You know, I’ve always wondered how well kids who have vocally critical parents develop in their soccer careers. Anecdotally, on DS’s team, the best players have very quiet parents or who watch from afar. For what it’s worth, parents have become quieter as the kids become more competitive. Perhaps a combination of the times (sideline coaching and criticism usually frowned upon now) and realizing that there are many other kids as good or better than yours. |
| If the player is on an ECNL team (National or Regional League) the league won't allow changes between clubs during the year. This applies even if the player is on an NCSL team (or going to one). That said, the player could go to a different club that does not have ECNL- say SYC to Arlington. |
| FVU to SYC too |
| Based on the very vague issues you mentioned, I would recommend that you encourage your kid to stick it out and try his best with the club he's with this year, and prepare to tryout at other clubs next spring. |
I'm assuming you honor the terms of your cell phone contract too? And your mortgage and/or car loan...you pay those to the end like you agreed? You never refinance, do you? What about your streaming services or internet contract? You should suck it up and honor your commitments. This is a service we buy...don't act like the clubs are doing something for us. This isn't a charity. We are sustaining them with our dollars. Wake up. |
This is an invaluable life lesson, OP. One of the real benefits of youth sports is handling setbacks. I’d get lessons so he can improve on his off-time and discuss what he wants in a team next year. This could bleed over into discussions about looking before you leap into a relationship and how to know when you just cut your losses and leave. Basically, you’ve been given parenting gold. Mine that. |
The parents who don't a shadow from a hole in the ground |
I agree. What that usually means is in the early years they might get stuck on lower teams while the loudmouth/upyourbutt parents push their kids on the coaches/TDs. By U17-18/19, you start to see these kids finally get noticed. I find on the higher teams and the older/oldest age groups, the stands/sidelines are virtually quiet. My mom just commented on this last week at my younger son's game. We have been on same crazy *ss sidelines over the years. I always tried to sit as far away as possible---another benefit to the older age groups playing in HS stadiums and larger venues where you really can sit far, far away from everyone else. |
i highlighted the wrong part---it was in reference to: Anecdotally, on DS’s team, the best players have very quiet parents or who watch from afar.[b] |
Why do you trust you to be an objective knowledgeable expert in evaluating your kids? |
Empty barrels make the most noise |
I would say that I am an expert in my children. Being objective can be hard, I agree. But using outside advice and getting outside feedback on how I'm viewing my kid's soccer performance helps. If you think I was implying that I'm going solo, then you just made a large assumption that was incorrect. |
| This is a good question to DCUM crowdsource, actually. Let’s say your kid is a serious player. Let’s say they are very good but relative to comparable peers, aren’t playing that much. Let’s say coaches have no true feedback despite requests. Let’s say you are not a player yourself. Who can help sort out what is going on? Is it coach bias, or a real gap? |
That's the million-dollar question. |
FWIW, I think parents of players who get all the minutes are also asking the questions as to why their kid is playing the most and rarely if ever subbed out, because you want to make sure you’re reinforcing whatever those are and continue to be able to play a lot. And I think the answer consists of multiple factors. Some gaps that do show up among equally skilled players are how do they actually implement those skills in a match and under pressure. Like are they connecting with their teammates? Are they always making a difference whenever they get the ball? There are also differences in soccer IQ and decision making. There may also be a difference in composure and grit (being able to play ur best even when ur down for example). There will also be differences in quickness, speed and endurance. It just becomes really hard to separate yourself on top competitive teams (ECNL and MLSNext for example) where there is a high base of soccer competency already so I’ve noticed the above as the difference makers. |