Millions Of Dollars Lost To Youth Sports Due To Covid-19

 

DALLAS (AP) — Less than a month ago, AAU President Roger Goudy watched membership in the long-running youth sports organization drop from 20,000 ahead of last year's pace to about 3,000 behind in just a week.

For now, he hopes a girls volleyball tournament he helped turn into one of the world's biggest will somehow be played in late June. Should the coronavirus pandemic disrupt that event along with other tournaments, Goudy is prepared to view the Amateur Athletic Union's financial losses as significant.

 

 

Santa Monica High School students play beach volleyball at Santa Monica beach near where the International Olympic Committee Evaluation Commission and LA 2024 gave press conferences as the IOC wrap up their visit to Los Angeles, California on May 11, 2017. / AFP PHOTO / FREDERIC J. BROWN (Photo credit should read FREDERIC J. BROWN/AFP via Getty Images)

 

 

"If we don't crank up, I'd say, by the first of May, we're going to see some tremendous losses simply because we're not going to have time for those events that have qualifiers," Goudy said. "But by the same token, you don't want to put them into an environment where their health or their family's health or the coaches or the volunteers' health are at risk. So that's a tightrope that we're walking right now."

Youth sports is a $25 billion U.S. industry that is essentially shut down, with seemingly endless ripple effects. Communities with sprawling, empty fields and arenas are losing millions of dollars with lucrative tournaments canceled or postponed. Thousands of youth leagues are on hold, with many sponsors hit by the economic slowdown and the prospect of nervous parents seeking refunds.

There is no sense of when, or whether, a recovery might come.

"I think it's one of those that, when you're looking at the ceiling at 2 in the morning going, you know, playing the 'what if' scenarios, you're worried," said US Youth Soccer CEO Skip Gilbert, whose organization oversees an estimated 3 million players. "But when I put on my hat every day and I'm talking to staff and talking to parents, you want to be as hopeful as possible."

The Sports Facilities Advisory, a Florida-based company that works with municipalities on youth sports and recreation venues, estimates the pandemic has disrupted a youth sports umbrella that includes some 45 million athletes and their families.

Dev Pathik, its founder and CEO, said there will be an impact regardless of how soon play resumes.

"There will be facilities that don't make it," Pathik said. "There will be sports organizations that don't make it. And I think in most cases, it's safe to say that those will be primarily facilities or organizations that just are smaller and weren't built to weather this thing, which is a large percentage of organizations."

 

French former football star and Barca foundation ambassador, Lilian Thuram (L), plays with young refugees at the Skaramangas camp, on the outskirts of Athens, on June 5, 2019, during an event organised by the Barca foundation which includes cooperative games, football matches and dialogue sessions with children. - Skaramangas camp houses 2624 refugees and migrants from 28 countries. (Photo by Louisa GOULIAMAKI / AFP) (Photo credit should read LOUISA GOULIAMAKI/AFP via Getty Images)

 

 

With that, Pathik added, comes opportunity: He believes there will be consolidation — "Eagles turn to vultures in times like these," he says — and there could be an increased role for national governing bodies and pro sports leagues in any rebound.

"And I think they'll come to the table ... from my conversations with them," Pathik said. "Because they know that fandom is born in youth sports."

That scenario seems a long way off, and participation levels never did recover from the 2008 recession. Tom Farrey, executive director of the Aspen Institute Sports and Society Program, cited statistics that showed a drop in team sports participation from 45% in 2008 to 38% in 2014; that number remained stagnant as the economy and industry recovered.

Goudy's concern goes well beyond his beloved AAU Junior National Volleyball Championships and the estimated $50 million impact it has in Orlando, Florida. The AAU has already suspended activities through April as the organization, which dates to 1888, tries to avoid widespread cancellations.

A half-hour's drive north of Indianapolis is the Grand Park Sports Campus, 400 acres of fields, baseball diamonds and indoor facilities built with more than $80 million in public funding.

If it stays closed through June, the loss in direct spending could exceed $85 million in central Indiana, according to Brenda Myers of the Hamilton County tourism department. Vicki Duncan Gardner, a spokeswoman for the city of Westfield, said Grand Park itself is in good shape financially and officials are confident of a robust return.

 

 

 

WUHAN, CHINA - JUNE 16: (CHINA OUT) Ouyang Nianchi 22. she is Juggling by herself after the blackout on June 16 .2019 in WuhanHubei Province.China. She comes from Dawu. It's actually a county town in Hubei Province.There was no football field in high school, so her had to join the local man football club. Later, she came to Wuhan Vocational College of Software and Engineering further education and began to receive regular football training. Without women's football, she had to train with the men's team. She can't play in the College League because the coach is afraid of her injury.After graduation, she came to starry sky stadium. A grass-roots football gathering place, she almost every day to join the men's game. few girls play football here.According to the statistics of relevant institutions. More than 1.8 million women's football players are registered in the United States, and more than 1 million women's football players are registered in Germany. The number of Chinese women football players registered exceeds 2000.(Photo by Wang He/Getty Images)

 

 

"Our concern is for our visitors and residents," Gardner said.

Parents are key in any question of a recovery. With 22 million people applying for unemployment in just the past four weeks, the affordability of a luxury like youth sports is now in question for many.

"The problem that we're facing is that a lot of our parents might be out of work," said Carrie Langford, chief operating officer for the 65-team North Texas Celtic Futbol Club that is part of thelucrative select soccer business in North Texas. "The question is, we don't know who's coming back and who can afford it."

Erica Smith, whose teenage son plays AAU basketball in the Dallas area, estimates her family spends about $4,000 in a normal year of tournaments and traveling. With summer coming up fast and sports still on hold, most parents have spent only a fraction of that.

"Youth sports is a huge part of my kid's life," said Smith, who also has a daughter who was just getting started in competitive cheer. "I really see the value in team sports because he's learned so much outside of just actually playing a sport."

Whenever youth sports do resume, Pathik said, the lucrative travel circuit could take longer to recover because events will be more regionally based.

Still, there is little question among experts that the recovery will gain momentum as safety concerns are addressed.

"How elastic this particular marketplace has been and how much just demand there is for kids to play and to compete and for families to do this," Pathik said. "I don't think there's any question that's going to rebound."

 

 

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