Perpetuating an inaccurate perspective doesn't make it more truth but to the user it becomes their false reality. You have not offered proof of your position so it unfortunately can not be considered accurate at this juncture. Please true again later with evidence of your statement Coaches need to know when you can matriculate but don't care about your youth age group. Be best. https://www.eastsidefc.or.../agegroups "The new two-year age group structure will not negatively impact college recruiting. College coaches evaluate players based on their performance, development, and potential—not the exact age grouping of their club team." |
All this underscores the importance of finding the best coach/team you can to continue to develop, which means playing time. So, that could mean playing up or it could mean playing on age. It also means trying to stand out in other ways at ID camps, ODP or even semi-pro teams. And it means try to figure out which schools you want to go to and be deliberate about it and focused sharing your journey and while you're a good fit. |
Perhaps, perhaps not. I will say current Aug high-level players will have the best chance to continue to play up -- although will it do them any good if they are bench players? |
You cant chamge when you were born and college coaches use gradation year for recruiting. These are facts. Aug birthdays depending on their school district will go from playing up in BY to playing with their grade or playing down in SY. Parents and players will have a choice to make and no matter which choice is made there will be repercussions. Playing with your grade will be what college coaches want to see. If you don't like this fine, hold your kid back a grade and they'll play on the correct grade team in club and their HS graduation year will be aligned. |
Players that end up playing in college generally don't ride the bench. It doesnt matter which level they play at. If you think your kid will ride the bench if they play on the team thats their correct grade in school most likely they're not going to play in college. |
Underlying theme of clubs agreeing with you and are flexible depending on the situation. |
Lower level D2 D3 and "other" schools might provide development. Most college coaches are looking for impact players day one that dont require additional training. |
Please offer proof on this statement because it goes counter to what has been presented here, "Playing with your grade will be what college coaches want to see." For instance, can you find somewhere on the Internet where college coaches agree with your unsubstantiated statement? |
Why then play up? Especially when clubs said they generally will only approve playing up for those will have the skills regardless of grade. Wouldn't make any sense. |
The reason they might ride the bench is there's going join a team that might have players who are now 5-months older than they have possibly played against before. It's not hard to see that happen during this transition. It certainly doesn't mean time to give up. There are so many different pathways to play in college. Sometimes people live in an area with limited club options. I mean this is why college coaches sometimes still go to HS games of all places. Also, kids who keep playing, keep developing. You gotta be realistic, but why be so closed minded? Don't let grade be on the brain. |
What does that have to do with finding youth teams with good coaches and plenty of playing time? |
Depends on the coach and school I bet pretty much all of them want someone that continues to get better before they show up on campus, so they are ready (which means a team you're starting). But even then, because of other issues noted, freshmen may not start and maybe redshirt, because well, they still gotta keep getting better. Some players don't like these situations so they don't transfer, but if you're there for a degree, you should stick it out and enjoy the ride. All depends on what your goals are. |
So now you're trying to argue that a college coach will give a roster spot to an Aug birthday thats playing down a level just to redshirt them their freshman year in college? Why would they burn a roster spot like this? Just tell them to hold back in HS or come back next year via the portal. Let someone else fill their roster with development players. Do you even understand how college works? |
You have August player rage issues beyond comprehension. Seriously, so much so that you are like a divorcee talking about their ex, everything is seen through a distorted negative lens. Eastside said college coaches don't care about your age group. Redshirting has enough that here is a guide, https://www.selectgeneration.com/blog-post/redshirt-year-in-college-soccer-what-it-is-and-how-to-make-the-most-of-it The AI provides College soccer coaches redshirt players fairly often, especially freshmen who need to develop physically/tactically or are behind older players, but it's less common than in football because soccer's limited substitutions make sitting out less beneficial unless it's for injury; it's a strategic tool to save eligibility for long-term success, offering time to adapt, gain strength, and improve skills before major contributions. |
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Theres no anger. There is frustration dealing with somone who is both ridiculously ignorant and arrogant at the same time.
Fortunately the more you respond the more people see through your nonsense. So it all works out in the end. |