Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:OP here. Just to be clear, the girl in issue is still playing club soccer, just at a program which allows her to play for her private HS team. And the college she is going to has won an NCAA championship in the last 5 years.
Then I would listen to the college coach. Simple.
Anonymous wrote:Wasn't their a WaPost story about a team with one kid who had done just that--stepped off from his DA to play HS for a year with his mates. The college was fine with it in that case.
Anonymous wrote:OP here. Just to be clear, the girl in issue is still playing club soccer, just at a program which allows her to play for her private HS team. And the college she is going to has won an NCAA championship in the last 5 years.
Anonymous wrote:RantingSoccerDad wrote:Plenty of kids do this. If your college coach doesn't like it, maybe it's a good time to shop around for another college.
Another way of looking at it: If you want soccer to be a job rather than something you enjoy, go pro.
Plenty of kids committed to top 10 D1 college soccer programs quit DA to play HS their senior year? That scenario doesn't happen very often, IME, at least on the boys' side. I certainly agree that you should play at a level that you enjoy, but it's kind of bizarre that you'd be ambitious enough to work to get recruited at that high a level and then stop caring about improving your game. And I think it's entirely fair for a college coach to look with disfavor on that decision.
RantingSoccerDad wrote:Plenty of kids do this. If your college coach doesn't like it, maybe it's a good time to shop around for another college.
Another way of looking at it: If you want soccer to be a job rather than something you enjoy, go pro.
Anonymous wrote:The biggest issue I would see a college coach having is that the risk of injury is higher in HS soccer. But really, it is between the player and her college coach. Why is it your concern?
Anonymous wrote:I know a girl who is currently a senior in HS and is committed to playing at a top 10 Division 1 program next season. She just switched from her top club team (which wouldn't allow her to play for her high school), so she could play for her private high school as a senior (she wasn't able to do that as a sophomore or a junior). The club team she switched to is good, but not as good. Seemed like a good plan to me, but I wasn't sure whether her new college coaches would be miffed.