|
Girls U14 Top team and Boys U13 teams |
Your dd has the Coach of the Year!? Wasn't 2011 girls the team that all left with their coach to go to syc last season? |
Yes. Only one girl returned from his Valor team |
Yep, and I'm not happy. I was a fool to bring them to Valor. The team was rebuilt with a few good players and others...no comment. |
Why so defensive? |
it's a lonely life, being the only happy valor parent |
Thanks for answering!! We can be lonely together! Now there are TWO! |
I think they pulled up a lot of girls from the second and third team to fill the ECNL-RL 2011 team after the coach left with all the players. my guess is that team is kind of a disaster, even with Coach of the Year in charge. |
It’s tryout season—if you don’t like Valor, just move on. Not all of us are unhappy. I came here looking for tryout dates and stumbled upon a lot of negativity. I’ve had three kids go through NOVA travel, and every club has its issues. Two of mine played at the national level—one went on to play college soccer, while the other chose club soccer in college. My youngest is currently at Valor, and aside from a few tournament selections, I haven’t seen the problems being mentioned here.
You have to be realistic about your child’s level and commitment. My eldest trained nonstop and now plays for a top 10 D1 program. My youngest prefers hanging out with friends and riding his bike—I don’t expect the same outcome. Let go of entitlement and the inflated perception of your kid’s abilities. |
I don't think too many would disagree with what you're saying here. Valor is fine for kids who like soccer and want more than rec, but are not talented and/or dedicated enough for higher level play. Though it is expensive compared to other clubs that fit this same bill. Valor is not fine for kids on their top teams who do want to train hard and aim for a higher level. Valor by and large does not attract enough of those players to put together quality teams. But they try to act like they are on par with the actual good clubs, with a price tag to match. It's a tough lesson to learn if you aren't familiar with the soccer landscape and didn't realize that leadership has zero vision beyond social media marketing and making as much money as possible. |
+1 |
But for a club whose bread and butter is rec-level players, they seem to treat those teams the crappiest! Doesn't make a lot of sense. |
Thanks for this!! |
Right. Clearly they are making the most money off the lower level teams with the parent coaches, where they charge the same price as the higher level teams. |