ANAHEIM, Calif. – Girls and boys gathered at the Nike Sport Court inside the Anaheim Convention Center during VidCon to get a lesson in soccer and to celebrate the sport.

This comes on the heels of the U.S. Women’s National Team winning their second-straight World Cup title and fourth overall. Eleven-year old Emma Glick watched every single game.

“Now they’re inspiring this next generation to be just like them,” said Glick.

The next generation of girls the players are inspiring includes Glick. She has played soccer since kindergarten as a center-back.

For a young girl like her, seeing the U.S. Women’s National Team as role models means she could one day be just like them.

“They inspire me to keep pushing, train every day, and to embrace who I am,” said Glick.

Nike is encouraging people to get out and make sport a daily habit. According to the U.S. Department of Health & Human Services, kids are less active now more than ever before with only one-in-three being physically active per day. Additionally, they spend more than seven hours a day in front of a screen.

With 30,000 Generation Z attendees visiting VidCon each day, Nike is using their sponsored athletes to play a role in how kids see and interact with the sport. One of the athletes being Olympic-gold medalist Gabby Douglas, who hopes her platform will motivate kids to move.

“People are always on their phones, iPads, laptops and it’s so important to be active. For me, I like to encourage them to even do something small, even to go outside,” said Douglas.

For 16-year-old Serena Lee, she never played soccer before, but wanted to give it a shot since Gabby was there.

“We have like an opportunity to play soccer with Gabby, and that’s when I was like sign me up. She’s an inspiration and I love her so what better to do than play soccer with her,” said Lee.

For kids like Glick who already play sports, she has a new idea on how she will elevate making sports a daily habit in her life.

“I’m going to put up a goal chart in my room and everyday I’m going to work on my shots, my skills, my volley, my juggling,” said Glick.

Daily habits can turn into a professional lifestyle, where one day we may be cheering for Glock representing the U.S. in soccer.