Hmm... Not really sure what you're trying to say. With MLSN you have the ability to play professionally or in college. With Boys ECNL you have the ability to play in college. Which option sounds better to you? |
Probably boys Ecnl for 75% of boys. |
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Of the options that actually exist now and in the near future? ECNL is the best option for girls. If the market shifts, then players will shift with the market. There will be know loyalty for getting ahead. In fact, if NWSL does what you have proposed it would be an open cattle call to a Spirit Academy anyways. So you might as well play at the highest level possible until your dream scenario happens a decade sooner than it will. That said: With MLSN you have the ability to play professionally or in college. The only ability to play professionally in MLSN is if you are on DC United. EVERYONE else in non-MLS clubs are all looking to play college. With Boys ECNL you have the ability to play in college. Literally the same opportunity for college as every non-MLS Academy MLSN player has. Neither ECNL Boys or MLYSN like SYC are not on a pathway to pro. |
I LOVE how you're applying the girls knowledge you've acquired and are now such an authority that you feel it applies to boys/mens high level soccer. However sorry, it's not how mens Soccer works. The biggest difference is that college coaches can recruit from anywhere in the world including foreign Academies. What this means is that it's much harder for boys to get noticed by college coaches. Imagine if you're a college coach and you have a choice between a 24 year old Liverpool FC or PSG Acadamy washout and an 18 year old from an ECNL club. Which one would you choose? This is going on at all the big D1 teams. You don't see this as much on the womens side because foreign Acadamies for women haven't matured enough that they're on that level. But, it's coming. Here's what the top Mens college coaches prioritize. 1. Foreign high level Academy players 2. MLS Academy players 3. MLS Non Academy players 4. ECNL and Everyone else The other thing you don't understand about MLS next is that it's not an US vs Them mentality. MLSN is more like all the MLSN clubs in a certain geography are feeders for the main MLS Academy. What this means is that even if you're not playing on the MLSN Academy team it's very likely that you'll be given an opportunity to practice with the team to see how you fit. MLSN Academies do look at other leagues for talent as well but you're just more likely to get noticed playing in a non MLSN Academy. Does any of this make sense? See how different things are when a "pro Pathway" is introduced to youth sports? |
I never stated any of the things that you implied. Men's college soccer programs are full of internationals who, by the way, washed out of their own academy systems. So what I stated was that unless you are actually playing in the actual MLS club's academy your pathway to pro is limited. Once that is established your chances of landing in college playing either ECNL or MLSNext are about the same. Your college competition is MLS affiliated players who do not catch on professionally, Internationals and then just regular domestic players from ECNL or MLSNext. there is no real material difference between a non-academy MLSNext player and a ECNL player. I'll grant a difference between some clubs but the real separation between players is between the actual academies and non-academies and ECNL. |
You forgot to mention that MLSN doesn't care about age. Sure, there are age defined levels but the overall goal is to get players playing at a professional level so they can play on an MLS team via the homegrown rule (which means the club can pay them whatever they want, and it doesn't count against their salary cap) or to a high enough level that they can be traded off for a transfer fee. This is something girls parents just don't understand. It's also why you don't see boys parents raging against each other online about how much better or worse their kids team is. It doesn't matter when the top players just get sucked up by the local MLSN Academy team. |
The ECNL Koolaid is strong with this one... There's a HUGE difference between MLSN and boys ECNL teams in that the MLSN teams play the MLSN Academies and boys ECNL teams generally do not. At the end of the day if your son is good enough they'll find their way to a MLSN Academy. However look at the rankings app and you'll see that Nationwide MLSN teams are the top tier for boys. |
Again, if your kid is actually playing for DC United I completely agree, but for those kids playing on SYC's or Bethesda's MLS Next teams there is no real shot at playing professionally. None, zero. They are playing to hopefully get recruited in college just like their ECNL counterparts. College roster competition is stiffer because there are far fewer men's college soccer programs than on the women's side and the international aspect is more prevalent on the men's side than the women's side. That said, women internationals is growing significantly but the far larger number of women's programs offset that a bit for now. |
Everyone can see that you're trying to disparage MLSN in favor of ECNL. Unfortunately for you boys/mens soccer doesn't care. MLSN is the top league. |
I'm not trying to disparage anything. yes, MLSN is the top but because of the 29 MLS Clubs. The rest of the clubs, in our area, are just clubs. Kids on DC United at worst will be able to play in college but those at a SYC or a Bethesda? The recruitment is much harder and not much easier than ECNL. The men's side is just a different beast for college. |
Boys/Mens soccer isn't "different". I would argue that it's closer to the international norm than Girls/Women's soccer. What throws a wrench into everything in America is College soccer. College soccer has a low standard to entry but all kinds of ridiculous drama and social games involved to play. If college soccer didn't exist ECNL wouldn't exist. (in its current form) MLSN is trying to cut through all the nonsense and be more like the rest of the world when it comes to development. But it's hard because there's so many parents who are willing to throw money at clubs for playing time and development. Regarding SYC and Bethesda, their teams aren't blocked out of the DC United. Their players will be asked to join DC United sessions to see how they work out. Again MLSN isn't an us vs them construct. It's more like a giant talent pool that MLS Acadamies pull from. They just happen to play games against each other. If you're stuck in the girls soccer mindset MLSN games are like showcases but the end goal is playing for DC United not a college team. |
SYC kids aren’t on DC United because they aren’t good enough. We do have college soccer in America so it is a consideration here. SYC is just a club and not a MLS academy. You’re either on an actual academy team or you’re playing club soccer in a league hoping to get recruited for college. It’s that simple. |
Again boys are different than girls. By 16 most girls are done growing. With boys some might get a growth spurt at 16 and go from average player to top talent in their group. With boys there's just a lot more variables involved. Its obvious that you're trying to apply what you've observed with girls to boys but many things don't translate. Maybe it will make more sense for you when NWSL Acadamies start up and a "NWSL Next" style league is implemented to support them. |
And your trying to apply MLS academy structure and success to NWSL. |