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How Soccer is Ruining America: A Jeremiad
First Things ^ | 5 March 2009 | Stephen H. Webb

Posted on 03/11/2009 8:56:05 AM PDT by AreaMan

How Soccer is Ruining America: A Jeremiad

By Stephen H. WebbThursday, March 5, 2009, 12:00 AM

Soccer is running America into the ground, and there is very little anyone can do about it. Social critics have long observed that we live in a therapeutic society that treats young people as if they can do no wrong. Every kid is a winner, and nobody is ever left behind, no matter how many times they watch the ball going the other way. Whether the dumbing down of America or soccer came first is hard to say, but soccer is clearly an important means by which American energy, drive, and competitiveness is being undermined to the point of no return.

What other game, to put it bluntly, is so boring to watch? (Bowling and golf come to mind, but the sound of crashing pins and the sight of the well-attired strolling on perfectly kept greens are at least inherently pleasurable activities.) The linear, two-dimensional action of soccer is like the rocking of a boat but without any storm and while the boat has not even left the dock. Think of two posses pursuing their prey in opposite directions without any bullets in their guns. Soccer is the fluoridation of the American sporting scene.

For those who think I jest, let me put forth four points, which is more points than most fans will see in a week of games—and more points than most soccer players have scored since their pee-wee days.

1) Any sport that limits you to using your feet, with the occasional bang of the head, has something very wrong with it. Indeed, soccer is a liberal’s dream of tragedy: It creates an egalitarian playing field by rigorously enforcing a uniform disability. Anthropologists commonly define man according to his use of hands. We have the thumb, an opposable digit that God gave us to distinguish us from animals that walk on all fours. The thumb lets us do things like throw baseballs and fold our hands in prayer. We can even talk with our hands. Have you ever seen a deaf person trying to talk with their feet? When you are really angry and acting like an animal, you kick out with your feet. Only fools punch a wall with their hands. The Iraqi who threw his shoes at President Bush was following his primordial instincts. Showing someone your feet, or sticking your shoes in someone’s face, is the ultimate sign of disrespect. Do kids ever say, “Trick or Treat, smell my hands”? Did Jesus wash his disciples’ hands at the Last Supper? No, hands are divine (they are one of the body parts most frequently attributed to God), while feet are in need of redemption. In all the portraits of God’s wrath, never once is he pictured as wanting to step on us or kick us; he does not stoop that low.

2) Sporting should be about breaking kids down before you start building them up. Take baseball, for example. When I was a kid, baseball was the most popular sport precisely because it was so demanding. Even its language was intimidating, with bases, bats, strikes, and outs. Striding up to the plate gave each of us a chance to act like we were starring in a Western movie, and tapping the bat to the plate gave us our first experience with inventing self-indulgent personal rituals. The boy chosen to be the pitcher was inevitably the first kid on the team to reach puberty, and he threw a hard ball right at you.

Thus, you had to face the fear of disfigurement as well as the statistical probability of striking out. The spectacle of your failure was so public that it was like having all of your friends invited to your home to watch your dad forcing you to eat your vegetables. We also spent a lot of time in the outfield chanting, “Hey batter batter!” as if we were Buddhist monks on steroids. Our chanting was compensatory behavior, a way of making the time go by, which is surely why at soccer games today it is the parents who do all of the yelling.

3) Everyone knows that soccer is a foreign invasion, but few people know exactly what is wrong with that. More than having to do with its origin, soccer is a European sport because it is all about death and despair. Americans would never invent a sport where the better you get the less you score. Even the way most games end, in sudden death, suggests something of an old-fashioned duel. How could anyone enjoy a game where so much energy results in so little advantage, and which typically ends with a penalty kick out, as if it is the audience that needs to be put out of its misery. Shootouts are such an anticlimax to the game and are so unpredictable that the teams might as well flip a coin to see who wins—indeed, they might as well flip the coin before the game, and not play at all.

4) And then there is the question of gender. I know my daughter will kick me when she reads this, but soccer is a game for girls. Girls are too smart to waste an entire day playing baseball, and they do not have the bloodlust for football. Soccer penalizes shoving and burns countless calories, and the margins of victory are almost always too narrow to afford any gloating. As a display of nearly death-defying stamina, soccer mimics the paradigmatic feminine experience of childbirth more than the masculine business of destroying your opponent with insurmountable power.

Let me conclude on a note of despair appropriate to my topic. There is no way to run away from soccer, if only because it is a sport all about running. It is as relentless as it is easy, and it is as tiring to play as it is tedious to watch. The real tragedy is that soccer is a foreign invasion, but it is not a plot to overthrow America. For those inclined toward paranoia, it would be easy to blame soccer’s success on the political left, which, after all, worked for years to bring European decadence and despair to America. The left tried to make existentialism, Marxism, post-structuralism, and deconstructionism fashionable in order to weaken the clarity, pragmatism, and drive of American culture. What the left could not accomplish through these intellectual fads, one might suspect, they are trying to accomplish through sport.

Yet this suspicion would be mistaken. Soccer is of foreign origin, that is certainly true, but its promotion and implementation are thoroughly domestic. Soccer is a self-inflicted wound. Americans have nobody to blame but themselves. Conservative suburban families, the backbone of America, have turned to soccer in droves. Baseball is too intimidating, football too brutal, and basketball takes too much time to develop the required skills. American parents in the past several decades are overworked and exhausted, but their children are overweight and neglected. Soccer is the perfect antidote to television and video games. It forces kids to run and run, and everyone can play their role, no matter how minor or irrelevant to the game. Soccer and relevision are the peanut butter and jelly of parenting.

I should know. I am an overworked teacher, with books to read and books to write, and before I put in a video for the kids to watch while I work in the evenings, they need to have spent some of their energy. Otherwise, they want to play with me! Last year all three of my kids were on three different soccer teams at the same time. My daughter is on a traveling team, and she is quite good. I had to sign a form that said, among other things, I would not do anything embarrassing to her or the team during the game. I told the coach I could not sign it. She was perplexed and worried. “Why not,” she asked? “Are you one of those parents who yells at their kids? “Not at all,” I replied, “I read books on the sidelines during the game, and this embarrasses my daughter to no end.” That is my one way of protesting the rise of this pitiful sport. Nonetheless, I must say that my kids and I come home from a soccer game a very happy family.

Stephen H. Webb is a professor of religion and philosophy at Wabash College. His recent books include American Providence and Taking Religion to School.


TOPICS: Culture/Society; Philosophy
KEYWORDS: athletics; children; football; soccer; sports
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To: gracesdad

Agree with that, track has really fallen upon hard times. It was a sport that brought a lot of glory when I was a kid (we were competing against the Russians) and now, not very many kids do it. It is unfortunate that lacrosse is a spring sport, it really should be a winter sport, at least in California.


141 posted on 03/11/2009 1:01:40 PM PDT by Defiant (One Big-Ass Mistake, America!!)
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To: Secret Agent Man

Soccer will catch on in Mexicanised parts of the country—where the competition will be just as bloodthirsty as American football (or, given the Central American influence, maybe even bloodier)—and in coccooning, white-flight communities who want inexpensive athletic leagues with minimised risk of interaction with inner-city teams and leagues.


142 posted on 03/11/2009 1:01:48 PM PDT by Philo-Junius (One precedent creates another. They soon accumulate and constitute law.)
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To: AreaMan

Possibly one of the dumbest articles I have ever read.


143 posted on 03/11/2009 1:02:25 PM PDT by KC_Conspirator
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To: Secret Agent Man
Soccer is where ‘everyone is a winner’ started.

That's simply incorrect. People are making the same mistake this author is making: they are identifying the problem, and fitting it into their own bias.

144 posted on 03/11/2009 1:02:49 PM PDT by 1rudeboy
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To: Defiant

Title IX and things like women’s soccer and lawsuit-shy elimination of many throwing events sucked the money and interest out of track much more than soccer and lacrosse.


145 posted on 03/11/2009 1:03:20 PM PDT by Philo-Junius (One precedent creates another. They soon accumulate and constitute law.)
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To: olivia3boys

You left football off that list. Football makes them men. We need football players in the next generation, or we will have a succession of Obamas.


146 posted on 03/11/2009 1:03:21 PM PDT by Defiant (One Big-Ass Mistake, America!!)
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To: Oztrich Boy

That’s Aussie Football (which I truly dig and was really disappointed when Fox Sports International turned into Fox Sports Soccer and dumped the Aussie Football). There’s also a couple of NFLs that are soccer-football. There is only 1 N(American)FL.


147 posted on 03/11/2009 1:04:50 PM PDT by razorboy
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To: 1rudeboy

You are, I think, not hearing what others are trying, I think, to say.

The problem is not with the sport per se, it is what the sport seemed to represent (and still does) to many of its advocates.


148 posted on 03/11/2009 1:05:36 PM PDT by Philo-Junius (One precedent creates another. They soon accumulate and constitute law.)
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To: Philo-Junius

Well, heck, you’re talking about people that get hyped up to watch cockfighting (please admin mods it’s not dirty), for Pete’s sake.


149 posted on 03/11/2009 1:05:57 PM PDT by Secret Agent Man (I'd like to tell you, but then I'd have to kill you.)
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To: Philo-Junius
I have a problem with what it meant to a lot of its original advocates—lots of tie games and no one is measurably better than anyone else.

The concept of a tie result is not a concept that is a development of soccer. And again, the 8-year-olders I'm familiar with go to overtime and then a shootout. In fact, I would argue that the abandonment of tie results in football and hockey have had a detrimental effect on those games.

150 posted on 03/11/2009 1:07:00 PM PDT by 1rudeboy
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To: AreaMan
Anyway, Alan Dundes was right!


151 posted on 03/11/2009 1:07:37 PM PDT by Revolting cat! (Let us prey!)
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To: 1rudeboy

It’s not my bias. I talk with my friends who have kids in soccer and that’s what they tell me. Nobody keeps score, everybody plays, only cheering allowed, nobody’s a loser.


152 posted on 03/11/2009 1:08:09 PM PDT by Secret Agent Man (I'd like to tell you, but then I'd have to kill you.)
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To: Philo-Junius
The problem is not with the sport per se, it is what the sport seemed to represent (and still does) to many of its advocates.

Again, I would argue that the operative factor here is what the sport represents to its detractors.

153 posted on 03/11/2009 1:08:32 PM PDT by 1rudeboy
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To: 1rudeboy

I would be interested to the hear case in favour of tie games.


154 posted on 03/11/2009 1:09:16 PM PDT by Philo-Junius (One precedent creates another. They soon accumulate and constitute law.)
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To: Wil H

That has nothing to do with our football not being international. That has to do with us hanging our hats on something other than sports. The World Baseball Classic (America’s past time and an international sport) is going on right now and we aren’t shutting down for it.

This is a 300+ million person country that spans 6 time zones. We aren’t going to shut down and have a “spectacular celebration” for any sport ever. For one thing you can guarantee that 100 million of them don’t even like that sport no matter what the sport is.


155 posted on 03/11/2009 1:10:15 PM PDT by razorboy
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To: Secret Agent Man
Nobody keeps score, everybody plays, only cheering allowed, nobody’s a loser.

Your bias enters the equation when you disregard the other childrens' sports where the same thing occurs.

156 posted on 03/11/2009 1:10:31 PM PDT by 1rudeboy
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To: Revolting cat!
Anyway, Alan Dundes was right!

Sounds like a little projection from Mr. Dundes. Maybe he had a secret and unrequited crush on a football player.

157 posted on 03/11/2009 1:10:56 PM PDT by AreaMan
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To: Philo-Junius
I would be interested to the hear case in favour of tie games.

If one sees sport as a metaphor of life itself, then an undefined outcome is perfectly acceptable.

158 posted on 03/11/2009 1:12:43 PM PDT by 1rudeboy
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To: 1rudeboy

This discussion occurs in the context of an article explaining what American soccer represents to its detractors. The mere noting that the criticisms are indeed criticisms does not by itself invalidate them.


159 posted on 03/11/2009 1:16:08 PM PDT by Philo-Junius (One precedent creates another. They soon accumulate and constitute law.)
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To: Philo-Junius

Right. So people shouldn’t make stuff up and assign it to the advocates, when all they are doing is detracting.


160 posted on 03/11/2009 1:18:05 PM PDT by 1rudeboy
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