U.S. Soccer has spent three decades wrestling with a fundamental problem: how to locate the nation’s best players when they are scattered across dozens of foreign leagues and amateur circuits.
AI Meets the Beautiful Game
The answer is emerging from the intersection of artificial intelligence and video analytics, a strategy championed by COO Dan Helfrich, who previously led Deloitte Consulting before joining the federation.
By feeding thousands of match recordings into machine‑learning models, the federation can flag athletes whose statistical signatures match the demands of each on‑field role, regardless of the continent on which they compete.
The Human Element
Human scouts still attend games live, listening for subtle cues — a player’s composure under pressure, the way he communicates with teammates — that numbers alone cannot capture.
Soccer has now edged past baseball to become the third‑most popular sport in the United States, yet the national team’s historic weakness in knockout‑stage matches underscores the urgency of closing the talent gap.
A Global Search
Helfrich believes the technology will finally allow the federation to look beyond geography, ensuring that a promising midfielder in Lagos or a defensive stalwart in Leipzig receives the same consideration as a domestic prospect in Scottsdale.
The hybrid model does not replace human judgment; rather, it amplifies it, creating a pipeline that feeds directly into both the men’s and women’s senior programs.