Super Soccer Stars
Super Soccer Stars is a company.
Financial History
Leadership Team
Key people at Super Soccer Stars.
Super Soccer Stars is a company.
Key people at Super Soccer Stars.
Key people at Super Soccer Stars.
Super Soccer Stars is the nation's leading youth soccer development program, offering age-specific classes, camps, and clinics for children from 12 months to 18 years old in a fun, non-competitive environment.[1][2][4][7] It serves over 140,000 kids annually across more than 1,200 locations in major U.S. cities like New York, Los Angeles, Boston, Miami, Chicago, and others, operating 3,300 classes weekly while solving the problem of inaccessible, high-quality early soccer instruction that builds skills, confidence, and teamwork.[1][3][5] With $26 million in annual revenue, 409 employees (including 217 listed on professional networks), and a franchise model under Youth Athletes United since 2018, the company shows strong growth momentum, including 47 travel teams via Soccer Stars United and expansion into over 153 franchise locations nationwide.[1][4][7]
Founded in fall 2000 by Argentine native Gustavo Szulansky, a New York City father frustrated by the lack of quality youth soccer coaching for his seven-year-old son, Super Soccer Stars emerged from his vision to deliver professional, caring instruction.[2][6] Szulansky, who moved to NYC in the 1980s with "fútbol in his blood," created age-specific curricula blending soccer fundamentals, early childhood development, and behavioral expertise after finding existing programs unprepared kids for real games.[2][6][7] Early traction came through community-based classes in schools and childcare centers in the New York metro area, expanding rapidly to over 1,000 locations by serving elementary and middle schoolers.[1][3] Now owned by CEO Adam Geisler and backed by Youth Athletes United franchise platform since 2018, it has grown into the largest corporate-run youth soccer program.[2][5][7]
Super Soccer Stars rides the $19 billion youth sports industry boom, capitalizing on rising parental demand for structured, developmental activities amid urbanization and health-focused trends post-pandemic.[4] Its timing aligns with soccer's global surge in U.S. popularity—fueled by MLS growth, World Cup hype, and immigrant communities—while community-based delivery taps into school/childcare partnerships strained by traditional leagues.[1][2] Market forces like franchise scalability and non-competitive programming favor it over elite clubs, influencing the ecosystem by democratizing access: it reaches 2 million+ kids historically, trains 300+ coaches, and sets standards for inclusive, skill-first youth sports that blend education with athletics.[4][7]
Super Soccer Stars is poised for further national dominance through franchise growth, potentially hitting 200+ locations as youth sports demand swells with millennial/gen-Z parenting and soccer's mainstream rise.[1][4] Trends like hybrid in-person/digital programming, inclusivity mandates, and partnerships with schools could accelerate expansion, while international hints (e.g., "across the Atlantic") signal global potential.[1][3] Its influence may evolve from regional pioneer to industry benchmark, empowering more kids as athletes—tying back to Szulansky's original spark of making soccer fun, professional, and transformative for every child.[2][6]