The youth academy fields at Ecuadorian club Independiente del Valle, a rising force in South American soccer, are in a frenzy. As kids between the ages of 12 and 13 play informal games, older ones practice in short spurts under the supervision of coaches, who tell them to keep their pace and handle the ball with intelligence.
Many coaches at the club work nonstop to polish the talents of each player, and they do it in an environment of strict rules.
About 150 youngsters train at the club’s headquarters in Sangolqui, the second most populous city in the Pichincha province and nicknamed “the heart of the valley.” And it’s where Ecuador’s national soccer team has found a key source of players as the team returns to the World Cup in Qatar after missing the tournament four years ago.
Among the 28 players chosen by Ecuador coach Gustavo Alfaro for two friendlies in September, 12 had been schooled in the youth divisions at the 64-year-old club that this year won the Copa Sudamericana for the second time. Independiente has been on the rise since 2007, and also played in the Copa Libertadores final in 2016.
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The club places a priority on education, with many of the players finishing their high school program.
Players like Bayer Leverkusen defender Piero Hincapié, who is 20, Brighton midfielder Moisés Caicedo, 21, and Real Valladolid winger Gonzalo Plata, 22, are among them. All three were unknown to Ecuador fans until recently. All three came from Independiente del Valle’s academy.
Alfaro, who was hired by Ecuador in mid-2020 after Jordi Cruyff left without ever coaching the national team in a match, has taken advantage of the star factory at Independiente del Valle. He used players from the club to start his team’s renovation, regardless of the criticism he received for leaving some veterans out of his squad.
“We want a seal of quality, we want this DNA to be not only on the field, but also in our trips, hotels, in their studies,” Independiente sporting director Roberto Arroyo told The Associated Press. “In youth divisions we always want Independiente to be the best-dressed, the most punctual, the one who cleans the dressing room after use.”