Toggle navigation
Toggle navigation
Home
DCUM Forums
Nanny Forums
Events
About DCUM
Advertising
Search
Recent Topics
Hottest Topics
FAQs and Guidelines
Privacy Policy
Your current identity is: Anonymous
Login
Preview
Subject:
Forum Index
»
Soccer
Reply to "Villarreal Virginia Academy: imploding?"
Subject:
Emoticons
More smilies
Text Color:
Default
Dark Red
Red
Orange
Brown
Yellow
Green
Olive
Cyan
Blue
Dark Blue
Violet
White
Black
Font:
Very Small
Small
Normal
Big
Giant
Close Marks
[quote=Anonymous][quote=Anonymous][quote=Anonymous][quote=Anonymous]The true story is it is the dream of every low level coach in Spain to come to the USA. To step on the turf, look around , and soak up the atmosphere. Then use that passion the work the crowd of American parents for thousands of dollars with the promise of their children may someday make it to play in Europe.[/quote] Nah. Some parents played and love the game. They know the difference between good and mediocre/bad training. It has nothing to do with accents/nationalities. Their kids were raised watching FIFA. They also know the difference and want to play for coaches that understand it and with teammates that know where/how to pass and when to dribble. They have no care or even want their kids to play college and zero expectation of pro. It’s hard to watch bad soccer when you love the game. By bad, I mean the predominant style here—physical/big kids with messy first touch. Some drive for this training and atmosphere instead of chasing the “status” travel clubs in the area and the “pre-Da” when “DA” won’t exist. Who is marketing a falsehood there? Who is guaranteeing if they play DA they will make the USMNT? No need to attack something different. People usually lash out when they feel threatened by their choices or of others that might steal their business. Work on your product and treat people decently and you wouldn’t have to worry. Go where your kid is happy. The stereotypical bashing of anyone outside the US who tries to dare step on travel club turf is tiresome. Up your product and game and you don’t have to rely on being the only game in town and making rules/regulations that block Clubs from your leagues. It’s an easy out to claim anyone with kids at Villarreal or Barca or Bayern is there because they think their kid is Messi or Kimmich.[/quote] I posted that I found it interesting that "Spanish" seems to have some cachet or value to people and that a paid tour of soccer in Europe is paid. "Up your product"? I did not lash out or bash and am not threatened. Its a free market and people can buy what they want and get what they get. To expand my point though, a Spanish coach coming to the USA can bring coaching knowledge and approach. They cannot bring the street soccer culture of Spain or Argentina or the barrios of Brazil to the USA. And they are NOT bringing the euro academy model either: they are charging fees and pay to play in USA unlike European academy style where the player is invited and all is paid by the club: Ajax, Barca, Villareal, Bayern all operate that way in Europe. As I understand it, the 'invitations' to train with these clubs extended to their USA affiliates are not trials, they are invites to pay for a week or so of training. Again, that may be something good for any individual kid or family, thats up to them. Inspiration is good anywhere. But no one should believe that the invite to train - guaranteed to a couple of players irrespective of ability - is the same as a trial with a club. In Goal Santi had to pay his way over, that's where the similarity ends. [/quote] Argentina and Spain have barrios. Brazil has favelas. I agree with everything else in your post though, 100%. For example, I'm sure this was a great experience for these two kids, but to advertise it as a "tryout" was complete BS, on many levels: https://www.annandaleunitedfc.com/villarrealcf [/quote]
Options
Disable HTML in this message
Disable BB Code in this message
Disable smilies in this message
Review message
Search
Recent Topics
Hottest Topics