Anonymous wrote:It is fascinating to me how these coaches defend themselves on this board. The same happens with the ASA (Alexandria) situation, which is funny. They are also on the bottom feed across all ages and lost GA status for similar issues not too long ago.
In any case, the best way to prevent abusive behavior is to report it. The club will be educated, and other families will benefit from it. On your end, you might choose to stay or leave; at the end of the day, this is about our kids having a good experience and developing and not at all about the egos of coaches or club directors. Sadly, in most cases, they are just money-hungry.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Achilles U16 currently is ranked above both Alexandria and Baltimore Armour (they are #4 in the mid-atlantic division). The U19 team is ranked #3 (above Alexandria, Bethesda, SYC, and Armour). Yes, the U14 team is struggling this year (as did the U16 team last year when it was effectively made up of a bunch of U15 who played up because Achilles had lost that age group), but this whole narrative that Achilles should not be in MLS Next gets old.
It’s not a narrative. It’s the work of the Achilles Stalker. The focus is generally on the younger Achilles boys teams. Kind of funny, kinda sad that Sal and Co. live rent free in parent’s head.
I think the more important narrative is how did a club that has no visible college recruitment pathway and depth other than at the very under littles can sustain MLS Next? This isn't an opinion, it is fact. What is the bar for clubs to get MLSNext? I know for ECNL on the girls side, there needs to be a dedicated college pathway advisement, a high level of licensure, dedicated field space, keeper coaching, on staff wellness/trainers, etc. Happy for someone to point me in the direction of what those barriers are for clubs to clear to get the MLSN badge. Winning or losing, Bethesda, SYC and Alexandria have 3-4 (or more) teams of depth in each age group. I'm not as familiar with the Baltimore area clubs.
Same way Revolution purchased its spot in GA. money talks and BS walks
Did Sal leave you at the altar?
Nope he perked my kid around one too many road trip to NJ/NY to play for 15 minutes
that's how this works, unfortunately. on our mls next squad, the starters get about 3/4 of the time. 4 or 5 subs come in. the subs' parents complain they don't get enough time, and the starters' parents complain that the level drops at the end of the game.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Achilles U16 currently is ranked above both Alexandria and Baltimore Armour (they are #4 in the mid-atlantic division). The U19 team is ranked #3 (above Alexandria, Bethesda, SYC, and Armour). Yes, the U14 team is struggling this year (as did the U16 team last year when it was effectively made up of a bunch of U15 who played up because Achilles had lost that age group), but this whole narrative that Achilles should not be in MLS Next gets old.
It’s not a narrative. It’s the work of the Achilles Stalker. The focus is generally on the younger Achilles boys teams. Kind of funny, kinda sad that Sal and Co. live rent free in parent’s head.
I think the more important narrative is how did a club that has no visible college recruitment pathway and depth other than at the very under littles can sustain MLS Next? This isn't an opinion, it is fact. What is the bar for clubs to get MLSNext? I know for ECNL on the girls side, there needs to be a dedicated college pathway advisement, a high level of licensure, dedicated field space, keeper coaching, on staff wellness/trainers, etc. Happy for someone to point me in the direction of what those barriers are for clubs to clear to get the MLSN badge. Winning or losing, Bethesda, SYC and Alexandria have 3-4 (or more) teams of depth in each age group. I'm not as familiar with the Baltimore area clubs.
Same way Revolution purchased its spot in GA. money talks and BS walks
Did Sal leave you at the altar?
Nope he perked my kid around one too many road trip to NJ/NY to play for 15 minutes
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Achilles U16 currently is ranked above both Alexandria and Baltimore Armour (they are #4 in the mid-atlantic division). The U19 team is ranked #3 (above Alexandria, Bethesda, SYC, and Armour). Yes, the U14 team is struggling this year (as did the U16 team last year when it was effectively made up of a bunch of U15 who played up because Achilles had lost that age group), but this whole narrative that Achilles should not be in MLS Next gets old.
It’s not a narrative. It’s the work of the Achilles Stalker. The focus is generally on the younger Achilles boys teams. Kind of funny, kinda sad that Sal and Co. live rent free in parent’s head.
I think the more important narrative is how did a club that has no visible college recruitment pathway and depth other than at the very under littles can sustain MLS Next? This isn't an opinion, it is fact. What is the bar for clubs to get MLSNext? I know for ECNL on the girls side, there needs to be a dedicated college pathway advisement, a high level of licensure, dedicated field space, keeper coaching, on staff wellness/trainers, etc. Happy for someone to point me in the direction of what those barriers are for clubs to clear to get the MLSN badge. Winning or losing, Bethesda, SYC and Alexandria have 3-4 (or more) teams of depth in each age group. I'm not as familiar with the Baltimore area clubs.
Same way Revolution purchased its spot in GA. money talks and BS walks
Did Sal leave you at the altar?
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Achilles U16 currently is ranked above both Alexandria and Baltimore Armour (they are #4 in the mid-atlantic division). The U19 team is ranked #3 (above Alexandria, Bethesda, SYC, and Armour). Yes, the U14 team is struggling this year (as did the U16 team last year when it was effectively made up of a bunch of U15 who played up because Achilles had lost that age group), but this whole narrative that Achilles should not be in MLS Next gets old.
It’s not a narrative. It’s the work of the Achilles Stalker. The focus is generally on the younger Achilles boys teams. Kind of funny, kinda sad that Sal and Co. live rent free in parent’s head.
I think the more important narrative is how did a club that has no visible college recruitment pathway and depth other than at the very under littles can sustain MLS Next? This isn't an opinion, it is fact. What is the bar for clubs to get MLSNext? I know for ECNL on the girls side, there needs to be a dedicated college pathway advisement, a high level of licensure, dedicated field space, keeper coaching, on staff wellness/trainers, etc. Happy for someone to point me in the direction of what those barriers are for clubs to clear to get the MLSN badge. Winning or losing, Bethesda, SYC and Alexandria have 3-4 (or more) teams of depth in each age group. I'm not as familiar with the Baltimore area clubs.
Same way Revolution purchased its spot in GA. money talks and BS walks
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Achilles U16 currently is ranked above both Alexandria and Baltimore Armour (they are #4 in the mid-atlantic division). The U19 team is ranked #3 (above Alexandria, Bethesda, SYC, and Armour). Yes, the U14 team is struggling this year (as did the U16 team last year when it was effectively made up of a bunch of U15 who played up because Achilles had lost that age group), but this whole narrative that Achilles should not be in MLS Next gets old.
It’s not a narrative. It’s the work of the Achilles Stalker. The focus is generally on the younger Achilles boys teams. Kind of funny, kinda sad that Sal and Co. live rent free in parent’s head.
I think the more important narrative is how did a club that has no visible college recruitment pathway and depth other than at the very under littles can sustain MLS Next? This isn't an opinion, it is fact. What is the bar for clubs to get MLSNext? I know for ECNL on the girls side, there needs to be a dedicated college pathway advisement, a high level of licensure, dedicated field space, keeper coaching, on staff wellness/trainers, etc. Happy for someone to point me in the direction of what those barriers are for clubs to clear to get the MLSN badge. Winning or losing, Bethesda, SYC and Alexandria have 3-4 (or more) teams of depth in each age group. I'm not as familiar with the Baltimore area clubs.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Achilles U16 currently is ranked above both Alexandria and Baltimore Armour (they are #4 in the mid-atlantic division). The U19 team is ranked #3 (above Alexandria, Bethesda, SYC, and Armour). Yes, the U14 team is struggling this year (as did the U16 team last year when it was effectively made up of a bunch of U15 who played up because Achilles had lost that age group), but this whole narrative that Achilles should not be in MLS Next gets old.
It’s not a narrative. It’s the work of the Achilles Stalker. The focus is generally on the younger Achilles boys teams. Kind of funny, kinda sad that Sal and Co. live rent free in parent’s head.
I think the more important narrative is how did a club that has no visible college recruitment pathway and depth other than at the very under littles can sustain MLS Next? This isn't an opinion, it is fact. What is the bar for clubs to get MLSNext? I know for ECNL on the girls side, there needs to be a dedicated college pathway advisement, a high level of licensure, dedicated field space, keeper coaching, on staff wellness/trainers, etc. Happy for someone to point me in the direction of what those barriers are for clubs to clear to get the MLSN badge. Winning or losing, Bethesda, SYC and Alexandria have 3-4 (or more) teams of depth in each age group. I'm not as familiar with the Baltimore area clubs.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Achilles U16 currently is ranked above both Alexandria and Baltimore Armour (they are #4 in the mid-atlantic division). The U19 team is ranked #3 (above Alexandria, Bethesda, SYC, and Armour). Yes, the U14 team is struggling this year (as did the U16 team last year when it was effectively made up of a bunch of U15 who played up because Achilles had lost that age group), but this whole narrative that Achilles should not be in MLS Next gets old.
It’s not a narrative. It’s the work of the Achilles Stalker. The focus is generally on the younger Achilles boys teams. Kind of funny, kinda sad that Sal and Co. live rent free in parent’s head.
I think the more important narrative is how did a club that has no visible college recruitment pathway and depth other than at the very under littles can sustain MLS Next? This isn't an opinion, it is fact. What is the bar for clubs to get MLSNext? I know for ECNL on the girls side, there needs to be a dedicated college pathway advisement, a high level of licensure, dedicated field space, keeper coaching, on staff wellness/trainers, etc. Happy for someone to point me in the direction of what those barriers are for clubs to clear to get the MLSN badge. Winning or losing, Bethesda, SYC and Alexandria have 3-4 (or more) teams of depth in each age group. I'm not as familiar with the Baltimore area clubs.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Achilles U16 currently is ranked above both Alexandria and Baltimore Armour (they are #4 in the mid-atlantic division). The U19 team is ranked #3 (above Alexandria, Bethesda, SYC, and Armour). Yes, the U14 team is struggling this year (as did the U16 team last year when it was effectively made up of a bunch of U15 who played up because Achilles had lost that age group), but this whole narrative that Achilles should not be in MLS Next gets old.
It’s not a narrative. It’s the work of the Achilles Stalker. The focus is generally on the younger Achilles boys teams. Kind of funny, kinda sad that Sal and Co. live rent free in parent’s head.
Anonymous wrote:Achilles U16 currently is ranked above both Alexandria and Baltimore Armour (they are #4 in the mid-atlantic division). The U19 team is ranked #3 (above Alexandria, Bethesda, SYC, and Armour). Yes, the U14 team is struggling this year (as did the U16 team last year when it was effectively made up of a bunch of U15 who played up because Achilles had lost that age group), but this whole narrative that Achilles should not be in MLS Next gets old.
Anonymous wrote:Achilles U16 currently is ranked above both Alexandria and Baltimore Armour (they are #4 in the mid-atlantic division). The U19 team is ranked #3 (above Alexandria, Bethesda, SYC, and Armour). Yes, the U14 team is struggling this year (as did the U16 team last year when it was effectively made up of a bunch of U15 who played up because Achilles had lost that age group), but this whole narrative that Achilles should not be in MLS Next gets old.