Description de l'episode
In December 2025, the United States Congress
held its first-ever hearing on the crisis
in American youth sports.
The title of that hearing — officially entered
into the public record — was one word.
BENCHED.
Six months later, the FIFA World Cup opens
on American soil. Billions of viewers.
48 nations. A global celebration
of the beautiful game.
And in the shadows of those stadiums —
millions of American kids
are still sitting on the bench.
Not because they lack talent.
Not because they lost interest.
Because the system was never built for them.
In this first episode of BENCHED,
hosts Cole Merritt and Dana Whitfield
go inside the congressional hearing room
of December 16, 2025 —
and trace the broken machinery
of youth soccer in America
back to its source.
Three barriers. Documented. On the record.
① The price architecture —
$4,000 to $15,000 per child, per year,
to access serious youth soccer development.
② The coaching gap —
a system built on unpaid,
unregulated volunteer parent coaches
with no accountability mechanisms.
③ The racial filter —
Latino and Black kids are three times
more likely to quit soccer
because they feel unwanted.
Not unskilled. Unwanted.
Sources used in this episode :
→ U.S. House Committee on Education
and the Workforce — official hearing
"Benched: The Crisis in American Youth Sports
and Its Cost to Our Future" — Dec. 16, 2025
democrats-edworkforce.house.gov
→ Tom Farrey testimony (full PDF) —
Executive Director, Aspen Institute
Sports & Society Program
edworkforce.house.gov
→ McKinsey Institute for Economic Mobility —
"Unlocking the growing power of Latino fans"
October 13, 2025
mckinsey.com/institute-for-economic-mobility
→ Aspen Institute State of Play reports —
aspenprojectplay.org
This is not a soccer story.
This is an American story.
—
BENCHED is a documentary podcast series
produced across the 2026 World Cup summer.
New episodes every week — June through August.
Subscribe so you don't miss Episode 02 :
"Follow The Money" —
Who built this system,
and who profits from keeping it exactly as it is.
BENCHED PODCAST
BENCHED | How America Named
Its Youth Soccer Crisis
DESCRIPTION YOUTUBE — VERSION COMPLÈTE
In December 2025, the United States Congress
held its first-ever hearing on the crisis
in American youth sports.
The title of that hearing — officially entered
into the public record — was one word.
BENCHED.
Six months later, the FIFA World Cup opens
on American soil. Billions of viewers.
48 nations. A global celebration
of the beautiful game.
And in the shadows of those stadiums —
millions of American kids
are still sitting on the bench.
Not because they lack talent.
Not because they lost interest.
Because the system was never built for them.
In this first episode of BENCHED,
hosts Cole Merritt and Dana Whitfield
go inside the congressional hearing room
of December 16, 2025 —
and trace the broken machinery
of youth soccer in America
back to its source.
Three barriers. Documented. On the record.
① The price architecture —
$4,000 to $15,000 per child, per year,
to access serious youth soccer development.
② The coaching gap —
a system built on unpaid,
unregulated volunteer parent coaches
with no accountability mechanisms.
③ The racial filter —
Latino and Black kids are three times
more likely to quit soccer
because they feel unwanted.
Not unskilled. Unwanted.
Sources used in this episode :
→ U.S. House Committee on Education
and the Workforce — official hearing
"Benched: The Crisis in American Youth Sports
and Its Cost to Our Future" — Dec. 16, 2025
democrats-edworkforce.house.gov
→ Tom Farrey testimony (full PDF) —
Executive Director, Aspen Institute
Sports & Society Program
edworkforce.house.gov
→ McKinsey Institute for Economic Mobility —
"Unlocking the growing power of Latino fans"
October 13, 2025
mckinsey.com/institute-for-economic-mobility
→ Aspen Institute State of Play reports —
aspenprojectplay.org
This is not a soccer story.
This is an American story.
—
BENCHED is a documentary podcast series
produced across the 2026 World Cup summer.
New episodes every week — June through August.
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