The real version will exist here... I will however be playing nice with this group over on a bigger blog...
http://www.iwantabuzz.com/wdblog/sports/pro-soccer-in-jacksonville-launches-town-hall-meetings/
http://www.iwantabuzz.com/wdblog/sports/pro-soccer-in-jacksonville-launches-town-hall-meetings/
Tuesday night, the big three of the Sunshine Soccer Group held their
first “Town Hall Supporters” forum for the new, North America Soccer League
expansion team coming to the First Coast in 2015.
NASL team owner Mark Firsch, Sunshine Soccer Group President
Dario Sala and Jacksonville NASL expansion club President Steve Livingstone
were asked questions ranging from where they will play to how much tickets will
cost.
“We will play like Barcelona –tiki-taka style, 70%
possession” they said.
It’s interesting that the team without a name, a coach, a
field or any players at all already has a style.
It is extremely evident that these three are a passionate core
chosen to spearhead the effort to grow the game here in Jacksonville but there
are some alarming signs that point towards a less than permanent existence
here.
Sound the alarms...
Football v Futbol?
Despite it being a global game soccer is still foreign to
many here in Jacksonville.
It is hard to market something that doesn’t have a logo,
name, colors or any brand identity yet; and there are only two people on the
ground leading the charge of developing a fan base in the heart of college
football country.
In the largest city by area in the United States how far can
so few people reach?
Yes, the game is growing organically and with the World Cup
right around the corner a new audience will be exposed to the soccer’s largest
and most passionate event this summer.
Combine that with the current state of American football
facing significant challenges with concussions, legal issues and massive
amounts of player safety concerns at every level, there is probably no better
time to promote soccer.
This NASL team will need a few more boots on the ground
taking part in forums like this in addition to starting new ones regarding
Jacksonville’s home team.
NASL- didn’t that die
in the 80s?
In the game of soccer, like life, you will make mistakes but
it is important that to let them guide you, not define you.
The original NASL was the first stateside soccer exposure
for many fans. It certainly sparked the flame for soccer here and opened eyes
to the game.
Livingstone was correct in dubbing the organization as “the
new kids on the block.” One of the main reasons the MLS is succeeding can be
credited to the people that did the research and found out why the NASL 1
failed.
Jacksonville has had soccer teams before like the Cyclones,
Destroyers and Tea Men. But why are all they all dead?
There is still a group of people in the community that were
involved in NASL 1 as well as the other failed soccer organizations. However,
they are still here hoping to help the game be more successful this time
around.
Adapt or die.
Youth Soccer in Jax
Perhaps the most important aspect the SSG/NASL group is
overlooking is how to engage the current soccer community.
Imagine the activation if the team had ONE match where all
youth players in the area wear their respective club’s jersey, get in free and
are given a shirt/scarf or some sort of fan gear.
You would think that these would be the groups that a
professional team would approach first. From a ticket sales standpoint these
are the most valuable customers for a number of reasons. Youth players love the
game already as they are currently participating at the club level. Athletes at
young ages are easily converted to life-long supporters with a singular
positive experience. Most obviously, the youth player cannot attend a game by
themselves so that’s at least one more ticket sold.
Professional teams are at the top of the developmental
pyramid in any soccer community. The process that works worldwide is for those
pro teams to provide a direct player path to the first team by connecting with
local youth organizations.
Livingstone paints a wildly inaccurate picture of the youth
soccer landscape here in Jacksonville. He blindly stated, “The clubs here in
Jacksonville do a terrific job- better organizations than some in Europe.”
From every angle Jacksonville soccer is at least a decade
behind the rest of the country. Player development is consistently strangled by
a select few that are more interested in website hits and winning trophies at
young ages than collaborating to create a better environment for the players in
our community and move the game forward.
Parents, who just don’t know any better yet, are more
concerned with getting their player on the top U10 team in the state rather
than placing them in the appropriate atmosphere to develop a relationship with
the game.
In the 1990s Florida traditionally had the most creative,
technical and athletic players in the country roaming this state. Now, particularly
north Florida, is viewed as a ‘backwards’ place unable to develop players on
any scale despite an insanely deep talent pool that exists in a near perfect
climate to train players 10 months out of the year.
What the Sunshine Soccer Group has yet to realize is this
is an opportunity to truly put soccer in north Florida back on the map.
If they want to do something great for the Jacksonville
soccer community they should put their arms around clubs in the area providing the players an opportunity come together and
compete at regional and national events wearing their NASL team’s jersey.
That is a model any
true professional organization would salivate over.
Despite the most recent addition to the team, iconic Barcelona
doesn’t win by buying players; they do it by
developing their youth players. In a 2012
match against Levante all 11 Barcelona players on the pitch were products
of their youth system.
This NASL team will not be able to play like Barcelona
without having that type of vision.
My vote for a team name suggests a bigger picture and a
different process than those employed by the past organizations: First Coast
Fusion.
For Jacksonville’s sake, I hope that this team’s players see
the full field.