The club has no DA. |
| knowing arlington, probably every kid on the 2010 A team will have played up a year, either in travel or rec |
Similar situation here. Of the 11 on my kids U10 A team, 7 are in DA - split between VDA, Arlington, and DCU. His old club has no DA. But yeah, it's all political. |
| 23:49 - that seems to be happening more and more. I was talking to a parent last night whose kindergartner is already being scouted to play up a year in travel. (their 3rd grader plays travel and the K girl has had a lot of exposure.) And the 2009 roster included a bunch of 2010 girls playing up, who will likely step back to 2010 rosters next year and dominate. |
Scouting in kindergarten? |
So playing up for girls in the younger ages is not a good idea. If the girls have skill they will get beaten up. |
So my younger daughter played up at U9...she spent a lot of time as a 4-7 year old at her big sister's practice field and games, always had a ball at her feet, loves to juggle, etc. Played in the travel club's pre-travel program. Also played rec with her school friends. Didn't mind drills and repetition from an early age. So when the club's TD asked us if she'd be interested in playing with the U9s as a seven year old, we asked her, and she said yes and we said yes. That happens a lot in our club. Fast forward a few years, she's still playing and still loves it as an eighth grader. So I'd say for her, it was the right decision. She played up until U13, then dropped back down to her true age group when her size became an issue. So for some kids, playing up is the right call. We appreciated the opportunity. Is that recruiting? I guess. Did it give her a leg up on new kids coming in at U9? Of course. But coaches understand the distinction between a play up and a new travel player and know that over time, that gap will close as the new player catches up on foot skills and gains confidence. It just seems like the PP is framing this sort of scenario as some kind of injustice and favoritism. If a kid shows a love for the game and an interest in playing at a higher level at a younger age, why is that a problem? My kid enjoyed rec with her friends, but was ready for something more than "sharks and minnows" at a younger age. That's the choice we made - totally get that it's not for everyone. And, yes an advance year of formal training IS going to make my 8 year old look different than one who didn't play up but any coach worth his salt will understand why that difference exists and not overlook a new kid with good potential. Maybe not everything in travel soccer is a conspiracy, you know? Or maybe I don't understand the PP's issue/beef. |
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Agree with 11:39 - I notice it a lot that the second or third kid in the family who plays soccer is often better than the first kid because they have had so much exposure to the game. They have been at practices and games for a couple years, and likely kicking the ball around with the older siblings and the parents. Plus the parents have already been around the block and know about all the various levels of play and training, so they can sign up kid #2 for stuff after kid #1 did it.
Nothing sinister here. A kid who plays up for U9 and then drops back to his/her real level for U10 has a serious edge on the other players. My daughter has a late year birthday, so she is old for her rec team and young for travel, and her year in travel had her playing a 7x7 format and positions a year earlier than the kids on her rec team. So when the rec league moved from 4x4 to 7x7 and positions(+goalie) the following year, she already had a year of experience with that. It worked in her favor. |
That edge I've noticed only lasts for so long, I feel like by u10 it's mostly gone. When those kids who played up dropped back to the age group, I was hoping for some serious advantage that didn't come to be. |
It’s a tough time to play up. U10-U12 the girls really grow. The differences between u10 and u11 are pretty big. In each age group the girls are 10-15% stronger, faster, quicker, coordinated, etc ...just more development mentally and physically. That’s the average. Sometimes your 8 or 9 year old will be going against a 5’ tall 90 pound girl who has been taught to “use your size”. It can take a toll. After u13 it does not matter as much. The girls are mostly done growing. |
This is standard practice for Arlington, having 2-3 play up and start early. Doesn't matter if skill doesn't last, it gives the wins for the U9 year. It's all about winning |
| At our club, the few kids who play up are those who need a more challenging training environment. Typically skillful. They’re not always the biggest kids. Not about team wins. Maybe Arlington is different...but I doubt it. Sounds like sour grapes to be complaining about a couple of U9 or U10 play-ups. Just sayin’...who cares if a team “dominates” at U9 or U10?? |
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I do not consider a January-March birthday playing up. The Jan-Feb 2009s are essentially the same age as the Oct-Dec 20008s.
My Dec 2005 plays with the 2004s. He is still 12 and many of his teammates have turned 14 in the last 3 months. There is a huge physical difference in these years. |
| Well with Arlington, they will have an entire team worth of kids who SHOULD be playing up but aren't. So when you play them at U9 when your kid is just getting their feet wet in travel soccer, your team is locked in front of its own goal the entire game playing against kids that could easily slot onto a "good" U10 team just defending. |
Agree. Little kids playing up isn’t huge. It is a lot of younger siblings that had exposure. If the kid is still playing up by 13, then it is more talent-based. |