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the athlete can do fancy moves learned from private coaching sessions.
the athlete will make the team because of the one strong sprint to reach to the ball followed by a Maradona followed by a strong right shoot on the ball that impressed the coaches while they were looking. athlete adds little to a team as it lacks game IQ, his athleticism compensates so much. |
| "Those grapes are probably sour anyway." |
what is the point of this post for diiscussion? |
Sour grapes You leave such a bad taste Sour grapes I don't need you anyways no idea what this post is about, but if I can drop a Descendents lyric in here, I'm going to do it. |
| attack on the coaches, interesting. agreed talent eval in the US sucks. |
Whomp whomp |
| The OP must have had a cut & paste malfunction |
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Yes, if the team needs a fast striker or winger, they will most certainly take someone who out sprints everyone to the ball, then has enough in the tank to do a 360 Maradona move, then shoots and finishes.
That sort of player does stand out, a lot of teams will take that player if they don't already have one... at the very least to bring on a sub. It's hard to standout during a group tryout or big ID session. Doing stuff like that, repeatedly, would make a player standout. Now if a player out sprints everyone and then toe-balls it... or, if they are doing Mardonas and losing the ball... well, they probably won't be getting picked, even to be a sub. Cattle-Call open tryouts are hardly offer coaches the opportunity to make a fair assessment of every new player. And clubs who demote players to make room for better players will always leave parents with sour grapes. It happens. Just keep trying. |
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Chances are, that athlete first caught the coaches’ eye when they arrived at the field. While other players were standing around chatting, or listening to their parents direct their warmup, this player showed up with a plan. They were purposeful in their warmup, showed their technical skills and comfort with the ball, didn’t try tricky stuff only to flub it, and were responsive, attentive, personable and coachable.
Or maybe they just did one thing right, while the coaches conspired to ignore your vastly more gifted child because they wore the wrong color socks. |
latter |
Hands down the greatest description of SYC soccer I’ve ever come across. |
This. You win a lot of games by one goal. |