Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:ECNL RL is going to max out at players who were not good enough to make an ECNL roster or likely even GA or MLS Next rosters. EDP1 is going to max out at players who could start on an ECNL roster but chose not to pursue that, as well as some much weaker players who might not even make an ECNL RL team.
I would say the top EDP1 players will go further in college pursuits.
True, on a top EDP team you always have the chance for outliers that are going to be far better than most, and if your kid is one of those, it probably doesn’t matter where they play.
But if the question is, if your choice is RL or EDP, which means the kid probably isn’t great, I’d go RL.
We had that exact choice, and talked to a bunch of college coaches, who all said that it’ll be easier to get seen playing RL or Nations League than EDP.
Anonymous wrote:ECNL RL is going to max out at players who were not good enough to make an ECNL roster or likely even GA or MLS Next rosters. EDP1 is going to max out at players who could start on an ECNL roster but chose not to pursue that, as well as some much weaker players who might not even make an ECNL RL team.
I would say the top EDP1 players will go further in college pursuits.
Anonymous wrote:ECNL RL for sure. Is anyone left in EDP?
Anonymous wrote:This should not even be a question. EDP 1.
In the history of the regional league how many players have went D1?
I can think of 5 players from u19 edp south Atlantic last year playing D1.
Anonymous wrote:A another question might be how many D1 players established themselves as a preferred walk on to their college team. I think Matt Turner took this path.
This is an interesting article on the subject: https://usatodayhss.com/2017/the-5-most-commonly-asked-questions-about-being-a-college-walk-on