Bamspeedy
CheeseBob
Okay, so until MLS draws better than the NHL you won't acknowledge growth. Got it. That's a a unique system of benchmarks there. Personally, since I acknowledge that they started from zero and get further from it every year they are clearly growing, but that may just be my view, which may be skewed by my awareness of their television contracts, along with the fact that many leagues in other nations now have US television contracts.
And plenty of park and rec level baseball programs, basketball programs, and any other sport programs operate about the same. Those sports also have other more organized youth programs available, and hey, so does soccer...now.
This argument always cracks me up. Do you think this is a result of puberty, really? Little League baseball never saw it that way. They recognized that kids grow up and those who are really interested go play high school sports. Youth football sees the same thing. Surprise, so does soccer.
Apparently I live in a place with nothing but large high schools. Our local area has produced an Olympic track athlete, a legitimate star NBA player, a couple of made the team but not overly famous NFL players, and a handful of baseball players who made it to the majors, a couple of whom stuck for a while though they were never all stars. We have a current crop of kids going to college on soccer scholarships and I suspect we will have an MLS player in the fairly near future...because here soccer is actually as popular as the other sports, and a lot of our most athletic kids have recognized that there is less competition (for now) for soccer scholarships so they are starting to focus differently than they would have in the past.
Sure soccer has shown growth, but like has been said it's pretty slow. The headlines make it sound like soccer is on pace to be the most popular in 10 years.....but they've been saying it for decades. At this pace it will be 50 years or longer.
It's not necessarily puberty that causes the change, but there is a dramatic change in interest in soccer whether one is in kindergarten or high school. Yes, all sports see a decrease as kids get older, but soccer suffers the most. There never was a football program available for us (except pass,punt, kick competitions) until we got to high school, then almost all boys signed up for it.
Are you in the southeast? I had a cousin who lived in NC and soccer was supposedly big in his area (this was late 80s to early 90s). He eventually played on the US Olympic team.