Growing up in Southern California, Eddie Lewis always was drawn to soccer. It was hard not to be given how closely linked Latin communities are in that part of the country.
However, at age 15, the Cerritos, Calif., native realized he was above the curve athletically but technically a step behind his peers. The left-footed Lewis eventually was taken as a last-ditch recruit for UCLA’s men’s soccer program, unsatisfied with where his game was at.
As Lewis’ sophomore year rolled around, he had an idea, sparked by watching UCLA’s basketball team practicing on smaller hoops: use a tennis ball to improve his touch. In a matter of weeks, Lewis saw marked improvement, prompting him to buy a tennis ball machine, venture to nearby industrial parks and repeatedly hone his touch.
“My goal was 1,000 reps a day,” Lewis said. “As you could imagine, relative to a soccer practice, bringing it down with my chest or heading it or bringing it out of the air, I was getting six months of practice in a couple afternoons. In the first six or eight months, I caught up rapidly and from there had a successful soccer career.”