Well, let\u2019s face it. US Soccer<\/a> has a long history of rewarding mediocrity, especially in comparison with the rest of the world. The MLS SuperDraft and the fact that more than half of the teams make it into the playoffs make this evident.\u00a0<\/p>
It\u2019s time to start rewarding failure.<\/p>
The federation ran by sound geniuses that understand the game and how to be successful, recently announced that the U20 Men\u2019s National Team coaching vacancy would be filled by Anthony Hudson. Hudson, if you aren\u2019t familiar, is arguably the worst coach in MLS history. In his tenure with Colorado Rapids<\/a>, he was sacked after amassing a truly incredible 8-26-9 record. If that doesn\u2019t sound like the kind of manager you want in charge of arguably the most important age level for national team development, then you must know that losing matches isn\u2019t what you want from a soccer team.<\/p>
One of the most baffling aspects of the federation is the fact that US Soccer essentially requires coaches to live in Chicago, where the headquarters are based. But that should have worked in favor of former Chicago Fire manager <\/a>Veljko Paunovic<\/a>, who still lives in the city.\u00a0Unfortunately, the Serbian international was not hired for the position.<\/p>
But would he have been a good fit for the U20 National Team job?<\/p>
According to Yahoo Sports\u2019 Doug McIntyre, Paunovic was not approached for the job.<\/p>
Make of that statement what you will.<\/p>
What remains with US Soccer isn\u2019t just the same joke as it was before. Hiring Gregg Berhalter<\/a> was accepting mediocrity. Bruce Arena before him was an attempt at mediocrity (but couldn\u2019t even deliver that). Hudson’s appointment shows that we’re in a position where we just have to accept that failure is, well, acceptable.\u00a0Finally, US Soccer stops rewarding mediocrity. <\/p>
Probably not.<\/p>","protected":false},"excerpt":{"rendered":"