That place is a mental asylum |
The goal of a youth coach is to develop players If they're on the roster, they should play or not be on roster at all How they gonna get better not playing and how are they motivated to train harder knowing they ain't playing on Saturday? |
+1 There are two major parts to development in any sports endeavor, 1. Practice and 2. Execution (playtime). Kids will only improve so much if all they get is practice. All parents pay the same amount, so if you are not going to play a child then they should be put on a "practice squad" and be charged less. But these coaches are happy to take the lower player's parents money with grand promises of future playtime. |
It's not the coaches, it's the clubs. |
So many kids are late developers who eventually become top players. It's the coaches who didn't ignore them and write them off why they made it Looking for kids to make you win only at u10 and keeping kids on the bench means you're an adult coach getting paid to coach kids |
I put that top 1 in on purpose. The OP what clubs could do to help with player development. They could help with ball mastery skills more, instead you often have to pay to attend supplemental ball mastery programs that are not included. If you take the attitude that individual player development should only be done at home, then there is only Team Development at practice. The better clubs incorporate individual development into practice sessions. Look, here is Ajax U13 club doing a butt-ton (technical term) of individual soccer ball mastery!!! https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=bOZ3z3UtMkE&t=12s Oh, be sure to go tell them they should not be doing that and all those players should be doing that at home! How dare those coaches try to incorporate individual technical ability like juggling and brazilians at practice... and they did if for more than 5 minutes too! Seriously, go watch better clubs and teams...try to get your kid involved with those programs. |
| Leaving current club for club that knows what they are doing for boys college recruiting. And puts investment there. A club that walks the talk and has results and relationships. At younger years this is less important. By U-15 it matters and too many clubs ride the girls coattails but don’t do anything similar for their boys. |
It's not winning that matters to clubs/coaches. It's $$$$. The sooner you understand that, the better. |
Your unicorn world sounds great. In the real world, coaches and playing time does not work like this. Politics, favoritism, quid pro quo are much bigger factors. Maybe if a player is so much better than the rest of team they could overcome the non-merit factors. But usually there isn't enough difference between players so the other factors are used. |
| are kids allowed to do both |
Top 3 Elements for new club: 1) Competition. My kid does not care if he is on 2nd or 3rd team. He wants the opportunity to compete and get better on a weekly basis. 2) an environment where kids play. Minimum of 3 practices a week and kids who want to play small-sided games 1-2x a week to replicate an international environment where kids play 3) Focus on development versus wins and losses. My child is 10 and I am more concerned with them playing every position and LEARNING versus winning the top bracket at Jefferson Cup Why leaving current club: Not enough kids as passionate as my child about playing. My kid is a starter and gets all of the playing time but learns more playing against better talent and older kids in neutral training environments like Next Star, Futstar, etc. |
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Leaving because Coach sold possession-based strategy, realized who he recruited and then couldn’t pull off strategy - went for classic kick and run.
Also the gifted small players are never promoted. |
What guarantees do you have for new team? |
| Leaving because Coach favors players who can’t play. Result? Loss after loss after loss. Hello politics. The coach prioritizes physicality and kickball. |
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Lots has already been said and not sure we will have option to leave for better team. Here goes. U15 girl:
1. Lack of club organization and facilities. At least 1/3 of practices cancelled this year. Indoor space not procured equitably. Yes 1st team got it, but so did lower level younger boys teams. 2. Huge rage of kids on team, not all serious, and lots of drama. 3. Too much scrimmaging. Totally agree, even the best teams do SOME tech training. It’s super important. One-touching to each other doesn’t happen with no practice.The girls who do nothing at home and don’t run are obvious. 4. Practices constantly change and can be up to an hour away. Really hard for working parents. 5. No film review ever. 6. Also agree that club heads, TDs, should come to a practice or two. Single coach is overwhelmed with little to no support from club. |