Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:You also need to talk to other parents and determine if you can trust the club/what the offer even says. Many times you should not!! There is a lot of bait and switch on coaches, roster sizes (hey now we have 21 on our roster so you may be on the team but won't go to games), or placement (I know you were offered a spot on team A and made the decision based on this, but really some parents complained about their kid so now yours will be on team B, too bad you already paid and turned down other offers, should have played more politics). Coaches and clubs are car salesman at heart.... whatever makes you sign on the dotted line, will lie right to your face.
You can never trust anyone. Even the ones that seem trustworthy eventually will reveal their stripes.
We have been “guaranteed” spots way ahead of time on top team by coaches only to have TDS who have never seen the kids play a single game/practice the entire calendar year come in and do bait switches on final rosters due to politics, nepotism, etc. What do you say to a kid that is conscientious and the team leader whose Coach said he’s only 1 moving up that he got fucked over for a third stringer or 4th stringer with lots of older siblings and parents that schmooze? Adios!
Always have something in your back pocket is my advice.
Some will definitely bank on your loyalty or past deadlines at other Clubs. Some are such babies that they take offense to looking around when if they were really confident in what they had to offer, they’d encourage it.
I really despise the entire industry for what they have taken away from kids by making it a business with no heart.
Then perhaps you should stay off the forums. Jesus Christ. Ask a simple question and the sour grapes bitter rants just come out of the woodwork.
I'm not sure if you feel you are providing some kind of public service but you can lighten up a bit because you offer nothing objective in your "wisdom" or advice.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Are you asking about spring tryouts for next fall or a mid-year tryout (eg, now) for winter and spring? They are handled differently at most clubs.
OP here, Spring tryouts for next fall.
I agree its best not to waste time trying out for clubs that we won't be interested in. One will have to decide if being on the A team of a mediocre club is better than being on a C team of a top club. The idea of visiting practices of a few clubs is probably one thing I will do.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:You also need to talk to other parents and determine if you can trust the club/what the offer even says. Many times you should not!! There is a lot of bait and switch on coaches, roster sizes (hey now we have 21 on our roster so you may be on the team but won't go to games), or placement (I know you were offered a spot on team A and made the decision based on this, but really some parents complained about their kid so now yours will be on team B, too bad you already paid and turned down other offers, should have played more politics). Coaches and clubs are car salesman at heart.... whatever makes you sign on the dotted line, will lie right to your face.
You can never trust anyone. Even the ones that seem trustworthy eventually will reveal their stripes.
We have been “guaranteed” spots way ahead of time on top team by coaches only to have TDS who have never seen the kids play a single game/practice the entire calendar year come in and do bait switches on final rosters due to politics, nepotism, etc. What do you say to a kid that is conscientious and the team leader whose Coach said he’s only 1 moving up that he got fucked over for a third stringer or 4th stringer with lots of older siblings and parents that schmooze? Adios!
Always have something in your back pocket is my advice.
Some will definitely bank on your loyalty or past deadlines at other Clubs. Some are such babies that they take offense to looking around when if they were really confident in what they had to offer, they’d encourage it.
I really despise the entire industry for what they have taken away from kids by making it a business with no heart.
Anonymous wrote:Are you asking about spring tryouts for next fall or a mid-year tryout (eg, now) for winter and spring? They are handled differently at most clubs.
Anonymous wrote:You also need to talk to other parents and determine if you can trust the club/what the offer even says. Many times you should not!! There is a lot of bait and switch on coaches, roster sizes (hey now we have 21 on our roster so you may be on the team but won't go to games), or placement (I know you were offered a spot on team A and made the decision based on this, but really some parents complained about their kid so now yours will be on team B, too bad you already paid and turned down other offers, should have played more politics). Coaches and clubs are car salesman at heart.... whatever makes you sign on the dotted line, will lie right to your face.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Just curious about how the tryout offer and acceptance procedures work for soccer.
When a player is accepted by a club, do they also let you know what team that player will be on (i.e team A, B, C...etc) immediately? or do they accept the player and ask to him/her to join another tryout to identify which team he/she will be placed on? If it's the latter how have you decided which club your child will play with if you have more than offer at the same time without knowing which team they will be placed on, especially since you have around 48 hours to decide? Thanks
Clubs do it all sorts of ways. From years of experience with this, there is no answer to your question. Clubs make it harder and harder for parents every year. Most are not interested in letting you continue to tryout at another club or giving you the time to then weigh which option is best. You have to play the political game and navigate the process using your own communication skills. Try to be both honest and strategic. Many niave parents step into it. There are various tricks of the trade to extend your time (showing up to the last tryout only, commiting verbally but not in writing or by check, etc), but the clubs are always finding ways to clamp down on that. It is very difficult to tryout at multiple clubs. The best advice is just to make your decision on which club you would pick even before tryouts start. That's honestly the best approach.
Anonymous wrote:Just curious about how the tryout offer and acceptance procedures work for soccer.
When a player is accepted by a club, do they also let you know what team that player will be on (i.e team A, B, C...etc) immediately? or do they accept the player and ask to him/her to join another tryout to identify which team he/she will be placed on? If it's the latter how have you decided which club your child will play with if you have more than offer at the same time without knowing which team they will be placed on, especially since you have around 48 hours to decide? Thanks
Anonymous wrote:Just curious about how the tryout offer and acceptance procedures work for soccer.
When a player is accepted by a club, do they also let you know what team that player will be on (i.e team A, B, C...etc) immediately? or do they accept the player and ask to him/her to join another tryout to identify which team he/she will be placed on? If it's the latter how have you decided which club your child will play with if you have more than offer at the same time without knowing which team they will be placed on, especially since you have around 48 hours to decide? Thanks