Other countries are scouting young US soccer talent – Los Angeles Times

When Brad Friedel was growing up in suburban Cleveland a generation ago, youth soccer was more an afterthought than an organized activity.

“There was nothing there,” he remembers.

So he was a bit surprised when he moved back to the U.S. after spending most of the last 20 years playing in the English Premier League.

“The entire landscape and scope of what soccer is today doesn’t compare, doesn’t even look remotely similar, to the landscape that I left,” he said.

And he’s not the only one who has noticed. Between the time Friedel quit UCLA and left for Europe in 1993 and his return to Southern California last year, leagues from around the world flooded the U.S. with scouts and training academies. They set up youth leagues, offered clinics, staged showcases and stole teenage players, all in a place they only recently felt comfortable ignoring.