Are juniors ever on JV team?

Anonymous
Anonymous wrote:you just had to add the jab that your son did not get cut. listen, the good and talented kids are all playing MLS Next.

Anonymous wrote:Our large public HS had over 100 kids tryout for about 48 spots (half JV half V). We do not have a Freshman team.

My understanding is that kids can only be on JV twice. Don't know if this is our school or county rule. So lots of Juniors and some Seniors were cut from Varsity (in some cases in favor of Sophomores) and were not offered a spot on JV because they had already done it twice. I think there may be 1 or 2 Juniors who didn't play JV Freshman year who are on JV. Also lots of new Sophomores on JV who didn't make it Freshman year, which is nice to see.

So yes, sometimes Juniors are on JV but due to rules, cuts, and sometimes their pride (they decline) it is not all that common. Also important to note that LOTS of good kids were cut, and cut for different reasons. From what I see my kid respects the hell out of a lot of boys who were cut (he was not) which is good to see.


Ah yes- the MLS Next booster is at it again.🥱 No other talent around here other than those playing MLS Next.Blah Blah Blah…
Anonymous
Better to try out and see what happens than to walk away and wonder “what if?”…
Anonymous
Anonymous wrote:Other problem at some schools, the Club coach coaching high school favors kid from club team and known at his club.


This can be true and it's unfortunate. I recently heard about this very issue at WestPo on the girls side.
Anonymous
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Anonymous wrote:Why play on the high school team? It doesn't help with recruiting and only increases the risk of injuries. Focus on academics and aim to get on the highest team with his club.


Recruiting? A kid that doesn't make their JV team sophomore year isn't getting recruited to play in college. Not everyone has that goal. Some just like to play soccer.

Playing for a school team can be a huge part of a kids identity, confidence, and social experience in high school. And it can be a lot of fun! Most kids who play HS sports have no plans to play in college.


Based on the comments in this forum, it seems a kid playing in HS is more important to parents identity than the kids.

The training is way too concentrated on running and strength and the games are poor quality.
Can't see why it's so much fun (over club soccer)


Different lanes for different kids. I have a daughter starting HS next year and one who has graduated from HS. The older one chose what she wanted to do in HS for activities. We won't tell our younger one what to do. We let them make their own decisions about activities. Just get good grades. You sound like a parent overly concerned about your kids not playing HS sports.


This is a soccer chat.
One of the most inconsequential HS sports is soccer.

It is a pathway to nowhere. Except the Orthopedic Surgeon's office.
Anonymous
Anonymous wrote:
Anonymous wrote:
Anonymous wrote:
Anonymous wrote:
Anonymous wrote:
Anonymous wrote:Why play on the high school team? It doesn't help with recruiting and only increases the risk of injuries. Focus on academics and aim to get on the highest team with his club.


Recruiting? A kid that doesn't make their JV team sophomore year isn't getting recruited to play in college. Not everyone has that goal. Some just like to play soccer.

Playing for a school team can be a huge part of a kids identity, confidence, and social experience in high school. And it can be a lot of fun! Most kids who play HS sports have no plans to play in college.


Based on the comments in this forum, it seems a kid playing in HS is more important to parents identity than the kids.

The training is way too concentrated on running and strength and the games are poor quality.
Can't see why it's so much fun (over club soccer)


Different lanes for different kids. I have a daughter starting HS next year and one who has graduated from HS. The older one chose what she wanted to do in HS for activities. We won't tell our younger one what to do. We let them make their own decisions about activities. Just get good grades. You sound like a parent overly concerned about your kids not playing HS sports.


This is a soccer chat.
One of the most inconsequential HS sports is soccer.

It is a pathway to nowhere. Except the Orthopedic Surgeon's office.


Can we get over this idea that there is nothing worthwhile besides ECNL/MLSNext/D1?

How about the pathway to happy, well-rounded human?

(Because high-level club soccer athletes don't end up injured? In my experience, that happens long before HS.)
Anonymous
Anonymous wrote:
Anonymous wrote:
Anonymous wrote:
Anonymous wrote:
Anonymous wrote:
Anonymous wrote:
Anonymous wrote:Why play on the high school team? It doesn't help with recruiting and only increases the risk of injuries. Focus on academics and aim to get on the highest team with his club.


Recruiting? A kid that doesn't make their JV team sophomore year isn't getting recruited to play in college. Not everyone has that goal. Some just like to play soccer.

Playing for a school team can be a huge part of a kids identity, confidence, and social experience in high school. And it can be a lot of fun! Most kids who play HS sports have no plans to play in college.


Based on the comments in this forum, it seems a kid playing in HS is more important to parents identity than the kids.

The training is way too concentrated on running and strength and the games are poor quality.
Can't see why it's so much fun (over club soccer)


Different lanes for different kids. I have a daughter starting HS next year and one who has graduated from HS. The older one chose what she wanted to do in HS for activities. We won't tell our younger one what to do. We let them make their own decisions about activities. Just get good grades. You sound like a parent overly concerned about your kids not playing HS sports.


This is a soccer chat.
One of the most inconsequential HS sports is soccer.

It is a pathway to nowhere. Except the Orthopedic Surgeon's office.


Can we get over this idea that there is nothing worthwhile besides ECNL/MLSNext/D1?

How about the pathway to happy, well-rounded human?

(Because high-level club soccer athletes don't end up injured? In my experience, that happens long before HS.)


HS soccer makes you well-rounded?

I thought it was the sports + academics
Anonymous
Andres Iniesta, David Silva and Betnardo Silva would not make the local high school team because of their speed. Sad state of affairs...
Anonymous
Anonymous wrote:
Anonymous wrote:
Anonymous wrote:
Anonymous wrote:
Anonymous wrote:
Anonymous wrote:
Anonymous wrote:
Anonymous wrote:Why play on the high school team? It doesn't help with recruiting and only increases the risk of injuries. Focus on academics and aim to get on the highest team with his club.


Recruiting? A kid that doesn't make their JV team sophomore year isn't getting recruited to play in college. Not everyone has that goal. Some just like to play soccer.

Playing for a school team can be a huge part of a kids identity, confidence, and social experience in high school. And it can be a lot of fun! Most kids who play HS sports have no plans to play in college.


Based on the comments in this forum, it seems a kid playing in HS is more important to parents identity than the kids.

The training is way too concentrated on running and strength and the games are poor quality.
Can't see why it's so much fun (over club soccer)


Different lanes for different kids. I have a daughter starting HS next year and one who has graduated from HS. The older one chose what she wanted to do in HS for activities. We won't tell our younger one what to do. We let them make their own decisions about activities. Just get good grades. You sound like a parent overly concerned about your kids not playing HS sports.


This is a soccer chat.
One of the most inconsequential HS sports is soccer.

It is a pathway to nowhere. Except the Orthopedic Surgeon's office.


Can we get over this idea that there is nothing worthwhile besides ECNL/MLSNext/D1?

How about the pathway to happy, well-rounded human?

(Because high-level club soccer athletes don't end up injured? In my experience, that happens long before HS.)


HS soccer makes you well-rounded?

I thought it was the sports + academics


Does HS soccer not mean sports at the same place kid does academics?
Anonymous
Anonymous wrote:Andres Iniesta, David Silva and Betnardo Silva would not make the local high school team because of their speed. Sad state of affairs...


And Chad Powers couldn't make it in the College draft because his 40 time was too slow!
Anonymous
Anonymous wrote:Playing isn't a right, its earned.



lol that’s a good one.
Anonymous
Anonymous wrote:
Anonymous wrote:
Anonymous wrote:
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Anonymous wrote:
Anonymous wrote:
Anonymous wrote:
Anonymous wrote:
Anonymous wrote:Why play on the high school team? It doesn't help with recruiting and only increases the risk of injuries. Focus on academics and aim to get on the highest team with his club.


Recruiting? A kid that doesn't make their JV team sophomore year isn't getting recruited to play in college. Not everyone has that goal. Some just like to play soccer.

Playing for a school team can be a huge part of a kids identity, confidence, and social experience in high school. And it can be a lot of fun! Most kids who play HS sports have no plans to play in college.


Based on the comments in this forum, it seems a kid playing in HS is more important to parents identity than the kids.

The training is way too concentrated on running and strength and the games are poor quality.
Can't see why it's so much fun (over club soccer)


Different lanes for different kids. I have a daughter starting HS next year and one who has graduated from HS. The older one chose what she wanted to do in HS for activities. We won't tell our younger one what to do. We let them make their own decisions about activities. Just get good grades. You sound like a parent overly concerned about your kids not playing HS sports.


This is a soccer chat.
One of the most inconsequential HS sports is soccer.

It is a pathway to nowhere. Except the Orthopedic Surgeon's office.


Can we get over this idea that there is nothing worthwhile besides ECNL/MLSNext/D1?

How about the pathway to happy, well-rounded human?

(Because high-level club soccer athletes don't end up injured? In my experience, that happens long before HS.)


HS soccer makes you well-rounded?

I thought it was the sports + academics


Does HS soccer not mean sports at the same place kid does academics?


Club soccer + academics makes you rounded.

HS soccer you’re with the same group of people you hang with anyway.
Anonymous
I've never heard of a junior playing on a JV team in any sport in a public school, I'm in Maryland. I don't know if that kind of thing is governed at the state level, county level, or up to each individual school.
Anonymous
Anonymous wrote:I've never heard of a junior playing on a JV team in any sport in a public school, I'm in Maryland. I don't know if that kind of thing is governed at the state level, county level, or up to each individual school.


It’s common at our private. But waste of time and boring. You blowout teams all season, no competition and miss so much time traveling to these games, get to school at 8, get home after 10pm. For what? I always thought Jrs on JV was embarrassing.
Anonymous
Anonymous wrote:
Anonymous wrote:I've never heard of a junior playing on a JV team in any sport in a public school, I'm in Maryland. I don't know if that kind of thing is governed at the state level, county level, or up to each individual school.


It’s common at our private. But waste of time and boring. You blowout teams all season, no competition and miss so much time traveling to these games, get to school at 8, get home after 10pm. For what? I always thought Jrs on JV was embarrassing.


Maybe its different at private schools where its so easy to make the teams.
At large publics with competitive sports, many juniors play varsity and there's nothing embarrassing about it. Literally, its called "JUNIOR varsity".
Anonymous
Anonymous wrote:
Anonymous wrote:
Anonymous wrote:I've never heard of a junior playing on a JV team in any sport in a public school, I'm in Maryland. I don't know if that kind of thing is governed at the state level, county level, or up to each individual school.


It’s common at our private. But waste of time and boring. You blowout teams all season, no competition and miss so much time traveling to these games, get to school at 8, get home after 10pm. For what? I always thought Jrs on JV was embarrassing.


Maybe its different at private schools where its so easy to make the teams.
At large publics with competitive sports, many juniors play varsity and there's nothing embarrassing about it. Literally, its called "JUNIOR varsity".


Same at our private. Making the soccer team is tough and only a few spots for a LOT of good kids. There are definitely some juniors on JV.
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