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IMO the experience will depend heavily on the coach/coaches and other parents/players on the team, probably more that than on what helmet they wear. You see this all the time where a program will have a great 2029 team and a terrible 2030 team or vice versa.
I would try to figure out who will be coaching each team and see if you vibe with them. (And accept that the entire team will probably move or fall apart at some point between now and 9th grade.) |
| Dont forget with ML you will get selected for the super inter galactic all universe team for an extra 5k then in HS figure an additional 8-10k on showcases and prospect days. Fun fun. |
Yes! And with NL, you can do Mojo, which means you’ll spend school breaks and holidays traveling to some random city to play with your same NL teammates against far inferior competition that you get driving 40 minutes up to HoCo games! All for the low low price of thousands of dollars in fees and flights. |
| And, remember, you will get to hang with these awesome parents at said landfill/cornfield…choose wisely |
| Get them on the best team they can play meaningful minutes. That might be an elite team, it might not. Being on elite teams and not playing is not good and it happens a lot. |
| Playing meaningful minutes means nothing if you aren't getting good coaching or getting crushed by playing in tough tournaments. At the younger years, reps are more important than dead time travel. Then, if the kid is good, he'll walk onto NL and ML and supplant the travel kid who's played there for years on the shiny new object premise. |
| IMO it's so much more nuanced than meaningful minutes or good coaching. Meaningful minutes all while playing bad lacrosse? Not meaningful. And, yes, coaches are definitely important but defining "good coaching" is akin to defining cereal as a soup or whether socks with sandals is acceptable. |
| Between the two choices here, it’s a pretty obvious choice considering the history of the clubs. Is it not?? |
I have no idea what you're trying to say here with cereal as soup. Do you just mean that it's hard to define good coaching? If so then you could just write that without weird, tortured analogies, but I think you'd still be wrong. A good coach is one who is organized, clear with expectations, and focused on long-term development. |
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Madlax is not without its faults, but it has a good development model and a long track record of success. Some years are more successful than others but the floor for success with Madlax is still really high.
BLC on the other hand used to be a very well run organization especially at the younger levels. However, it appears that the organization has fallen on hard times and is nowhere near what it used to be. As someone else mentioned above Next Level is probably the best club program in the area at this point, but it really comes down to convenience in my opinion. If you live in Maryland or DC go to Next Level as first choice if your kid can make it. If you live in Virginia, go the Madlax route. |
I would agree with this up until a point. It is certainly grade by grade based and If you look at both programs, you can see where most of the kids started and where they ended up. The trajectory has always been one develops and the other reaps the rewards once individuals are fed up with their situation. If you look grade by grade, you can see the different crossover points from BLC to NL and NL to ML and so on. If you have the time and means, go where your kid enjoys it and where they’re getting the best coaching. |
How old is the kid and where do you live? Inside the beltway - Club Blue and NL MD side of the beltway - BLC and Team MD VA side of the beltway - ML and VLC Under 12 years old - stick with the clinics and try all the clubs and camp specific orgs |
Having had multiple kids go through the club scene with the oldest mow in the thick of college recruiting I can emphatically say it’s not that black and white, it never is. |
Would not recommend VLC at all. Ask parents who have been there. They will give you the honest truth on it |
I think he's trying to cram in a joke he heard somewhere else that maybe was funny in its original context but isn't here, and doesn't really make sense in this context. |