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United States: Importer or Exporter of Talent?

When I travel abroad, people often tell me that the United States is good at soccer only because they import foreigners to play for the national team. While this strategy was key in our development as a soccer nation, it is far, far less common today. The 1990s saw the US scour European leagues for players with American connections, coming up with gems such as Ernie Stewart and Thomas Dooley (both of whom had American servicemen fathers) and duds such as David Wagner and David Regis (the latter was a Frenchman whose late call-up into the 1998 World Cup squad led to great friction within the team and was a large part of the team’s horrible showing in that tournament). But since the turn of the century, the US has invested a tremendous amount of money into youth development, and nearly all of its players have been born in this country. Despite this, the image of the US as a sub-par team that must import foreigners to achieve success has lingered. Yet ironically, in recent years the US has helped to develop several players who have gone on to play for other countries internationally.

This development is perhaps not all that surprising given that the United States is a nation of immigrants. Many of the players who have developed their skills in the US and played for other nations are children of immigrants. The most notable such example is Giuseppe Rossi. Born in Teaneck, New Jersey to Italian parents, Rossi traveled to his parents’ homeland at age 13 to begin playing for Parma. He would later sign for Manchester United before moving on to his current club, Villarreal. Intrigue surrounded Rossi, with American fans holding onto hope that he would choose to play internationally for the US despite his assertions that he wanted to represent Italy. His call-up for the Azzurri in October 2008 sealed his international fate (and, to rub salt in the wounds of American fans, he scored twice against the US in last summer’s Confederations Cup).

Other Americans born to immigrant parents to have played for other the national teams of other countries include Espen Baardsen, and Arturo Alvarez. Baardsen was a goalkeeper for Tottenham, Watford and Everton from the mid-1990s until he retired in 2003 (quoting the BBC: “American-born Norway international who retired aged 25 in 2003 after a spell with Everton, saying he had lost his passion for the game. Spent a year travelling the world and now works in London as a financial analyst for a hedge fund. His preferred reading is Milton Friedman and Immanuel Kant.”). Born in California to Norwegian parents, Baardsen played for youth national teams in the US before representing Norway at the senior level, despite the fact that he never lived in that country.

espen-baardsen

Espen Baardsen (photo: Spurs Odyssey)

Arturo Alvarez is a Salvadoran-American midfielder currently plying his trade for the San Jose Earthquakes in Major League Soccer. Born in Houston to Salvadoran parents, Alvarez played for the US at youth level, but chose to represent El Salvador at senior level. He took advantage of FIFA’s changed restrictions making it easier for players to represent a country at senior level even if they played for another country at youth level.

The Balkan wars of the 1990s spread people from the former Yugoslavia around the world (many of their children have gone on to become soccer stars), and the United States received many immigrants from these countries. Two players who passed through the US have since gone on to become major stars in Europe, and both chose to represent other countries rather than the Americans. Bosnian-born Vedad Ibisevic, striker for German feel-good club Hoffenheim, came with his family to St. Louis (a city that has received a huge number of Bosnian immigrants) and became a star high school player before going on to St. Louis University. He was then signed by Paris St. Germain, spending one season in the French capital before moving on to 2nd division club Dijon. He moved across the border to Germany, playing one season for Alemannia Aachen before being signed by Hoffenheim. Ibisevic made his international debut for Bosnia in 2007, but he told the New York Times that he would have considered the US if he had heard from them. “I was happy in St. Louis, got a green card, but I never really heard from anyone from the U.S. national team. I would have considered it.”

vedad-ibisevic

Vedad Ibisevic (photo: bundesliga.de)

Like Ibisevic, Neven Subotic is the child of parents from the Balkans, in his case Serbian. The Subotics settled in the US in the late 1990s and Neven played for teams in Utah before being called up to the U-17 national team. He represented the US at that level as well as the U-20 level, but a falling out with coach Thomas Rongen led him to turn his back on the Americans and represent Serbia. He made his debut in March of 2009 and has amassed 7 caps since then.

These types of quandaries in which players eligible to represent multiple countries must choose between them are not, of course, unique to the United States (German international Kevin Kuranyi, for example, could also have represented Brazil and Panama). Increased flows of people across national boundaries in recent years are creating many novel problems to be dealt with throughout life, and soccer is merely one area in which these problems manifest themselves. That said, there have often been debates about players’ eligibility for various national teams, especially in the early 20th century when European nations such as Italy and Spain made a habit of recruiting South Americans for their national teams. It was this poaching that led FIFA to tighten restrictions on players switching their allegiances. It is only now, with players who represent one country at the youth level having previously lost the right to represent another at senior level, that FIFA has loosened these restrictions. Finding appropriate definitions for defining nationality and determining eligibility has long vexed FIFA and will almost certainly continue to be a problem in the future.

When  Schalke midfielder Jermaine Jones announced recently that he intends to switch his national allegiance from Germany to the United States, it was notable because it has been so long since the United States has had the potential to call on players such as him (Edgar Castillo, a Mexican-American who has previously played for Mexico, may also suit up for the US). The US has arguably become more of an exporter of talent in recent years. The United States’ status as a nation of immigrants means that it is likely to continue to develop players who are eligible and choose to represent other countries. It is less clear, however, how long it will take the US to shed its image as an importer of players and be seen as a country that also develops players for other nations.

8 Responses to “United States: Importer or Exporter of Talent?”

  1. Luke
    November 2nd, 2009 08:16
    1

    Thanks for the interesting post. It’s nice to see you writing about soccer again, even if your come-back post pulled the scab off the Rossi wound ;)

  2. Nick
    November 2nd, 2009 08:18
    2

    Good article. I would also bring up Stuart Holden(born in Scotland), Benny Feilhaber(born in Brazil) and Freddy Adu(Ghana) as three more prominent USMNT members that we have taken as our own.

  3. Murfmensch
    November 2nd, 2009 10:11
    3

    A team of diverse origins is no less poised to represent the US than France’s World-Cup winning squad. Feilhaber is as American as Chow Mein and Nachos.

    There are a single-digit percentage of Germans who would question whether or not Jermaine Jones is actually German. He has every reason to feel at home on the US squad.

    People who follow the game closely have a pretty positive stereotype of US players. They run through the whole game and generate less off-pitch drama. Many believe that we are mistaken when we do not pluck teenagers out of the youth system and have them battle full-grown experienced players. I’m not sure a better national team is worth destroying that system.

  4. Rob
    November 2nd, 2009 14:24
    4

    Great Post! I just found this site today as I found your post where you reviewed “Soccer in a Football World” by David Wangerin.

    I think it is safe to say that for the 2010 Cup we are basically on our own now for the most part. Our top (most talented) players include born and bred Americans through and through (I consider the top five in no specific order to be Dempsey, Howard, Donovan, Bradley, and Onyewu). What will be key going forward for the MLS is if they want to focus on exporting talent (and therefore developing better American talent) or importing talent (short term focus) to improve the overall level of the league.

    Looking forward to more from the site as I’m saving it now.

  5. Elliott
    November 4th, 2009 16:48
    5

    I find the underlying assumption of such theories borderline offensive and at best ignorant – we live, and have always lived, in a society with open borders and fluid migration.

    Great article and look forward to many more!

  6. Sgc
    November 4th, 2009 18:42
    6

    When I travel abroad, people often tell me that the United States is good at soccer only because they import foreigners to play for the national team.

    This misconception has been going on a long time. In the 1950 WC, English press erroneously reported that most of the US team was Scottish, when all but I wanna say 3 were born in the US.

    It comes from foreign press that can’t figure out how we beat anybody.

  7. Meat Pies and Orange Slices « Association Football
    November 24th, 2009 10:13
    7

    [...] well. Grant Wahl explains. US exports soccer talent. The Culture of Soccer makes a great point: we now export soccer players. Giuseppe Rossi, Vedad Ibisevic, Nevan Subotic, and Arturo Alvarez all developed their skills in [...]

  8. oseni hakeem
    January 22nd, 2010 07:32
    8

    my name is oseni hakeem alex, i have a football skill and talent but i need some to train me on how to develop it pleasde i need any out there to help me i want to become a football star.

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