Forgot the link... https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=ypdoinkdyd4 |
I'm sure it improved but the first 7 minutes showed a lack of playing soccer but the ball just bouncing everywhere. Where they did try to keep it on the ground, the passes were always behind the intended target. What's with the Phila coach, omg so much screaming and nothing tactical. |
We get it Johan, Arlignton does not play as elegantly as you'd like. But the big question remains, why do you even care? How does anything Arlington does affect your life or your kid? I never understand these campaigns that people just go on and on about. I get a person would defend their choice and the club that their kid plays for (this is not me, I have no kid at Arlington). But I never understand why people just feel the need to attack clubs that they have no affiliation with. There is no real consequential higher truth that needs to be illuminated here so why all the effort? The only reasons I can fathom are: 1. They cut your kid some time ago. 2. They beat your kids team and they do it in a style that you have been told is crude and should not be successful. That your team, "that plays the right way" simply can't get past teams like Arlington and it just ticks you off. 3. Someone you know is at Arlington and they just brag, brag, brag. How about you just say where your kid plays and talk about why it is better there and why you are so happy. Sell your clubs elegant possession instead of attacking another club. You can probably list 5-6 clubs in the area who play a committed style of possession and talk them UP without ever trashing a club. Knowing that possession is played in degrees mentioning the clubs that more closely play to your ideals is simply a better way to illustrate your points and they have the added benefit of not making you sound like a petty douche. |
| I agree! I think these are terrible people who trash a club where other people are happy and their daughters are successful. Unless you have actually had a child play at a club you really don’t know what’s being taught at practices, what’s happened with coaches or the parents. |
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Not DA related, but positive pro team announcement re Spirit today:
https://www.soccerwire.com/news/pro/washington-spirit-announces-major-tv-deal-for-2019-nwsl-season/ Hopefully the positive announcements continue next week. |
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Firsthand experience here... if I am incorrect or off base here, please jump in. (my comment is in reference to the girls program)
Some soccer teams that are U9-U12 have "that one player" who should be "playing up" a year because of their athletic ability. This player scores a chunk of the team's goals because they can kick/pass/shoot harder, run faster, shield the ball better with their body, intercept passes better because of speed, and wins most tackles and 50/50 ball situations. Dealing with one of these type of players on the other team in 7 versus 7 during U9-U10 can be a handful and change the game. Dealing with 2 or 3 players on the other team in 9 versus 9 can also be a handful and will easily swing the game in one direction. When you have a club the size of Arlington (or Loudon), instead of having a team with 1-3 players that fit this description, ALL the players on the top team fit this description of being in the early developer category. They also have *some* level of skill, but there are actually more skillful players on the second tier teams. The only clubs that can put together teams that can compete on an even playing field against another team of 100% overgrown kids for their age are other clubs that draw from a big area, or a "destination" club that people are willing to drive to from other areas. One argument is that these teams full of players who are ahead of their peers is that there are only a handful of local teams that provide even competition for them to actually play with skills and tactics. The top tier girls teams in CCL at the younger ages (from the bigger clubs) almost always have bigger-sized players who could play a year above their age group without anyone noticing. This advantage lasts through U15. Size matters at U9-U12 when the entire team (not just 1,2 or 3 players) is big sized. At U13 and U14, it definitely factors in. At U15/U16, for the first time the game is about the speed of play and "real" soccer. Players who have had the early physical advantage for 6 or more years now have to play the "right" way, but players who didn't have the early size advantage have been learning the right way from the beginning because they could not dominate games with size. Being on one of these "bigger sized" teams leads to sloppy individual habits and a false sense of superiority with some players. Some of these players get displaced by more skilled ones (from the same club or from somewhere else) when the physical differences are not as drastic by U15 or U16. |
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Final note - Does anyone know how many players are in Arlington's player pool in every age group (2007-2011?) Is it 300? 400?
Factor in the county population plus kids that play in Arlington's program from the areas around the county. When you have that many players to choose from, selecting the athletically dominant kids that have at least decent skills and putting them on the same team together gives that team a huge leg up on the competition... unless the competition has done the same process. Baltimore Union, Pipeline SC, are also notorious for selecting players at the younger ages based on size, which is why they win almost every tournament they play in at the younger ages. Loudon, McLean, FCV, and Braddock Road are no different. There is always a mega size difference between the "top tier" team and the second team. |
More information is always better than less. When people know the reason things are happening, even if it's bad news, they can adjust their expectations and react accordingly. Keeping people in the dark only serves to stir negative emotions. - Simon Sinek |
I just have not seen a pervasive use of "size" as a selection criteria. I am aware in some of the clubs you mention that players move up and down among teams in the age group based on skill and commitment. It is true that a coach might want a rangy center back or a giant target forward in the mix, but no real club is picking all the big kids--many can't get around the pitch as well as the little workhorse who buzzes around all match. The beautiful thing about soccer is that there is no prototype body for success in the game. |
| There are a lot of skilled kids in any given club. Of those, the ones with the strongest athletic attributes are put on the top team. |
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Why? Because everybody else does it so it is a cycle that feeds itself.
If you put out the skilled but smaller kids out against the slightly less skilled and bigger more athletic kids, they will get creamed. |
| or the skilled but smaller or average sized vs. the equally skilled but bigger sized... you still get creamed. |
| 45 pages strong. Yet, everything you needed to know was posted on page 2. |
Why is it always assumed that the bigger, more athletic kids don't have as much skill? Just because a player is athletic doesn't mean they don't put in the time to hone the technical skills of a player. |
| because they don't need it to succeed in the game |