Youth Soccer Options Grow With Pelada

Pelada Football Academy, a youth soccer academy founded as a nonprofit in February, aims to give more kids the opportunity to play and learn while seeking to complement and not compete with other soccer clubs by bringing in kids and their families who find recreational soccer too recreational or competitive soccer too competitive. These kids, in addition to clinics and scrimmages, will have a chance to play more than just soccer. Futsal, a form of indoor soccer with more reliance on technique and fancy footwork, is just around the corner with the upcoming Pelada Football Academy Futsal Tournament, Nov. 16 and 17 at Willamalane Indoor Courts in Springfield.

“I try to organize our program so it works in conjunction with those other ones, so we’re not trying to take players off of Metro or Kidsports,” says Joey Garah, director of the Pelada. “We’re trying to serve those people who are lost in the middle ground. They are not necessarily looking for college scholarships, not trying to win big titles, but they do value the training and teaching element of the game. We’re finding right now that that’s a lot of kids.”

Played on a smaller court with fewer players per side and more excitement offensively, Futsal is fast-paced and places particular emphasis on individual skill. The tournament is composed of high school boys and U-13/14 (under age 13 and 14) and U-11/12 boys and girls. The registration deadline is Nov. 6.

“One of the main things I hear about soccer and people who don’t enjoy watching it is they want to see more points, and Futsal is that way,” Garah says. “You tend to see more high-scoring games, and that action is always in your goal. You don’t have to be a player or fan of the sport to see that more goals are going in and that it is more packed action. I think part of the reason it is taking off is because it’s a lot of fun.”

Traditional soccer may not be as high scoring, but it sure is taking off. Last fall, when Pelada was first organized before becoming a nonprofit, Garah estimates about 44 players were in the system within the U-14 and U-12 boys and girls classifications. Now, he estimates about 130 are associated with the academy, incorporating U-10 and U-8 age groups. Additionally, Garah and his colleagues with Pelada run soccer clinics in the summer for U-18 high-schoolers.

“I just continue to hear from families that they were looking and looking for something like this,” Garah says, “so as long as we keep hearing that feedback we will keep trying to spread out and make it more accessible to everybody.”