Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Summer soccer on HOT turf with short rostered teams as players regularly dont show up like they do during the typical travel fall/spring season. My kid did Super Y one year and we were not never again. If you go into it expecting exercise and some training then go for it. If you want the equivalent coaching, commitment and competition found in your usual travel season its not there. Not even close. Did I say it was HOT and rosters are short so dont expect substitutions at the rate they should be given the temperature
I was going to say the same thing. I will add it is a money maker for Super Y. The trip to Florida if you get that far is a nice distraction form the cold weather here but all in all it is a constant struggle to field a team and the coaches sort of treat it as a casual league and are on vacation at times with their families as well.
and so hot, it is almost like they find the fields with no shade around, and blow in more hot air. It often conflicted with swimming so we often didn't go to the games because our kid enjoys summer swim much more than super y because of the heat, did we mention that?
Anonymous wrote:Summer soccer on HOT turf with short rostered teams as players regularly dont show up like they do during the typical travel fall/spring season. My kid did Super Y one year and we were not never again. If you go into it expecting exercise and some training then go for it. If you want the equivalent coaching, commitment and competition found in your usual travel season its not there. Not even close. Did I say it was HOT and rosters are short so dont expect substitutions at the rate they should be given the temperature
Anonymous wrote:you will find that other families will dip out on hot days because they have "last-minute commitments" or "something came up", which leaves the kids who do show up playing with only 9 or 10 players and no subs on a 95+ degree turf temperature.
Also a lot of teams don't get a real goalkeeper because one didn't sign up.
Anonymous wrote:He's very decent, but not an A team player and probably never will be .
Anonymous wrote:So it sounds like the Super Y is a good summer experience and a decent league?
We are trying to decide which summer activity to sign up my U-12 for (we can really only choose one, for financial reasons) and we're thinking that he'd enjoy Super Y because it's got actual games and he loves that competition.
I've heard that rosters are large to make it through the summer vacation season ... how has that worked out in practice -- do kids get decent playing time?
Anonymous wrote:Summer soccer on HOT turf with short rostered teams as players regularly dont show up like they do during the typical travel fall/spring season. My kid did Super Y one year and we were not never again. If you go into it expecting exercise and some training then go for it. If you want the equivalent coaching, commitment and competition found in your usual travel season its not there. Not even close. Did I say it was HOT and rosters are short so dont expect substitutions at the rate they should be given the temperature
Summer soccer on HOT turf with short rostered teams as players regularly dont show up like they do during the typical travel fall/spring season. My kid did Super Y one year and we were not never again. If you go into it expecting exercise and some training then go for it. If you want the equivalent coaching, commitment and competition found in your usual travel season its not there. Not even close. Did I say it was HOT and rosters are short so dont expect substitutions at the rate they should be given the temperature