😂😂😂😂😂😂 |
This is right. A very select group of youth players will be involved. |
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Seattle Reign:
The Reign have a youth soccer program that is a founding member of the GA. NJ/NY Gotham FC: The club has two Girls Academy-affiliated programs: NYSC and PDA |
I don't think the Spirit Could Field a new Academy/ Travel Club.... the market is saturated and since they would be a For-Profit -vs- Non-Profit, they would need to pay for Field Space. I feel like they would have to partner with an existing club to get something off the ground. -I have also heard of a 'reserve' squad where some USL-W girls get looks and some Top Youth Talent receive double-secret invites in Instagram through connections. Hence, the girls who make the dramatic 'just finished a great session w the XXXX NWSL Club.' Which is also a far cry from a youth academy/ development model. It could be done. But I look at all the issues DCU are having with their academy in this high priced area. I just don't see how the Spirit could operate one without a significant loss year after year. |
It's easy to do. NWSL teams just need to partner with successful youth clubs letting them manage the team from an administrative perspective. They pick the players and coach. |
Pretty sure it will be ECNL not GA. Deal is not any time soon though. 2026 at best. Affiliation will be meaningless though. Big PR not a real thing. |
PDA? Founding member of ECNL? They’re not GA. |
NWSL will most likely copy MLS when it comes to Acadamies. This is why the MLS Next and GA alliance is such a big thing. If NWSL doesnt do something soon reguarding Acadamies USL W is going to take over that space. |
Thats weird. I dont know how it got in there. |
The best would be if college mirrored all NWSL rules and since you can pay players now functioned at a type of Academy. |
There is zero money to do this. Not a chance. What has been under discussion is an affiliation where the private clubs come under the umbrella of a team -- multiple clubs but the clubs still run themselves and charge what they charge. They still play ECNL or GA but they also play and there is like a Spirit Academy team that is like an all-star team. NWSL has been talking to lots of people about this including both GA and ECNL. It would require almost no money from the NWSL. |
Agree that women's college should match NWSL rules...especially as it relates to having unlimited subs. Regarding USL W do mean the short season summer league or their much smaller footprint Super League? The summer league is interesting because there are a ton of teams and they do pull in younger players into a competitive short season environment. Here in our area, the USL W team has a small group of ENCL players that join the team for training during the spring. Several of the ECNL players have been rostered and have seen some playing team as well. It's a good experience for them, but not sure where it would go beyond that. The one club that I know offhand that uses it's USLW team as academy type team is NC Courage. They are strictly U23 and have done quite well. The USL mens side locally has a more etablished model where they run a U20 academy team and have move players up to the senior team from that and even have signed players to pro contracts. |
Nwsl doesn’t need academies yet. Clubs and college programs are doing that development right now. Academies are very very expensive with very little ROI. |
I just mean someone will create an Academy option if NWSL continues to ignore it. Miggt be USL might be WPSL. There's so many players that could be developed to a higher level. NWSL needs to separate itself from competitors because eventually someone will figure out that running a pro womens league isnt as hard as it looks (or doesnt look). I firmly believe that MLS Next's true value is establishing and maintaining MLS as the top American soccer league starting at very young ages in players minds. |
Because of the MLS academies. Not because of your son‘s youth club. |