Cover image of show Youth $ports

Youth $ports

Podcast by Ally Tucker

English

Personal stories & conversations

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About Youth $ports

This podcast explores the changing landscape of Youth Sports (or Youth $ports, rather) in America and how it continues to shift away from its roots. What started out as a golden period in many children’s lives has become a cut throat industry, with various sides trying to find the advantage. As a former high level club soccer coach and collegiate athlete, Ally Tucker sits down for each episode in a 1 on 1 interview format with a variety of co-hosts from different realms of the youth sports world. Guests range from parents, to youth coaches, to referees/officials, to administrators, to college coaches, to business owners… and of course, to the athletes themselves (at some point, they still matter in this equation). Some topics will make you think critically. Some topics will make you cry. Other topics will infuriate you and leave you asking, “What are we really doing here?” Youth sports provide a lane for growth, life lessons, incredible memories and lifelong friendships. But at what cost?

All episodes

98 episodes

episode A Moving Target artwork

A Moving Target

Episode 97: Taylor Roden (Soccer coach/Teacher) 🎙️ |  Taylor Roden is an elementary school teacher and girls soccer coach who loves coaching high school soccer, but has found it a challenge in recent years to land in the right spot at the club level. 🔹 As both a teacher and coach, Taylor is deeply focused on development and those “aha moments” for players  when confidence clicks and they realize “I can do this.” Those moments still give her chills. 🔹 Taylor shares a very honest reflection before the episode: despite being a C-license coach and educator, she doesn’t feel like there’s a clear place for her in today’s club soccer landscape outside of high school coaching. 🔹 She reflects that coaching “second-level” club teams was the most fulfilling experience she’s had, but that space feels like it’s disappeared in the current system. 🔹 She describes feeling stuck between worlds… like she has to choose between being a teacher with a full life outside soccer or being fully immersed in the demanding club coaching circuit. 🔹 The modern club structure has raised the commitment bar so high (travel, practices, year-round demands) that it’s pushed out many quality coaches who aren’t full-time soccer professionals. 🔹 The idea of true “second teams” has faded, with clubs instead funneling players into a system where everyone is labeled “top team,” even when the competitive balance doesn’t match. 🔹 We talk about how clubs have shifted away from coach autonomy, moving toward rigid league-driven structures instead of allowing teams to be placed where development actually makes sense. 🔹 The core idea: players should be in environments where they are challenged appropriately, not getting crushed every game, and not dominating without growth opportunities. 🔹 Taylor calls out the constant “Pathway to Pro” messaging in youth soccer culture, questioning how realistic or meaningful it is for the vast majority of players. 🔹 With experience across rec, club, and high school soccer, she highlights how dramatically different each level is from organization and consistency to resources and expectations. 🔹 We close by reflecting on how club soccer today feels designed for full-time coaches, and wondering if either of us would have survived in the current landscape…plus some unfiltered hot takes to finish it off.

20 May 2026 - 1 h 41 min
episode The Numbers Don't Lie artwork

The Numbers Don't Lie

Episode 96: Joe Foran (Long-time soccer official and mentor) 🎙 Joe Foran, a long-time soccer official, mentor, and author of Misusing the Young, joins the podcast to unpack the growing referee crisis in youth sports and why the entire system is leaning heavily on teenage officials to keep games alive. 🔹 Foran’s path into officiating started in the most ironic way possible: criticizing a referee himself. The official turned to him and said, “You really should become a referee.” Thirty-plus years later, he’s still in the game and now serves on the National Disciplinary Appeals Panel for the Soccer Federation (essentially soccer’s version of the Supreme Court). 🔹 One of the most alarming realities? Foran says roughly 1/3 of the disciplinary cases he hears involve referee abuse in some form. 🔹 We discuss how physically and mentally demanding officiating actually is. In a typical soccer match, referees are making 100-150 decisions while constantly moving and all are expected to be perfect and delivered in microseconds. “If people understood the difficulty, they’d be more sympathetic.” 🔹 The officiating pipeline is collapsing. Across all sports, roughly 75% of officials quit within three years. In soccer specifically, Foran says about 1/2 of newly trained youth referees are gone by the end of their very first season. 🔹 And the issue isn’t really the pay. Officials can make GOOD money. The real problem? The constant negativity, judgment, and abuse — not always screaming, but the exhausting environment young refs are forced to operate in every weekend. 🔹 Nearly half of the 100,000+ referees in the US Soccer Federation are under 18 years old. Youth refs are officiating the majority of youth games because, bluntly, many adults don’t want those assignments. The entire youth sports model is increasingly being sustained by teenagers. 🔹 Foran argues the conversation has to go beyond “administrative shortages.” What happens to the teenagers who quit after being verbally abused? What’s the long-term mental health impact on kids squeezed out of sports officiating before they even become adults? 🔹 One of his biggest practical solutions? Adult field marshals. Foran believes simply having an adult presence supporting young referees on the sideline could dramatically lower tensions and improve retention almost immediately. 🔹 We also dive into the “proximity theory”.... Which is the closer spectators are to the action, the more emotional they become. One league experimented with moving parents back just five yards from the touchline, and clubs were stunned by how much it lowered the temperature. 🔹 Foran shares a brutally funny phrase from a basketball coach: “Delusional Parent Disorder” That is the irrational belief that your child is dramatically better than reality, often fueling sideline outrage directed at officials. 🔹 And one final reminder from Foran: “We see what we look for.” Parents watching officials are often searching for mistakes, while watching their own kids for moments of success. Maybe youth sports changes a little when we start looking for the good in officials too. 🔹 Plus… today’s hot take: NO MORE CRUISES.

13 May 2026 - 1 h 1 min
episode Double-Edged Sword artwork

Double-Edged Sword

Episode 95: Abby Fleischer (Hospitality and Management Student at Kansas State)   🎙 Let’s talk youth sports megaplexes… You know, the massive, all-in-one complexes with endless turf fields, lights, indoor facilities, and yes… $50 parking. If you’ve been in youth sports long enough, you’ve probably lived a weekend (or 3 day weekend, because hey… Spend more MONEY!) inside one. 🔹 Abby Fleischer dug into the economic impact of sports tourism, earning national recognition and presenting at the Eta Sigma Delta Research Symposium. 🔹 We all know youth sports hit parents’ wallets, but they’re also big business for entire communities and regional economies. 🔹 Across the country, massive multi-sport complexes are popping up, hosting tournaments year-round and transforming how and where kids compete. 🔹 One standout example: Grand Park Sports Campus in Westfield, Indiana—a sprawling facility that’s evolved into a full-blown entertainment district, with housing, and even future pro-level facilities planned. 🔹 These complexes often feature 15–20 full-sized fields, huge parking lots, highway exits built just for them and they’re frequently dropped in the middle of nowhere, then built outward. 🔹 The goal is clear: attract tournaments, drive traffic, and generate spending. As Fleischer notes, communities invest in these projects to stimulate economic growth. 🔹 And it works! Hotels, restaurants, shopping centers, and entertainment venues boom around these complexes. “They find the space and then build everything around it.” 🔹 But what’s often missing? A focus on what’s best for the athletes themselves. 🔹 These facilities make year-round play easier than ever…but that raises a legit question: is constant access helping development or just causing more burnout? Research tells us year-round participation isn’t necessarily a positive.  🔹 Towns like Westfield become weekend hotspots, but they’re also active during the week with practices, leagues, and rentals. This isn’t just occasional traffic, it’s constant. 🔹 There’s major residential growth too. Families moving closer, schools expanding, and in some cases, athletes temporarily relocating just to keep up with travel demands. 🔹 It’s not all positive: rising taxes, longer commutes, higher prices. Longtime residents often feel the strain of rapid development. 🔹 Meanwhile, parents are feeling it too. Hotel stays, missed school days, stay-to-play rules, wristband fees, parking costs… it adds up fast. 🔹 Scheduling isn’t accidental either. Long gaps between games often push families into nearby restaurants and entertainment zones. Cha-ching. 🔹 And here’s the twist: despite all the revenue, the margins can be razor thin. Grand Park brought in millions, but still operated at a loss, with tens of millions in debt remaining. 🔹 So the big question: are these megaplexes sustainable and even if so, at what cost? Because when year-round competition becomes the business model… the kids might be the ones paying for it most.

6 May 2026 - 1 h 4 min
episode Forecasting artwork

Forecasting

Episode 94: Harvey Araton (Sports Journalist/Author, New  York Times) 🎙 Harvey Araton, longtime The New York Times journalist and author, joins the podcast to reflect on decades of covering sports and how many of today’s youth sports issues were visible long before they exploded. 🔹 Araton shares that his most memorable assignment came during the 1998 NBA Finals, but what stuck with him most was a personal moment with his son after the game. 🔹 Even while writing about youth sports concerns 20 years ago, Araton admits he never imagined the system would evolve into what it is today. 🔹 He revisits the Little League World Series scandal involving Danny Almonte, using it as an early example of how exposure and pressure can push adults and systems to cross ethical lines. 🔹 The LLWS transformation from a single televised game to a full summer broadcast spectacle, raises a key question: are we celebrating kids, or exploiting them? 🔹 A sports psychologist told Araton the real danger isn’t being on TV…it’s what adults are willing to do to get kids there, from financial investment to bending the rules. 🔹 He discusses the growing role of private equity in youth sports, emphasizing that much of the money entering the space is driven by profit and not player well-being. 🔹 Araton shares stories of former youth stars who struggled later, unable to live up to the expectations created by early success on big stages. 🔹 The conversation tackles a common parent question: “What if my kid really loves it?” through the lens of pro soccer player Yael Averbuch’s upbringing and her parents’ decision to stay in a supportive, not controlling, role. 🔹 A powerful takeaway from that story: true passion is obvious. Averbuch was the one pushing to get to practice, not the other way around. 🔹 Araton draws a firm line between nurturing talent and trying to manufacture it: “You cannot spend your way to an elite athlete.” 🔹 His blunt reminder to parents: your child is not an investment or a stock…they are a developing human being. 🔹 He also warns about the subtle but telling use of “we” in youth sports parenting, and how it can blur the line between a child’s journey and a parent’s identity. 🔹 Araton discusses writing a book aimed directly at young athletes, cutting through the noise to remind them that the real benefits of sports often look very different from what adults promise. 🔹 The conversation ultimately centers on reclaiming youth sports for what they should be: a space for growth, enjoyment, and development…not just a pipeline to the next level.

29 Apr 2026 - 1 h 5 min
episode Soccer Dad artwork

Soccer Dad

Episode 93: David Murray (Soccer Dad/Best-selling author/journalist) 🎙 David Murray, best-selling author and journalist, joins the podcast to unpack his new book Soccer Dad. It’s a brutally honest, often hilarious chronicle of his journey as a youth sports parent raising a future Division 1 soccer player. 🔹 Murray makes it clear from the start: “This conversation is not about sports… it’s about us,” framing the story as a reflection on parenting, identity, and the choices families make along the way. 🔹 The book reads like an unfiltered diary, avoiding preachy advice and instead sharing real mistakes, emotions, and lessons learned in real time. 🔹 The story opens with a surprising twist…the long-awaited Division 1 scholarship moment feels underwhelming, challenging the idea of a “pinnacle” in youth sports. 🔹 The infamous moment: “Hey… your kid is pretty good.” Murray explains why that comment can act like fuel for parents, often driving bigger commitments and tougher decisions. 🔹 He dives into the financial realities of youth soccer, noting that most families spend far more chasing opportunities than they ever receive back in scholarships. 🔹 Murray strongly cautions against skipping high school sports for the college chase, arguing that it may actually take away the most meaningful part of the experience. 🔹 He reflects on parenting missteps, including playing his daughter up too early, and how that impacted her development and sense of belonging. 🔹 A candid look at club soccer culture and the pressure-filled pipeline, including experiences with elite leagues and the pursuit of college exposure. 🔹 The transition to Division 1 life at Ohio University brings a major wake-up call, reshaping expectations for both athlete and parent. 🔹 Murray shares the internal struggle of parenting during the college years—wanting to foster independence while always being there when the phone rings. 🔹 “You’re only as happy as your least happy child.” What a powerful reality that defines much of the parent experience during challenging moments. 🔹 He highlights both sides of the journey: the immense pride in watching his daughter succeed and the difficulty of navigating setbacks. 🔹 One of the book’s most memorable moments: the chapter titled “The Day I Became Dumb F*ck Dad,” capturing the humor and humility of youth sports parenting. 🔹 Murray offers one key suggestion for college coaches: spend “five f*cking minutes” understanding the athlete through the parent’s perspective. 🔹 The conversation closes with life after youth sports…how the parent-child relationship evolves once the game is no longer the central “shared project.”

22 Apr 2026 - 1 h 19 min
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