REV Soccer Only CHAT, No drama please

Anonymous
Anonymous wrote:
Anonymous wrote:
Anonymous wrote:
Anonymous wrote:
Anonymous wrote:
Anonymous wrote:
Anonymous wrote:
Anonymous wrote:
Anonymous wrote:
Anonymous wrote:
Anonymous wrote:I have high hopes for this group when it comes to getting some enlightened responses, rooted in experience, to a question about player development and team/club performance. I treat the bulk of what transpires on here as satire, but every once in a while, someone adds something truly valuable. I'm hoping that'll be the case with your responses.

For those with older kids who are serious about their soccer training and potential career beyond the club level, what role do you feel a specific club or team coach has made (or could make) in the tactical, skill, and physical development of your player, or an entire team for that matter, outside of the individual/personal/group/non-team training that most do?. In other words, in the NoVA area, have any of the clubs, GA or ECNL, actually proven that they can develop their players, beginning at a young age, to be extremely competitive throughout their pre-college career? Or does a club just look like they're really good at developing talent by performing well in a given year because a large enough group of talented kids leave other clubs and all end up at the same place for a given reason, e.g. their particular age group performed well at said new club so they think it's a great club, or one of the coaches has great college relationships so they go there because they think it'll increase their likelihood of getting recruited, or they want GA vs ECNL or vice versa?

CC is both heavily praised and criticized depending on someone's individual experience. When BP was at FCV, he had a lot of relationships so talented girls went there (don't know if they were always the best in their age group or not) and CC gets the "training" credit of having graduated a lot of talented kids. Were they talented before they got there and he was just the lucky recipient of kids who wanted to leverage BP's relationships, or is he a proven entity when it comes to team-level player development and, if he's not, are any of the coaches or clubs in the NoVA area worthy of such a reputation?

- actual Rev parent


It's a blurry picture and there are plenty of examples in all directions. CC was at FCV for years before BP arrived. CC gets training credit for the girls who were developed pre-BP, and many of the players BP took credit for right after he arrived were developed by CC. They both benefited from each other and claim/deserve some of the credit. They were also both lucky recipients of talented kids. FCV was always known as the place that recruited talented players from other clubs. CC is way more knowledgable about soccer and a better teacher, BP is better at promotion, recruiting players, and has more connections. There is no single best coach/club for a player. It depends on the situation. Is the player raw and needs a lot of soccer development? Are they good at promoting themselves? Do they have a private soccer trainer and work on their own? Are they self motivated? How is their mindset? If a player is talented enough they would have recruiting success at most any ECNL or GA club because they are all going to the same showcases events. Marketing yourself by contacting coaches ahead of events with film and then *standing out* on the pitch at these events is still the recruiting formula.



When FCV got DA, the talent flocked to them. They didn’t develop anyone.


+1


-99. You haven’t been around long. The girls currently at Georgia were at FCV since they were little. Same with the girl at Florida. Same with a few now at VDA. Whether that is on BP or CC can be debated.

You guys forget that kids are mostly developed between ages U8 to U12. Most of those kids developed at the other Loudoun Clubs and others in the area.

ECNL and DA/GA didn’t start til U14 years ago in which girls flock to when the good players seperate from the weak players. It’s the Ulittle coaches that always develop.

Here in the funniest thing though…GD probably had almost every single one of these now college players in the Loudoun area doing Futsal and other small sided games. Like U12 and younger. I could tell you at least 5 freshman in P4 and another in D1 outside of P4 that was Freshman who all played futsal for him.


Futsal means very little. Does it help? Yes. Does it completely translate to 11 v 11 full pitch soccer? No. It doesn't at all. It can help a kid look really good on TikTok though.

Bottom line, futsal is helpful but not some panacea like some people think.

Let your littles play it. It's helpful but not anymore than some other things.


Please feel free to ask Christian Pulisic what Futsal did for him and get back to me.


Pulisic is the best example that you can come up with when talking about futsal? That lets me know that you dont know anything about soccer.


Would Messi’s example suffice to you? Ever heard of him? He’s on interviews quoted to own the vast array of ball mastery he possesses to his time playing futsal.

You are a prime grade-a example of the supine ignorance that roams our country’s football fields.


If you are going to try and sound sophisticated and call it "football" then it's a "pitch" not a "field". You're making yourself sound ignorant and look like a joke. If the shoe fits...


LOL, thank you for teaching them.


This individual won't accept the lesson but thank you.

The next lesson could be his/her/their improper use of the word "supine". Doing both in one lesson would have been too much for baby boy/baby girl/baby they.
Anonymous
Anonymous wrote:
Anonymous wrote:
Anonymous wrote:
Anonymous wrote:
Anonymous wrote:
Anonymous wrote:
Anonymous wrote:
Anonymous wrote:
Anonymous wrote:
Anonymous wrote:
Anonymous wrote:
Anonymous wrote:I have high hopes for this group when it comes to getting some enlightened responses, rooted in experience, to a question about player development and team/club performance. I treat the bulk of what transpires on here as satire, but every once in a while, someone adds something truly valuable. I'm hoping that'll be the case with your responses.

For those with older kids who are serious about their soccer training and potential career beyond the club level, what role do you feel a specific club or team coach has made (or could make) in the tactical, skill, and physical development of your player, or an entire team for that matter, outside of the individual/personal/group/non-team training that most do?. In other words, in the NoVA area, have any of the clubs, GA or ECNL, actually proven that they can develop their players, beginning at a young age, to be extremely competitive throughout their pre-college career? Or does a club just look like they're really good at developing talent by performing well in a given year because a large enough group of talented kids leave other clubs and all end up at the same place for a given reason, e.g. their particular age group performed well at said new club so they think it's a great club, or one of the coaches has great college relationships so they go there because they think it'll increase their likelihood of getting recruited, or they want GA vs ECNL or vice versa?

CC is both heavily praised and criticized depending on someone's individual experience. When BP was at FCV, he had a lot of relationships so talented girls went there (don't know if they were always the best in their age group or not) and CC gets the "training" credit of having graduated a lot of talented kids. Were they talented before they got there and he was just the lucky recipient of kids who wanted to leverage BP's relationships, or is he a proven entity when it comes to team-level player development and, if he's not, are any of the coaches or clubs in the NoVA area worthy of such a reputation?

- actual Rev parent


It's a blurry picture and there are plenty of examples in all directions. CC was at FCV for years before BP arrived. CC gets training credit for the girls who were developed pre-BP, and many of the players BP took credit for right after he arrived were developed by CC. They both benefited from each other and claim/deserve some of the credit. They were also both lucky recipients of talented kids. FCV was always known as the place that recruited talented players from other clubs. CC is way more knowledgable about soccer and a better teacher, BP is better at promotion, recruiting players, and has more connections. There is no single best coach/club for a player. It depends on the situation. Is the player raw and needs a lot of soccer development? Are they good at promoting themselves? Do they have a private soccer trainer and work on their own? Are they self motivated? How is their mindset? If a player is talented enough they would have recruiting success at most any ECNL or GA club because they are all going to the same showcases events. Marketing yourself by contacting coaches ahead of events with film and then *standing out* on the pitch at these events is still the recruiting formula.



When FCV got DA, the talent flocked to them. They didn’t develop anyone.


+1


-99. You haven’t been around long. The girls currently at Georgia were at FCV since they were little. Same with the girl at Florida. Same with a few now at VDA. Whether that is on BP or CC can be debated.

You guys forget that kids are mostly developed between ages U8 to U12. Most of those kids developed at the other Loudoun Clubs and others in the area.

ECNL and DA/GA didn’t start til U14 years ago in which girls flock to when the good players seperate from the weak players. It’s the Ulittle coaches that always develop.

Here in the funniest thing though…GD probably had almost every single one of these now college players in the Loudoun area doing Futsal and other small sided games. Like U12 and younger. I could tell you at least 5 freshman in P4 and another in D1 outside of P4 that was Freshman who all played futsal for him.


Futsal means very little. Does it help? Yes. Does it completely translate to 11 v 11 full pitch soccer? No. It doesn't at all. It can help a kid look really good on TikTok though.

Bottom line, futsal is helpful but not some panacea like some people think.

Let your littles play it. It's helpful but not anymore than some other things.


Please feel free to ask Christian Pulisic what Futsal did for him and get back to me.


Pulisic is the best example that you can come up with when talking about futsal? That lets me know that you dont know anything about soccer.


Would Messi’s example suffice to you? Ever heard of him? He’s on interviews quoted to own the vast array of ball mastery he possesses to his time playing futsal.

You are a prime grade-a example of the supine ignorance that roams our country’s football fields.


Messi didnt grow up playing futsal. Try again! who is going to be your next example? Trinity Rodman? Maybe you should try a player from Brazil (where GD is from) and understand why they play the way they do. Futsal is not for everyone and here in the US where kick and run rules or the big and fast kids are the chosen ones, futsal doesnt work. Also, search Richard Rios, colombian futsal player that became a soccer player. Maybe thats a better example for you. You are welcome.


This male doesn't know what he's talking about. He's pulling ideas from a dark, cavernous (and probably loose) place 2''-3' below his head without showing receipts.

Futsal doesn't make world class soccer players. It can help at younger ages with foot skills but ultimately is detrimental to 11 v 11 on a full pitch.


People that know soccer understand that.


The 9U coach is probably telling him/her/them the "facts" about futsal so kids sign up.

For the record, I am not against a little kid playing futsal. However, at some.point it becomes detrimental to their soccer game. Same as when they first start futsal season having to adjust to the futsal game.

It WILL NOT make your kid world class. It Will NOT make them better than a kid playing indoor soccer or working their tail off in the off season but if your elementary school kid lilies it, do it.
Anonymous
Anonymous wrote:
Anonymous wrote:CC doesn’t care what anyone thinks about him here. Any high level coach knows he can’t keep everyone happy. Any high level youth coach really only cares about getting players to the next level. He has one of the top 3 players in the US on his time and many other successful players.

If you want a coach that is trying to please everyone, play fourth tier. Even then, coaches can’t keep everyone happy.


Hello CC! Happy New Year!


Frohes neues Jahr, mein Freund!
Anonymous
Anonymous wrote:
Anonymous wrote:
Anonymous wrote:CC doesn’t care what anyone thinks about him here. Any high level coach knows he can’t keep everyone happy. Any high level youth coach really only cares about getting players to the next level. He has one of the top 3 players in the US on his time and many other successful players.

If you want a coach that is trying to please everyone, play fourth tier. Even then, coaches can’t keep everyone happy.


He is an abusive coach whose time is numbered. Just because he had a lot of big names, doesn't make him a good coach. Snyder had a lot of big named players and that didn't make him a good owner. It is the fact that he doesn't care that makes him such a shthead. A lot of people have done good by him only to get dumped on. As I said, his days are numbered. He will join club with RAT soon enough.


Remind me of CCs big names please


Emily Fox, Alexis Theoret, Olivia Migli, Mya Townes, Allie Flanagan, Alicia Meinke just to name a few…
Anonymous
Anonymous wrote:
Anonymous wrote:
Anonymous wrote:
Anonymous wrote:
Anonymous wrote:
Anonymous wrote:
Anonymous wrote:
Anonymous wrote:
Anonymous wrote:
Anonymous wrote:
Anonymous wrote:
Anonymous wrote:
Anonymous wrote:I have high hopes for this group when it comes to getting some enlightened responses, rooted in experience, to a question about player development and team/club performance. I treat the bulk of what transpires on here as satire, but every once in a while, someone adds something truly valuable. I'm hoping that'll be the case with your responses.

For those with older kids who are serious about their soccer training and potential career beyond the club level, what role do you feel a specific club or team coach has made (or could make) in the tactical, skill, and physical development of your player, or an entire team for that matter, outside of the individual/personal/group/non-team training that most do?. In other words, in the NoVA area, have any of the clubs, GA or ECNL, actually proven that they can develop their players, beginning at a young age, to be extremely competitive throughout their pre-college career? Or does a club just look like they're really good at developing talent by performing well in a given year because a large enough group of talented kids leave other clubs and all end up at the same place for a given reason, e.g. their particular age group performed well at said new club so they think it's a great club, or one of the coaches has great college relationships so they go there because they think it'll increase their likelihood of getting recruited, or they want GA vs ECNL or vice versa?

CC is both heavily praised and criticized depending on someone's individual experience. When BP was at FCV, he had a lot of relationships so talented girls went there (don't know if they were always the best in their age group or not) and CC gets the "training" credit of having graduated a lot of talented kids. Were they talented before they got there and he was just the lucky recipient of kids who wanted to leverage BP's relationships, or is he a proven entity when it comes to team-level player development and, if he's not, are any of the coaches or clubs in the NoVA area worthy of such a reputation?

- actual Rev parent


It's a blurry picture and there are plenty of examples in all directions. CC was at FCV for years before BP arrived. CC gets training credit for the girls who were developed pre-BP, and many of the players BP took credit for right after he arrived were developed by CC. They both benefited from each other and claim/deserve some of the credit. They were also both lucky recipients of talented kids. FCV was always known as the place that recruited talented players from other clubs. CC is way more knowledgable about soccer and a better teacher, BP is better at promotion, recruiting players, and has more connections. There is no single best coach/club for a player. It depends on the situation. Is the player raw and needs a lot of soccer development? Are they good at promoting themselves? Do they have a private soccer trainer and work on their own? Are they self motivated? How is their mindset? If a player is talented enough they would have recruiting success at most any ECNL or GA club because they are all going to the same showcases events. Marketing yourself by contacting coaches ahead of events with film and then *standing out* on the pitch at these events is still the recruiting formula.



When FCV got DA, the talent flocked to them. They didn’t develop anyone.


+1


-99. You haven’t been around long. The girls currently at Georgia were at FCV since they were little. Same with the girl at Florida. Same with a few now at VDA. Whether that is on BP or CC can be debated.

You guys forget that kids are mostly developed between ages U8 to U12. Most of those kids developed at the other Loudoun Clubs and others in the area.

ECNL and DA/GA didn’t start til U14 years ago in which girls flock to when the good players seperate from the weak players. It’s the Ulittle coaches that always develop.

Here in the funniest thing though…GD probably had almost every single one of these now college players in the Loudoun area doing Futsal and other small sided games. Like U12 and younger. I could tell you at least 5 freshman in P4 and another in D1 outside of P4 that was Freshman who all played futsal for him.


Futsal means very little. Does it help? Yes. Does it completely translate to 11 v 11 full pitch soccer? No. It doesn't at all. It can help a kid look really good on TikTok though.

Bottom line, futsal is helpful but not some panacea like some people think.

Let your littles play it. It's helpful but not anymore than some other things.


Please feel free to ask Christian Pulisic what Futsal did for him and get back to me.


Pulisic is the best example that you can come up with when talking about futsal? That lets me know that you dont know anything about soccer.


Would Messi’s example suffice to you? Ever heard of him? He’s on interviews quoted to own the vast array of ball mastery he possesses to his time playing futsal.

You are a prime grade-a example of the supine ignorance that roams our country’s football fields.


Messi didnt grow up playing futsal. Try again! who is going to be your next example? Trinity Rodman? Maybe you should try a player from Brazil (where GD is from) and understand why they play the way they do. Futsal is not for everyone and here in the US where kick and run rules or the big and fast kids are the chosen ones, futsal doesnt work. Also, search Richard Rios, colombian futsal player that became a soccer player. Maybe thats a better example for you. You are welcome.


This male doesn't know what he's talking about. He's pulling ideas from a dark, cavernous (and probably loose) place 2''-3' below his head without showing receipts.

Futsal doesn't make world class soccer players. It can help at younger ages with foot skills but ultimately is detrimental to 11 v 11 on a full pitch.


People that know soccer understand that.


The 9U coach is probably telling him/her/them the "facts" about futsal so kids sign up.

For the record, I am not against a little kid playing futsal. However, at some.point it becomes detrimental to their soccer game. Same as when they first start futsal season having to adjust to the futsal game.

It WILL NOT make your kid world class. It Will NOT make them better than a kid playing indoor soccer or working their tail off in the off season but if your elementary school kid lilies it, do it.


Yes, don’t listen to coaches. Listen to the egotistical anonymous poster on DCUM instead. ROFL.
Anonymous
Anonymous wrote:
Anonymous wrote:
Anonymous wrote:
Anonymous wrote:CC doesn’t care what anyone thinks about him here. Any high level coach knows he can’t keep everyone happy. Any high level youth coach really only cares about getting players to the next level. He has one of the top 3 players in the US on his time and many other successful players.

If you want a coach that is trying to please everyone, play fourth tier. Even then, coaches can’t keep everyone happy.


He is an abusive coach whose time is numbered. Just because he had a lot of big names, doesn't make him a good coach. Snyder had a lot of big named players and that didn't make him a good owner. It is the fact that he doesn't care that makes him such a shthead. A lot of people have done good by him only to get dumped on. As I said, his days are numbered. He will join club with RAT soon enough.


Remind me of CCs big names please


Emily Fox, Alexis Theoret, Olivia Migli, Mya Townes, Allie Flanagan, Alicia Meinke just to name a few…


Good to know. I'm actually irl friends with someone who actually did coach her. Coach her to the point where she actually called him after Arsenal beat Barcelona in the Champions League final. I'd be interested in what he has to say about it.
Anonymous
Anonymous wrote:
Anonymous wrote:
Anonymous wrote:
Anonymous wrote:CC doesn’t care what anyone thinks about him here. Any high level coach knows he can’t keep everyone happy. Any high level youth coach really only cares about getting players to the next level. He has one of the top 3 players in the US on his time and many other successful players.

If you want a coach that is trying to please everyone, play fourth tier. Even then, coaches can’t keep everyone happy.


He is an abusive coach whose time is numbered. Just because he had a lot of big names, doesn't make him a good coach. Snyder had a lot of big named players and that didn't make him a good owner. It is the fact that he doesn't care that makes him such a shthead. A lot of people have done good by him only to get dumped on. As I said, his days are numbered. He will join club with RAT soon enough.


Remind me of CCs big names please


Emily Fox, Alexis Theoret, Olivia Migli, Mya Townes, Allie Flanagan, Alicia Meinke just to name a few…


Du brauchst deine Ruhe, Freund, geh ins Bett
Anonymous
Anonymous wrote:
Anonymous wrote:
Anonymous wrote:
Anonymous wrote:
Anonymous wrote:
Anonymous wrote:
Anonymous wrote:
Anonymous wrote:
Anonymous wrote:
Anonymous wrote:
Anonymous wrote:
Anonymous wrote:
Anonymous wrote:
Anonymous wrote:I have high hopes for this group when it comes to getting some enlightened responses, rooted in experience, to a question about player development and team/club performance. I treat the bulk of what transpires on here as satire, but every once in a while, someone adds something truly valuable. I'm hoping that'll be the case with your responses.

For those with older kids who are serious about their soccer training and potential career beyond the club level, what role do you feel a specific club or team coach has made (or could make) in the tactical, skill, and physical development of your player, or an entire team for that matter, outside of the individual/personal/group/non-team training that most do?. In other words, in the NoVA area, have any of the clubs, GA or ECNL, actually proven that they can develop their players, beginning at a young age, to be extremely competitive throughout their pre-college career? Or does a club just look like they're really good at developing talent by performing well in a given year because a large enough group of talented kids leave other clubs and all end up at the same place for a given reason, e.g. their particular age group performed well at said new club so they think it's a great club, or one of the coaches has great college relationships so they go there because they think it'll increase their likelihood of getting recruited, or they want GA vs ECNL or vice versa?

CC is both heavily praised and criticized depending on someone's individual experience. When BP was at FCV, he had a lot of relationships so talented girls went there (don't know if they were always the best in their age group or not) and CC gets the "training" credit of having graduated a lot of talented kids. Were they talented before they got there and he was just the lucky recipient of kids who wanted to leverage BP's relationships, or is he a proven entity when it comes to team-level player development and, if he's not, are any of the coaches or clubs in the NoVA area worthy of such a reputation?

- actual Rev parent


It's a blurry picture and there are plenty of examples in all directions. CC was at FCV for years before BP arrived. CC gets training credit for the girls who were developed pre-BP, and many of the players BP took credit for right after he arrived were developed by CC. They both benefited from each other and claim/deserve some of the credit. They were also both lucky recipients of talented kids. FCV was always known as the place that recruited talented players from other clubs. CC is way more knowledgable about soccer and a better teacher, BP is better at promotion, recruiting players, and has more connections. There is no single best coach/club for a player. It depends on the situation. Is the player raw and needs a lot of soccer development? Are they good at promoting themselves? Do they have a private soccer trainer and work on their own? Are they self motivated? How is their mindset? If a player is talented enough they would have recruiting success at most any ECNL or GA club because they are all going to the same showcases events. Marketing yourself by contacting coaches ahead of events with film and then *standing out* on the pitch at these events is still the recruiting formula.



When FCV got DA, the talent flocked to them. They didn’t develop anyone.


+1


-99. You haven’t been around long. The girls currently at Georgia were at FCV since they were little. Same with the girl at Florida. Same with a few now at VDA. Whether that is on BP or CC can be debated.

You guys forget that kids are mostly developed between ages U8 to U12. Most of those kids developed at the other Loudoun Clubs and others in the area.

ECNL and DA/GA didn’t start til U14 years ago in which girls flock to when the good players seperate from the weak players. It’s the Ulittle coaches that always develop.

Here in the funniest thing though…GD probably had almost every single one of these now college players in the Loudoun area doing Futsal and other small sided games. Like U12 and younger. I could tell you at least 5 freshman in P4 and another in D1 outside of P4 that was Freshman who all played futsal for him.


Futsal means very little. Does it help? Yes. Does it completely translate to 11 v 11 full pitch soccer? No. It doesn't at all. It can help a kid look really good on TikTok though.

Bottom line, futsal is helpful but not some panacea like some people think.

Let your littles play it. It's helpful but not anymore than some other things.


Please feel free to ask Christian Pulisic what Futsal did for him and get back to me.


Pulisic is the best example that you can come up with when talking about futsal? That lets me know that you dont know anything about soccer.


Would Messi’s example suffice to you? Ever heard of him? He’s on interviews quoted to own the vast array of ball mastery he possesses to his time playing futsal.

You are a prime grade-a example of the supine ignorance that roams our country’s football fields.


Messi didnt grow up playing futsal. Try again! who is going to be your next example? Trinity Rodman? Maybe you should try a player from Brazil (where GD is from) and understand why they play the way they do. Futsal is not for everyone and here in the US where kick and run rules or the big and fast kids are the chosen ones, futsal doesnt work. Also, search Richard Rios, colombian futsal player that became a soccer player. Maybe thats a better example for you. You are welcome.


This male doesn't know what he's talking about. He's pulling ideas from a dark, cavernous (and probably loose) place 2''-3' below his head without showing receipts.

Futsal doesn't make world class soccer players. It can help at younger ages with foot skills but ultimately is detrimental to 11 v 11 on a full pitch.


People that know soccer understand that.


The 9U coach is probably telling him/her/them the "facts" about futsal so kids sign up.

For the record, I am not against a little kid playing futsal. However, at some.point it becomes detrimental to their soccer game. Same as when they first start futsal season having to adjust to the futsal game.

It WILL NOT make your kid world class. It Will NOT make them better than a kid playing indoor soccer or working their tail off in the off season but if your elementary school kid lilies it, do it.


Yes, don’t listen to coaches. Listen to the egotistical anonymous poster on DCUM instead. ROFL.


Let the kid play. They have fun. I'm all for that. However, it's not going to translate as well as you may think DadMom.

I'm not egotistical. I just know some things and I am not trying to make money off your kid. It's clear you do not much and are just trying to stir the pot. Tell us about when you were a tromboner in the high school band, please?

Oh yeah and, ROFL LOL, LMAO. Also, your wife is disappointed in your lack of virility compared to the other men she has "known".
Anonymous
Stay classy REV parents. You couldn’t even if you tried…
Anonymous
Anonymous wrote:
Anonymous wrote:
Anonymous wrote:
Anonymous wrote:CC doesn’t care what anyone thinks about him here. Any high level coach knows he can’t keep everyone happy. Any high level youth coach really only cares about getting players to the next level. He has one of the top 3 players in the US on his time and many other successful players.

If you want a coach that is trying to please everyone, play fourth tier. Even then, coaches can’t keep everyone happy.



He is an abusive coach whose time is numbered. Just because he had a lot of big names, doesn't make him a good coach. Snyder had a lot of big named players and that didn't make him a good owner. It is the fact that he doesn't care that makes him such a shthead. A lot of people have done good by him only to get dumped on. As I said, his days are numbered. He will join club with RAT soon enough.


Remind me of CCs big names please


Emily Fox, Alexis Theoret, Olivia Migli, Mya Townes, Allie Flanagan, Alicia Meinke just to name a few…


Bwahahaha.. I'll give you Emily and Ellie Wheeler (you never can seem to give her any credit!) The rest are washed up. They tanked aa soon as they got to college and a non BFF coach saw their real "talent"

Just because they made a team (and didn't stand out) doesn't mean anything. Theoret, Miguel, Flanagan.. come on...

Why the constant ELlie jealousy?
Anonymous
Anonymous wrote:
Anonymous wrote:
Anonymous wrote:
Anonymous wrote:CC doesn’t care what anyone thinks about him here. Any high level coach knows he can’t keep everyone happy. Any high level youth coach really only cares about getting players to the next level. He has one of the top 3 players in the US on his time and many other successful players.

If you want a coach that is trying to please everyone, play fourth tier. Even then, coaches can’t keep everyone happy.


He is an abusive coach whose time is numbered. Just because he had a lot of big names, doesn't make him a good coach. Snyder had a lot of big named players and that didn't make him a good owner. It is the fact that he doesn't care that makes him such a shthead. A lot of people have done good by him only to get dumped on. As I said, his days are numbered. He will join club with RAT soon enough.


Remind me of CCs big names please


Emily Fox, Alexis Theoret, Olivia Migli, Mya Townes, Allie Flanagan, Alicia Meinke just to name a few…

Also Meaghan Nally who is now the college recruiting director at Rev
Anonymous
Anonymous wrote:

Emily Fox, Alexis Theoret, Olivia Migli, Mya Townes, Allie Flanagan, what Alicia Meinke just to name a few…

Also Meaghan Nally who is now the college recruiting director at Rev

And exactly does Meaghan do in this position? My child is having to do all their own recruiting research and work on their own. Meaghan hasn't put anything out to the players to assist with this at all.
Anonymous
He is claiming full responsibility for the success of these players?
Anonymous
Anonymous wrote:
Anonymous wrote:

Emily Fox, Alexis Theoret, Olivia Migli, Mya Townes, Allie Flanagan, what Alicia Meinke just to name a few…

Also Meaghan Nally who is now the college recruiting director at Rev


And exactly does Meaghan do in this position? My child is having to do all their own recruiting research and work on their own. Meaghan hasn't put anything out to the players to assist with this at all.

+1. When was she hired? We haven't received anything from her.
Anonymous
Im sure BP was just watching Mya Townes be developed by him. And fix didn't have any other coaches or trainers. Does he still claim to be coaching her during her national team status? He's very good about taking credit for the development of players he didn't develop. That's a skill. He won't be able to recreate a winning invironmentbwith the clowns he has as cronies. All he knows how to do is steal other players by getting access to top leagues. Most of those player came to FCV to have access to a better league. The league provides the exposure, not the coach. The coach does absolutely nothing but he's good at being on his cell phone a lot. I see all his cronies coming here to brag about his lack of real accomplishments.
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