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 "U9 full of 2017 kids"
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][quote=Anonymous][quote=Anonymous][quote=Anonymous]Why are a handful of 2015 teams playing U11. Rumor is its a recruiting tactic. It's all nonsense. [/quote] There are a few 2015s playing up, SYC, Mclean, Loudoun and Arlington are the ones I’m familiar with personally. For each of those teams, winning the majority of their games 6-1, 10-2 or worse, except when playing each other, (of course with a few exceptions) likely wasn’t helping their development at a macro level. I have no problem with teams playing up an age group if that is what is required to continue their development. Also, playing 9v9 alone will accelerate their development vs playing 7v7 if they weren’t being challenged. [/quote] Give me a break. They are joint aged teams pretending to be playing up a year. I know. We know the teams personally and it's ridiculous and laudable. A singular player that's advanced playing up? Cool sure. Playing a 'team up' is not a real thing. It's one of two kids carrying the team with kids of the right age also joining in to help. I know of one team worth playing up an age and they only did it one season before long to pre ecnl. [/quote] I love how people come on here and speak with authority on things they know nothing about. My son happens to play for one of those teams a previous poster highlighted that is playing up this year. I would concur that about 1/3 of the parents are disappointed and believe that they’re being pushed up too fast (skipping their last year of 7v7) while another 1/3 is excited to see them pushed and think 9v9 will accelerate their development. Then there is the other 1/3 who just don’t care and want their kids to have fun and play with their friends. That being said, it is not a “joint age” team and there is not one “of age” kid on the team, nor is there any intent to do so. They took the 10 who have been together for almost 2 years since pre-travel academy and added 2 more from the “2nd team” to have a 12 man roster for 9v9 - all of whom are “playing up” in age. Some would argue that’s how roster management is supposed to work, flight your best players up when they’ve earned the opportunity (and down when they can no longer keep up technically or tactically). They are not playing in the top division of u11, in fact they are buried somewhere in the middle of the NCSL divisions to gauge how they hold us against older kids (most of whom are also playing 9v9 for the first time ever). Time will tell how they do, but they’ve more than held their own so far. Sorry to rain on some peoples parade that every club is doing nefarious things, but I can’t be any closer to the situation. That being said, I know nothing about what other clubs are doing - and will readily admit that. [/quote] So your U10 top team is playing against U11 4th and 5th teams? How does That help with development? [/quote] Not the original poster but that comes down to the previous discussion re. if you think the 9v9 fosters development better than 7v7. Personally, I think the need to make quicker decisions in tighter spaces is a good thing. 7v7 allows for top players to literally dribble circles around others, that space disappears in 9v9 (and up). [/quote] The space definitely disappears in 9v9, especially for clubs that use the smaller pitch limits, it’s like 7v7 with 4 extra kids. But it reappears in 11v11 when the pitch expands, and each field player has almost 2x space as they would on the largest 9v9 fields. 11v11 can definitely benefit dribblers. The biggest problem dribblers have is that most coaches don’t understand how to utilize a dribbler in their “pass only” dollar-store tiki-taka knockoff systems - and most players have it coaches out of them by MS / HS age. [/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