The fact that soccer has woven itself into nearly every aspect of Brandi Mitchellโs life wasnโt by design. Instead, it has been more of a series of fortuitous events.
Brandi, the founder of San Diego Soccer Women and Soccer Women Play, has become a prominent figure in the world of womenโs recreational soccerโnot only in San Diego but globally as well.
Her business involves connecting women soccer players of all ages who are looking for teams and tournaments or who want to start leagues of their own.
While the sport of soccer dominates globally, itโs been a slow uphill climb in popularity in the United States. That climb has been even steeper for womenโs soccer, save for a few regional areas of the country.
Fortunately for Brandi, she was born into one of those soccer-popular regionsโSouthern California. And this is when the series of fortuitous events in Brandiโs soccer life began.
How Brandi Got Her Start in Soccer
Brandi was born in 1976, just a few years after Congress enacted Title IX in 1972. The bill prohibited the Department of Health, Education, and Welfare from discriminating based on sex and sought to eliminate disparities in funding for things like athletic equipment, scholarships, training facilities, and coaches. It wasnโt until 1979 that the details of the athletics portion of the bill were finalized.
And so, in 1981, Brandi began her inaugural soccer season in the AYSO (American Youth Soccer Organization) league, and she can never remember a time when she felt disadvantaged because she was a girl.
โI had three sisters. We all played soccer at some point, says Brandi. โI didnโt have any sense of not belonging in the soccer community as a girl. I was given a perfectly comfortable situation, and I had no visibility of what boys were dealing with or not. It didnโt feel like anything was being held back for me.โ
Brandi continued playing soccer through high school. She also dabbled in other sports like softball, volleyball, and field hockey. A tough bout with mono sidelined her from soccer during her last year of high school, and it would be another decade until she dusted off her cleats to play again.
She hasnโt taken them off since.
โAround 27, I was working out with a friend who said, โHey, I remember you said you played soccer when you were a kid. Did you know thereโs a womenโs soccer league in Poway [near San Diego]?โ Brandi recalls when discussing her re-entry into soccer as an adult.
Thus began the intersecting of Brandiโs on and off-field worlds. She realized while there were soccer leagues for women, they werenโt necessarily accessible or visible. She sought to change that.
The Small Idea That Turned Soccer Into a Business
The classifieds, the Pennysaver, and Craigslist were the old-school ways local leagues promoted themselves. Brandi put a new spin on things when she launched sandiegosoccerwomen.com about 15 years ago. It was initially meant to be a local San Diego County womenโs soccer league and tournament directory. Women who were looking to join a team or teams looking for players could use her website as a resource.
What started as a small side project while she was raising two children has become a much bigger venture for Brandi. San Diego Soccer Women drew the interest of women outside of San Diego, so Brandi branched out with Soccer Women PLAY to be more inclusive of all recreational soccer women globally. Her side project is now a global initiative.
In addition to the website, Brandi manages an associated Facebook group and page, Soccer for Women in San Diego and San Diego Soccer Women. Each has nearly 1,000 and 3,500 followers, respectively. Both are very active with women interested in playing soccer where they live or traveling to play in tournaments.
While Brandiโs organization focuses solely on women, itโs age-agnostic, serving soccer women in their 20s and in their 80s. Yes, 80s. โThere are at least four 80-year-olds in the San Diego leagues,โ notes Brandi.
College Soccer–at 45 Years Old
Seeing the passion with which women of all ages play inspired Brandi. This led to her next fortuitous soccer experience. Since she didnโt have much skill training beyond high school, Brandi decided to enroll in a soccer class at Miramar College so she could improve her game.
Little did she know this would result in her landing a spot on the womenโs collegiate soccer team and her earning the title of team co-captain. At 45 years old, she was old enough to be her teammatesโ mother. Fortunately, she wasnโt at a complete disadvantage physically because she was already playing regular recreational soccer games.
Nonetheless, 90 minutes of soccer is taxing, especially when playing with women more than half your age. Thatโs where Brandiโs experience helped. Years of playing gave her a tactical advantage in decision-making on the field versus trying to outrun a younger player. She played smarter, not harder.
While Brandi has retired from collegiate soccer, she continues to play recreationally and in tournaments. She credits the skills she learned in the college class and on the collegiate team with giving her more of an edge these days.
โI didnโt improve a lot from 27 until my early forties because I was playing very recreationally,โ says Brandi. โIt wasnโt until I did the Miramar team that I felt like I was getting better and at a new primeโa prime at adult soccer.โ
The Evolution of Women’s Recreational Soccer
The world of womenโs recreational soccer has gone through quite a change in the 20 years since Brandi began promoting it. The barriers to entry are diminished, and the skill level of female soccer players has grown exponentially. Despite the growth, women in some countries still experience cultural barriers around them playing soccer.
So what is Brandiโs take on what the recreational game was for women and what she thinks will become the next evolution of womenโs soccer?
She sees a shift, no doubt.
โHearing the stories from women who played in leagues 45 years ago, they said you had one game per week, and you were lucky to be out there playing. You didnโt get to grow up with this, โ Brandi notes. โSo if you had a baby, you would breastfeed on the sideline, you would sit your kid on the sideline in a pen. Whatever it took to get there and play that game you were going to do.โ
These days, itโs different, says Brandi. Women in their 40s have options to play up to seven times a week in some cities, like San Diego. The options for women to play other sports have also expanded over the years.
Thatโs one reason Brandi thinks thereโs actually been a reduction in womenโs recreational soccer in the United States. She thinks another reason is that todayโs girls start playing much younger and at a much more competitive level than was ever available before. Their bodies take a beating from a younger age, so they might not be able to play when they are older, versus women who picked up soccer later in life.
โThe women who are playing now in their 60s generally didnโt play sports when they were young,โ Brandi explains. โSo their bodies came into sports in their 20s, 30s, 40s, 50s not having all the wear and tearโthe hip damage, the knee damage, the ankles. So for them to play later in life is completely possible because they are starting from a fresh point.โ
The Global Stage for Women’s Recreational Soccer
The stage for womenโs recreational soccer globally is different. Things outside the U.S. are starting to blossom.
โItโs very recent,โ Brandi says of the growth of womenโs recreational soccer in countries like the UK, France, and Mexico. โTheir timeline is 30 years behind the U.S. Itโs still rare to see age divisions older than 30 outside the United States.โ
Brandi notes one exception. โThereโs a woman down in Peru who had been following me for a while, and she started her own age 30+, 40+, 50+ womenโs soccer training, and itโs awesome to see how sheโs growing it and marketing it.โ
โEverything shows the ages on it, so women know they are welcome,โ continues Brandi. โThe opportunity is there, and the women are there.โ
So, while the future of adult recreational soccer for women continually changes, one thing does not. Brandiโs dedication to the sport, both as a player and as a businesswoman, remains constant.
What keeps her in the game? โI think itโs just the chemical adrenaline. The social part is great, but physically feeling what my body can do and the cognitive part it has to go through. I think my brain chemicals just really like it,โ says Brandi.
And her grade for the college soccer class she took? An โA,โ of course.
Where can YOU Play?
If youโre a woman looking for an adult soccer league near you, check out our directory. There are leagues of all competition levels listed for women. And if you want to read another inspiring soccer story, check out how this woman went from a high school track star to a beginner soccer player at age 48.
We’d love to hear your thoughts. Comment below.
4 comments
Gina Titus
We love you Brandi! Thank you for all you do for Womens Soccer and for keeping us New York women in the loop!
Laura Shear
Brandi’s inspiration helped me put my cleats back on–despite injury set backs.
I fell in love with soccer at age 16 when it was a sport for boys in schools. My high school boyfriend played soccer and at 18 I was playing for PWSL in San Diego. That was 1977. I think it was a new league. Any old Booters out there? Later we merged with Magic to become Magic Booters. Then we dropped Booters to be Magic. Some of the happiest years of my life.
Tanja Kropf
That is such a great story! I actually play on Magic for a lot of the tournaments. It’s a fantastic community for sure. Thank you for sharing your experience. Love to hear it.
Whitney Stewart
I love your story! So inspirational! Thank you so much for sharing it with us!