I have the dubious honour of being an expat that works in the "sawker" industry out here in the US. A few items of note: Firstly, football (soccer) is now the number one participation sport in the whole country. Meaning more people play soccer recreationally than any other sport. Secondly, the US has really good facilities. I run a large indoor soccer center which is nearly 100,000sq ft. of state of the art indoor turf fields. It strikes me that the kids in the youth clubs around the city where I live, are enjoying much better playing conditions than I did as a kid in England. I remember having to hoof the ball over the midfield because in the middle of winter the center of the pitch was essentially just a mud patch. The artificial surfaces here are much more durable and conducive to technical soccer.
With that said a huge majority of the coaches I meet out here (at the good youth clubs) are English, and they are instructing the kids in wildly outdated playing styles. Read, kick and rush and long ball soccer. Basically how we played the game in the 80's and 90's. There are of course notable exceptions in any club, but this seems to be the rule. Below this strata of extremely expensive private youth club instruction, it is down to volunteer parents to coach kid's soccer teams. I cannot tell you the amount of times I have met Dad's who are coaching their son's team, and who have never ever played the game. Indeed they don't even know the rules. It's scary.