We’re sorry to bring it up, but directly following the USMNT’s fiasco at Ato Boldon Stadium, a lot of talking heads entered the debate surrounding how to fix U.S. Soccer without offering much in the way of concrete, actionable plans. But it was hard to ignore the insight offered from two of America’s most prized European exports: Borussia Dortmund’s Christian Pulisic and Newcastle United’s DeAndre Yedlin.
In Pulisic’s article for The Players’ Tribune, he outlined how important his dual citizenship was to his development with regards to being able to train at Dortmund’s academy at the age of 16: “Man, ask anyone and they’ll tell you — those age 16-18 years are everything. From a developmental perspective, it’s almost like the sweet spot. It’s the age where a player’s growth and skill sort of intersect, in just the right way — and where, with the right direction, a player can make their biggest leap in development by far.”
For Pulisic, the ability “to fight tooth and nail” with a group of players who’ve all “been the best player” throughout their own youth careers was what made the difference, rather than being “treated like a star” on some U-17 side in the U.S.
“It really does frustrate me, when I watch MLS, and I see our best U-17 players — who, again, are so talented and so capable — being rostered … but then not being put on the field much to actually play,” Pulisic wrote. “I watch that, and I just think about how I was given a chance … a real chance … and it changed my life. Why then are we seemingly hesitant to allow these other talents to blossom?”
In an extensive interview in Newcastle’s match day program last December, Yedlin was asked for his take on Pulisic’s comments: “I thought he was spot on,” he said. “Coming from a kid who notices the problem, especially with youth soccer and the way we’re developing kids in America, the fact that he can see it at such a young age is pretty telling. It shows that I think a change does need to be made.
“We’ve seen that young players, especially American players, are being put on the bench in MLS. They’re taken out of college, so they’re not going to have an education, and they’re just being put on the bench. Then, say they don’t play for a year, it’s tough. Then maybe you have to go to the second division in America, or stuff like that.
“I think that players need the opportunities. Look at England — there are a lot of young English players who are doing well, because they’ve been given a chance at such a young age. I definitely think that kind of policy needs to be implemented in the U.S.”
And while no such policy exists in MLS, it’s interesting to note that Liga MX re-instituted a youth rule for the 2018 Apertura season and beyond that dictates how much time must be given to U-21 players. For the 17-game Apertura tournament, each of the 18 clubs have to give at least 765 minutes to youth players. That number will rise to 1,000 minutes for the 2019 Clausura.
Reddit user ZeroLolisPlan does an excellent job of covering this in the LigaMX community, and you can see that clubs like America, Atlas, Lobos, Pachuca and Monterrey have already far exceeded the requirement after only eight weeks of play (although the rule is certainly not without controversy).
With all that being said, here’s a look at the state of U-21 playing time in MLS, with an emphasis on American (and for the Canadian clubs, Canadian) players, although you’ll also find a list of the non-American U-21 players with above 500 minutes of playing time at the bottom. Keep in mind that clubs have now played anywhere between 26 and 28 games.
If you want to blame five clubs for failing to push U.S. Soccer forward, look at Colorado, Columbus, Houston, New England and Seattle. The pathetic thing is that three of those teams are charter clubs (among the 10 which debuted in the ’96 season). They’ve now had 23 seasons to create some kind of youth setup, and this is what they’ve got to show for it. It’s impossible to grasp how pathetic this is — Houston, New England and Colorado probably won't even make the playoffs, making you really question their purpose.
MLS Youth Development: American U-21 Playing Time By Club, Ranked
*Canadian international | All numbers courtesy of WhoScored.com and correct as of 09/04/2018.
T19. Colorado Rapids = 0
NONE
T19. Columbus Crew = 0
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T19. Houston Dynamo = 0
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T19. New England Revolution = 0
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T19. Seattle Sounders = 0
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18. Los Angeles FC = 30 minutes
Shaft Brewer Jr, 18 (30)
17. Chicago Fire = 125 minutes
Djordje Mihailovic, 19 (125)
16. New York City FC = 198 minutes
Jonathan Lewis, 21 (198)
15. LA Galaxy = 202 minutes
Bradford Jamieson, 21 (202)
14. Orlando City = 231 minutes
Cameron Lindley, 21 (202)
Pierre Da Silva, 20 (29)
13. Montreal Impact = 287 minutes
*Shamit Shome, 20 (249)
*Mathieu Choiniere, 19 (26)
*David Choiniere, 21 (12)
12. Minnesota United = 340 minutes
Mason Toye, 19 (340)
11. Portland Timbers = 433 minutes
Marco Farfan, 19 (425)
Jeremy Ebobisse, 21 (8)
10. Atlanta United = 443 minutes
Miles Robinson, 21 (270)
Andrew Carleton, 18 (90)
Brandon Vazquez, 19 (69)
George Bello, 16 (14)
9. Sporting Kansas City = 665 minutes
Jaylin Lindsey, 18 (555)
Gianluca Busio, 16 (110)
8. Toronto FC = 666 minutes
*Liam Fraser, 20 (525)
*Julian Dunn-Johnson, 18 (105)
*Aidan Daniels, 19 (12)
Ayo Akinola, 18 (24)
7. San Jose Earthquakes = 769 minutes
Jackson Yueill, 21 (769)
6. D.C. United = 1,142 minutes
Christopher Durkin, 18 (1,142)
5. Vancouver Whitecaps = 1,906 minutes
*Alphonso Davies, 17 (1,906)
4. FC Dallas = 2,507 minutes
Reggie Cannon, 20 (2,382)
Paxton Pomykal, 18 (125)
3. New York Red Bulls = 2,583 minutes
Tyler Adams, 19 (1,968)
Kyle Duncan, 21 (353)
Benjamin Mines, 18 (90)
Tommy Redding, 21 (90)
Cristian Casseres Jr, 18 (82)
2. Philadelphia Union = 3,943 minutes
Auston Trusty, 20 (2,430)
Mark McKenzie, 19 (1,179)
Matthew Real, 19 (236)
Anthony Fontana, 18 (98)
1. Real Salt Lake = 6,413 minutes
Justen Glad, 21 (2,461)
Brooks Lennon, 20 (2,323)
Sebastian Saucedo, 21 (905)
Aaron Herrera, 21 (724)
U-21 Non-Americans With Above 500 Minutes In MLS Play
Jefferson Savarino, 21 (2,405) Real Salt Lake | Venezuela
Diego Rossi, 20 (2,002) LAFC | Uruguay
Milton Valenzuela, 20 (1,955) Columbus Crew | Argentina
Latif Blessing, 21 (1,633) LAFC | Ghana
Nouhou Tolo, 21 (1,529) Seattle Sounders | Cameroon
Ezequiel Barco, 19 (1,419) Atlanta United | Argentina
Cristhian Paredes, 20 (1,281), Portland Timbers | Paraguay
Eduard Atuesta, 21 (1,203) LAFC | Colombia
Jesus Medina, 21 (1,813) NYCFC | Paraguay
Yangel Herrera, 20 (1,003) NYCFC | Venezuela
Mohammed Adams, 21 (908) Chicago Fire | England
Danilo Acosta, 20 (897), Real Salt Lake | Honduras
Joao Moutinho, 20 (874) LAFC | Portugal
Jeisson Vargas, 20 (846), Montreal Impact | Chile
Cristian Martinez, 21 (843) Columbus Crew | Panama
Josue Colman, 20 (809), Orlando City | Paraguay
Derrick Etienne, 21 (744), NYRB | Haiti
11 American U-21 players have been given over 500 minutes in MLS this season as compared to 17 Non-Americans. Two Canadians have hit that mark.