work campaign. Details: 
EMPLOYER & WORK PLACE CAMPAIGNS DONATION

If you complete a pledge forms, e-pledge, or donor card at work:  you may direct all or part of your donation to United Soccer Alliance of Indiana by designating "Pike Youth Soccer Club" on the donor or pledge card.  You do not need the "number" as such numbers often change and your company may have an unique number.  Please check if your employer will match your contribution to the company Campaign.  If so, please make arrangements with your HR department or contact your Campaign coordinator.  Companies with workplace campaigns typically ask their employees to contribute through pledge forms or e-pledge so that each employee's contribution counts with their company campaign.  All money donated to United Soccer Alliance of Indiana via employer campaigns goes to player scholarships or field development, unless otherwise designated by donor.  United Soccer Alliance of Indiana, Inc., is a 501(c)3 not for profit.  Your contribution is tax deductible.

 

Thank you for choosing United Soccer Alliance of Indiana.

 

Here's how it feels to coach USAi Rec and Rec Plus

Rec Players   

Here's how it feels to volunteer from one of our Rec Coaches:
"I had a blast coaching last season. I loved every minute of it and felt like I was part of an amazing organization that knew their stuff and were willing and capable of supporting (and improving!) the best efforts of someone who had not actively participated in sports for over 20 years -and had certainly never coach a team.  As a family, we had an amazing experience last season. When I'm on the field with the kids and we're all giving 100% and working as one cohesive multi-national, multi-lingual group of kids, coaches and parents with a common passion I couldn't be happier."  

Article about why soccer is world's most popular sport

Soccer's big takeover by Roger Bennett

 

The future of American soccer will be determined by one man. And, perhaps surprisingly, he is neither Jurgen Klinsmann, Clint Dempsey nor Ian Darke. 

Rich Luker, a 59-year-old baseball-loving social scientist based in North Carolina, is the brains behind the ESPN Sports Poll, the complex database that recently pronounced soccer as America's second-most popular sport for those age 12-24, outstripping the NBA, MLB and college football. Luker is also the man who discovered that three soccer players -- Lionel Messi (16th), iconic veteran David Beckham (20th), and Real Madrid's Cristiano Ronaldo (24th) -- rank among the 50 most popular athletes in America. "Unbelievably, [Lionel] Messi ranks ahead of Dwyane Wade," Luker marveled. "Only two baseball players, Albert Pujols and Derek Jeter, are ahead of him." 

Luker founded the Sports Poll in 1994 when he realized the industry lacked a systematic intelligence service despite the billions of dollars poured into it. The researcher quickly partnered with ESPN to track the minutiae of fan habits surrounding 32 major sports, hoping to understand how Americans watch, play, buy and express their fandom. 

Luker is a gregarious chap whose passion for his craft is self-evident. Even after 30 years in the business, the researcher still sounds as if he is in the midst of his first "Eureka moment" as he litters his conversation with such off-the-cuff nuggets as "lack of discretionary spending power means that a larger proportion of Americans would now rather watch games on television than in person," or "since 2007, the only age group that has increased its interests in sports are males over the age of 45. Everyone else is down." 

Granted, Luker's terrain, the United States, is exceptional. "We live in a country that experiences a pent-up need for connection between family and friends, and sport has become the dominant way to do that," he said. 

His studies have revealed that 85 percent of Americans identify themselves as sports fans, and the social scientist said with a giddy tone of wonder, "Most cultures have two, sometimes three dominant sports -- the United States has 12." 

Come on, now, CR7, be happy -- you're the 24th most popular athlete in America. (But, OK, we won't mention where Messi is ranked.)


The U.S. soccer audience is also unique in Luker's eyes. "It is a true community. The only group that comes close are college sports fans or followers of the Grateful Dead. They embrace soccer as a communal lifestyle as opposed to a personal experience or a community that only exists on gameday." 

Luker's analysis has revealed the reason soccer fandom tends to be expressed on a 24/7 basis. "Soccer was originally an expression of national identity in hotbeds like the United Kingdom or Brazil," he said. "So that seed has been imported and sown here in the United States." 

However, Luker also believes soccer is underperforming. "It's a sport that should have been doing well a long time ago." The social scientist is well positioned to make that claim. He partnered with MLS back when it was planning the launch of the league in 1994. "We discovered 30 percent of American households contained someone playing soccer. The only game that comes close to that massive number is baseball." 

Through decades of study, Luker was able to pinpoint the exact moment soccer's built-in early advantage traditionally evaporated. "The game was massive up to the age of 13, when sport was all about bonding with male peers, but in middle school, it became all about cross-bonding with other genders and high school football shot right to the top," he said. "You simply can't beat the social lubrication of the homecoming football game." 

Soccer's social perception was further weakened by the sport's stigmatization in the 1990s. "Middle school kids were seen to lack the guts to play one of the big sports -- baseball, football, or basketball -- preferring to play soccer, the sport their moms were pushing." 

But the sporting tectonic plates have shifted. America's cultural diversification, increasingly globalized outlook, and widespread access to the Internet all have benefitted soccer more than the other more traditional American sports. "In the last two years, Americans have been exposed to elite soccer on a very regular basis, which has allowed us to appreciate the sport and develop a savvy about it in a way we could not before," Luker said. 

The impact of these factors has been as powerful as they are simple. "Kids growing up today gain cachet and social currency by knowing about the sport," Luker said. The old stigma has fallen away. Pride and esteem have become attached to the game for the first time as Americans have collectively undergone a "now we understand what it is all about" moment. It is only a matter of time 'til we see soccer take off in a big way." 

By way of context, Luker rattles off statistics about soccer's competitors. "Twenty-five percent of Americans are avid NFL fans first and foremost, 14.4 percent are basketball fans, and MLB comes third with 13.9 percent." 

Soccer's avid fanbase is 10 percent, which does not sound like much until you realize that is 33 million people. "Based on the way it is trending, I believe global soccer will soon be four or five times bigger than it is today, and MLS's fanbase will triple or quadruple," he said. For those who do not believe, Luker is keen to underline that change can happen fast. "In 1994, MLB was as popular as the NFL. This stuff can shift quickly and right now, soccer is like a rocket ship on the launchpad." 

"If baseball and basketball don't adapt to this new reality they are going to have issues," Luker continued, discussing the NFL's challenge to continue to develop talent in an era in which youth participation has dropped precipitously. "Fewer and fewer kids are actually playing [American] football so they won't learn the game in the way it sustained their interest in the past. It is an inevitability that soccer will soon be as popular as MLB and NBA." 

How long will it take to get there? "We are talking generational change," Luker said. "A generation of kids have now grown up as having MLS as part of their reality. Give us one more cycle and that is all it will take. One more generation." 

Luker is bullish about the rise of MLS, given that 7.2 percent of Americans describe themselves as fans of the league. "That is 25 million people, of whom MLS can only currently account for about 5 million, a fifth of their potential audience," he said. "If the league gets its marketing right, there will be massive growth." Luker reinforces this bold claim by revealing a remarkable 50 percent of those who declare any interest in soccer ask to know more about the MLS when three percent is considered a positive response rate in the consumer product industry. "MLS's problem is they only have 19 teams and no regular national television presence," Luker said. "Right now, you are not going to bump into their product but they are working hard to change that." 

Despite Luker's evident enthusiasm for soccer's future, he said that he grew up playing hockey in Ann Arbor, Mich., and only watches MLS and EPL for a living. When pushed, he concluded by confessing, "My greatest delight is to look out of a plane's window when I am crossing the country and see what people are playing in the parks below," he said. "If you watch it like that, soccer is the biggest sport in the nation." 

Roger Bennett is a columnist for ESPN.
Volunteer 

Volunteer  Click here to volunteer.

http://unitedsoccerallianceindiana.org/aboutus/volunteer/

Word From Our Sponsor: Land O' Frost

Land O' Frost Land O' Frost lunch meats, USAi's Platinum sponsor, wants to make a stronger effort to better communicate and be more closely involved with USAi's member families.. It's motivation to grow this program is fueled by the energy they see in children and their families participating together in healthy, well-rounded experiences.  LOF will send you special savings opportunities along with promotional announcements primarily via mail. The initial mailing will include a coupon for a free package of lunchmeat, followed by cents-off coupons throughout the year. Special offers will also include a yearly gift for each child whose parent has signed up for inclusion in this program. This special link (above)  http://www.landofrost.com/youthsports/ takes you to Land O' Frost and asks for your name, address, and please enter "Pike Soccer Club" name for now.  We will ask them to change it to United Soccer Alliance of Indiana for next season.   Land O' Frost absolutely will not share this information with any other company or party. It is solely for LOF's purpose of building stronger relationships directly with the leagues and parents of the children they support.   Click here to register, SELECT "PIKE SOCCER CLUB"   


Community Through Youth Sport Foundation, USA of Indiana, Fusion Soccer Academy, Avon Soccer Association, Brownsburg Junior Soccer League, Indy Burn, and Pike Youth Soccer Club are nonprofit organizations and depend upon individual donations to meet the annual budget. 

 

Community Through Youth Sport Foundation:  Improving the Central Indiana community through youth sport and developing fine young men and women, one child at a time.

  

United Soccer Alliance of Indiana:  Committed to providing the best possible environment for the community's youth through fun, fair play, and player improvement. 

  

Avon Soccer Association, Brownsburg Junior Soccer League, and Pike Youth Soccer Club founded in 1979 by parents to provide and promote the game of soccer within the community.   

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