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 "ECNL moving to school year part 2"
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][quote=Anonymous][quote=Anonymous][quote=Anonymous][quote=Anonymous][quote=Anonymous][quote=Anonymous][quote=Anonymous][quote=Anonymous][quote=Anonymous][quote=Anonymous][quote=Anonymous][quote=Anonymous][quote=Anonymous][quote=Anonymous][quote=Anonymous][quote=Anonymous][quote=Anonymous][quote=Anonymous][quote=Anonymous] I think many people forget MLSNext is not just MLS Academies. On the contrary, with tier 2 expansion the MLSN P2P clubs outnumber the academies. So MLSN can’t ditch P2P clubs’ interests (huge amount of money is coming from P2P clubs to MLSN). For a MLSN P2P it’s impossible to keep 2 age systems. Organization would be crazy. U12 and younger, plus the rest of older teams (non MLSN) will be playing SY … so I see unavoidable that MLSN P2P push for moving to SY. [/quote] P2P MLSN clubs vastly outnumbered Academies [i]before[/i] MLSN2 arrived. It is just, literally, another soccer league in a soup of them. Some of these people on here acting like these kids are all going pro and need to be grouped by BY because ('sans England') other countries group by BY (they do that because BY is also their school year cohorts) is wild. I know certain generations are susceptible to marketing but dang. Nothing would change if MLSN went SY or stayed BY. It would not change an iota. My god... [/quote] Why dont you just mind your own business and let people do what they want. Oh ya you know that if MLSN stays BY they will just ignore ECNL even more than they already do. Which will be really bad for boys ECNL.[/quote] I' m glad you think I have some sort of 'say' on what happens. Do you think the board of MLSN is here reading our posts and going, "hmmm. Anon#20232 had a really good point there, let's change to SY!"? Personally, I don't care if they change or not. My kid plays MLSN1 and I love the competition and strength of the league. [/quote] What month is your son? Maybe are you afraid that your boy won’t be a starter, or even not make his MLSN1 team, if MLSN1 moves to SY? Just asking …[/quote] I’ve been saying SY is the correct call for MLSN man. I don’t think a fractured system where two silos (BY/SY) have different age cutoffs benefits anyone but the leagues themselves. Boy, both sides of this debate are hella suspicious. [/quote] Can't say I agree with this. If you're the oldest in a particular age group system, you will benefit as a player. So in the SY system, the August - December bdays benefit (a lot) by being the oldest and getting more opportunities. And same for the spring birthdays in the BY system. Having two systems gives more opportunities for more players![/quote] Please explain how further fracturing (an already fractured and confusing youth system) even further "[i]gives more opportunities for more players![/i]"? What is going to happen is we would end up with entire clubs, cities and ecosystems split into BY and SY. How does that benefit anyone except for those at the top? "gives more opportunities for more players!". Yes. It gives more opportunities for players/famlies to get fleeced. Sounds great. [/quote] Happy to explain. The fall bday players will have more opportunities for top teams to get out on the field and play soccer in the SY leagues. Same for spring birthdays in the BY leagues. You wouldn't necessarily have to travel more. You could just play the same teams more times. So your economic argument doesn't hold water. This is about kids playing soccer - and there will be more of them doing that with two systems. Don't be salty.[/quote] If they are split up you have lowered the bar for being on a top team. That hurts everyone. [/quote] It's not "if." They will be split up in 26/27 if MLS Next and GA stay BY. US Club and USYS are changing to school year for sure. So are you suggesting MLS Next and GA [b]MUST[/b] change to SY for the sake of youth soccer? If so, just say that.[/quote] I would suggest that yes. Your solution just makes things more confusing, more diluted, and ultimately does not progress youth soccer for anyone. Creating two completely siloed systems (which ECNL is clearly trying to do, and now MLSN with MLSN2 seems to be also doing) isn't good for the sport. You can't honestly argue that it will be. They should probably have never changed it in 2016, and they should not have then decided to change it again. But it is what it is. Is that fair for these other two groups to now change if they don't want really to? No, it is not fair. it sucks but it would be better for the sport to change. That's all. I don't give a shit about ECNL or any other league in particular. I hope MSNL/GA changes to SY and then eats ECNL for lunch. One less league would be fantastic. [/quote] It would be better if MLSN + GA stayed BY and "ate ECNLs lunch". This way they not only address ECNL they also take half of US Clubs customers.[/quote] Will be interesting to see what happens. The tough part is only top teams can plays MLSN or a u little league. Where clubs can have 2-5 teams play USYS or us club. Do they want to poss off the money maker leagues for only the top teams if it came down to choosing one or the other?[/quote] A single MLSN + GA club is going to have 2-5 levels of teams for both girls and boys at every age. They can just work with other MLSN + GA clubs to make multiple levels of leagues all the way down to youngers. Top to bottom BY leagues can be done but once the decision is made theres no turning back.[/quote] I know that seems to sound good, but these clubs typically have their lower tiers in the USYS -- which is changing to SY! Both MLSN/GA and ECNL are racing to build out lower tier options BUT they don't currently exist anywhere close to the depth and breadth of USYS.[/quote] Not defending PP, because building that sort of club requires a lot of work, overhead and fields. Having 1 team per age group for GA / MLSN / ECNL doesn’t, and that’s why many clubs let other clubs handle the ulittles. All that to say, the only reason USYS handles the big clubs feeder tiers and ages is because of sanctioning. Many of the rec and travel lite programs are in house. And also many of the development programs (“junior academy” type programs) are actually fully “off the grid” in terms of sanctioning. Ie. If you look at your kids player card, you’ll see a few years of rec, then a couple of years without sanctioning (no record), then USClub, GA, MLS, etc.[/quote] That's not been my experience at all. In my large metro area, there no clubs with "off the grid" teams during the regular season. Maybe some summer/winter leagues but that's it.[/quote] What club, and I can tell you which programs are fully inhouse and not sanctioned (if they have any) - and I can tell you which neighboring clubs have those programs that you can compare to.[/quote] The point I'm arguing isn't that in-house programs don't exist. The point I'm making is that they aren't at the size/scale to replace sanctioned leagues that everybody does. Basically, there aren't top-tier players who play years without sanctioning (at least in the US P2P system).[/quote] Ok, thanks for clarifying. That point wasn’t clear until now. You’re wrong though. Most of the power clubs have an in house feeder to their elite teams. The DMV chaos-musical-chairs structure isn’t normal.[/quote] Sure, some large clubs with multiple "franchises" might have an in-house feeder. In my area, that's like 2 mega clubs and ALL those mega clubs play in the USYS at lower levels. And those clubs still will replace those in-house recruits for anyone better from the outside. In fact, sometimes the best way to get to a higher team is to leave a club/system, where the current place already has decided whether your kid has A team potential.[/quote] The best way to not make the club’s top team is to leave the club. 😂 This happens ALL the time. Parents are ticked off that feeder teams tier, and DC isn’t on top team bc in their mind, DC is “just as good as.” So the leave the club in a huff about “politics, bad coaches, no development, etc etc etc.” Then they go to some small club that is more “focused on development” and they play an awful and slow variety of kick and run / chaos-ball for 2 years then show up at ECNL tryouts for u13 and their kid is on the bottom field, maybe shining, maybe not against the former club’s 3rd tier players that are there to make club’s parents feel like tryouts actually decide anything. And then the kid doesn’t make it, and gets an invite to the clubs classic or whatnot. Parent is insulted and goes back to the new club or some other club, or “focuses on futsal.” Every year this happens at every club. Rinse, repeat. The best way to insure you won’t make the top competitive teams is to leave the club. Kid doesn’t [/quote] Nope. I've watched for years players on second teams never get promoted while spots on the A team go to players recruited from elsewhere. This is even more true for the elite of elites.[/quote] I agree, going to a different club is generally a better way to get on the top team than trying to work your way up within the club. Unfortunately when a kid gets tagged as a B team player they're screwed. The only way to get past this is if a player absolutely blows up the B team to the point where the club feels like other clubs will recruit them. Usually clubs give coaches bonuses for bringing on new players. What this means is there's no incentive to look within bringing players up. If you think you hate P2P clubs. Just wait the more you find out you'll hate them even more.[/quote] We’ve found this to be true as well. It’s easier to recruit an outside kid by giving a first team offer. Much harder if only offering second team. An outside kid only has to be marginally better to take a first team spot while a second team kid from the same club would need to be an immediate impact/top half player on the first team to be moved up. [/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