Read through the thread, there were comments such as “making a DA or ECNL team isn’t that hard” for rec players. If that statement is true, then the data should show many rec players on DA and ECNL teams. There’s no evidence that it does. There are exceptions to every rule, but to say the path from rec to elite soccer is “not hard” is a long stretch. |
Aren’t you a journalist?? Go to the games and ask the parents. Easiest data set you can obtain if you are really interested. I’ve already stated no rec players on our squad, why would I lie about it?? Better for the kids of parents like me to have competing players think rec makes for an easy path, that’s less real competition for their starting spot. |
If you are a parent on a team and don’t know the other kids backgrounds by mid year, it’s odd. On our team they all came from B or higher travel teams. I don’t know what to tell you, RSD. People are free to believe whatever they’d like. |
| You seem to deal in a lot of “if you don’t x, then you must x” type comments. Conjecture isn’t data. |
What part of I’ve talked to the parents and know where all the kids came from do you not understand? |
Agree with you on the u9 rec point. That’s fair and was not claimed, at least by me. I was arguing against the guy why stated it was not hard to make DA or ECNL at u14 or u15 with a rec only background. Kids can start at u9 and transition to higher level soccer at u10 or maybe even 11 and succeed more easily. But to go from pure rec to the highest level at u13-15 is not easy, as was claimed. |
| So you know all the kids in the program, or just on your kid’s team? |
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^^^I made the comment about a select/classic player being able to make it to ECNL/DA eventually if they begin travel soccer at u13/u14. A player can be a stand out in select/classic but to make the jump from that level of play to ECNL/DA at u13/u14 is difficult. The speed of play, technical ability and physical play is much different than NCSL, EDP lower divisions, CCL and classic/select, A strong select/classic player can make certain elite teams and move up to ECNL/DA within a seaosn or two. It takes that long to get use to the level of play.
Again, this goes back to the idea that you don;t need to play travekl at u9/u10 but can make an elite travel team if you begin travel at u13/u14. |
| That wasn’t your original argument but I think this one is a little closer to reality than your first attempt. |
It's really an empirical question as to how different these teams are at U9, U10, U11, and U12. I'd love to see a tournament (maybe there is one?) where the top classic/select teams play A and B travel teams to see the point at which travel is much different from Classic. |
That point at its most generous is U11. But pretty much by U10 the typical select player/team is just to far behind the A/B travel team player. And the reality for a select program is many kids in the program are there not by choice. They are there because they did not make travel at U9. So depending on the club, at least in the clubs eyes these are kids 50-80 already. Now, yes, there are the unicorns that choose Select because they don't see the value in travel. And these may very well be quality players, but beating up on select level players twice a week in practice will do little for their development. There is an ongoing discussion about promotion relegation and the goal differentials in leagues is astounding. So when a travel team in any particular league, or any particular division is allowing 30-40+ goals a season while scoring 1-3 goals? I'm sorry but a select team is just not going to be competitive into a U10 season with any average travel team. |
By U10? That's it? No chance to catch up after that. No way. I've seen many, many players make travel that hadn't played it before. |
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I can’t speaker for other clubs, but prior to joining travel at U11 B/C team, my DD was on a MSI U10G Classic (select) team. There’s no way her now U11G Classic team can compete against her current U11 travel team. Her Classic team had maybe 2/3 girls that has ball control, dribble and kick the ball while the rest had no technical skills at all. Compared to her current B/C travel team, at least 8 girls had good call control, dribbling and kicking/shooting skills.
I also have to add that her U10 Classic team was the top 2 teams for the entire year last year. |
Noooooo, that wasn't the question, or at least the question I was answering. What I was answering was the bolded above. And by U10, a "Classic/Select" team would no longer be competitive with a travel A/B team. Yes, a select player can make a travel team at U10 and much older, but a select team would have very little chance of success against a A/B travel team. |
Ahh, sorry. I totally misread that.
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