I'd contact both. You missed the tryouts for Classics and they did cut people so I'm not sure they have space. PPA doesn't cut anybody but the better players already have a spot in the Premier League while everyone else goes into the Developmental league. They might not have space depending on how many Classics teams there are. But they are super nice people and will try to work with you.
Anonymous wrote:I don't think the PP is correct. My son played on both ppa developmental and Msi rec last year. The ppa games were against other ppa teams, at Norwood school. Maybe PP meant PPA premier? We haven't done that yet.
That's for the lower ages. PPA U10 developmental plays in the MSI Classics league and the Premier teams plays in SAM Select. MSI rec is different from MSI Classics, which starts in 4th grade.
I don't think the PP is correct. My son played on both ppa developmental and Msi rec last year. The ppa games were against other ppa teams, at Norwood school. Maybe PP meant PPA premier? We haven't done that yet.
PPA Developmental is comparable to MSI Classic because they play in the MSI Classic League. You can save tons of money by having your kid play on a good Classics team and then, if you like the PPA coaches, have him or her take one of their workshops or whatever they call it.
There's PPA Developmental and PPA Premier (and I think PPA Academy too). Premier is travel-level -- 3 practices a week plus a game on the weekend. Developmental is for kids who are working up to Premier or who can't give the 4-days a week commitment that Premier requires. I think PPA Developmental is comparable to MSI Classic and is between "rec-league" soccer and full-on travel soccer. And I think the Academy may be more like rec-league. I assume PPA's website explains it all.
I have a DS who plays in PPA Premier and we think the organization and its coaches are superb. Very well managed. Coaches are great - - all of them in our experience are amazingly good soccer players and good leaders.
We thought that their format of not having the teams practice together (two teams practice together) makes for disjointed play because the kids never get a chance to really get a feel for other players. I also think that they could do more footwork for the players. That said, if you are just interested in having your kids have fun with nice coaches, they are great.