Boys |
I'm talking about girls |
| If you're that pissed then why don't you email the coach instead of suffer in silence. Create an email account and do it anonymously |
No. |
Pussy. |
[b] Here’s a question for you-why haven’t these guest players been offered official spots on the team? McLean carries a large roster for ECNL teams (you can have up to 30 on the roster) so why not take these players officially if they are that good? |
There is a Composite team too at BRYC-it’s a way for the clubs to have a deep player pool for ECNL. After a certain time though, the same girls are chosen for the Composite games and the same ones for ECNL, so at the older ages it doesn’t make as much sense to keep the larger pool. The cream rises... |
| I don't know my McLean well but from what I have read in these discussions, it is clear that McLean is constantly upgrading its player pool by recruiting. If my DD were on that team and I weren't comfortable with a large roster, I would encourage DD to move. The downside is that whatever they are doing there is working given the number of girls that are currently at or heading to DI programs. That being said, if players from the outside are starting games, you should discuss with the coach. |
I know entitlement is a cool buzzword but its not entitlement when you pay for a product. Entitlement is when you haven’t earned the right to complain ...yet complain anyways |
Is Arlington any better? |
Because it is mid-season and there are more factors involved than just performance on the field. |
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So we should expect McLean’s ECNL rosters to look a lot different next year? Is this 1-2 new players or several?
They didn’t have tryouts last year, so maybe they will get a lot of newbies try out this year... |
God, no! Though I think they are too chicken to complain though. They’ll do whatever you tell them and even bend over if it will help their cause. |
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Okay, so here's the deal, the parents who can afford the thousands of dollars to pay for all the travel and ecnl and all of the frills with the training are middle to upper class suburban people.
Kids who grow up playing soccer from the time they are born don't come from these kinds of families. They tend to be non-white people who don't live in mclean, and soccer is in their blood and their culture and they have multiple family members who have either played or are truly passionate about the game of soccer and are doing it 24/7 as fans or out on the field. McLean parents are focused on getting extracurricular activities and checking the box for their kids to get into a competitive college. That's why the talent level is not in McLean it's elsewhere. |
| This is why you have teams like Sterling popping up out of nowhere and wiping the floor with mcleans younger age group teams |