Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Barca needs to reduce its pricing by about $1500 or more to attract better talent and be consistently competitive against stronger teams. Otherwise, they will continue to have wildly inconsistent talent fluctuations within their player pool. They currently do well against low to mid-level competition, but get beat in higher level tournaments/leagues.
Seems like they are building teams at a reasonable rate. This is what - their second or third year? DS plays u-13 and I have noticed the Barca Academy team in some tournament brackets and they are performing respectably.
It's only been 1.5 years.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Barca needs to reduce its pricing by about $1500 or more to attract better talent and be consistently competitive against stronger teams. Otherwise, they will continue to have wildly inconsistent talent fluctuations within their player pool. They currently do well against low to mid-level competition, but get beat in higher level tournaments/leagues.
Seems like they are building teams at a reasonable rate. This is what - their second or third year? DS plays u-13 and I have noticed the Barca Academy team in some tournament brackets and they are performing respectably.
Anonymous wrote:Barca needs to reduce its pricing by about $1500 or more to attract better talent and be consistently competitive against stronger teams. Otherwise, they will continue to have wildly inconsistent talent fluctuations within their player pool. They currently do well against low to mid-level competition, but get beat in higher level tournaments/leagues.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:because it is a low-key program to begin with
I wouldn’t say Barcelona is a “low key” organization. Seems a good number of parents/kids there may be though, from these descriptions.
Yes. Very refreshing after being many at other Clubs where parents are wound so tight they could polish a nickel between their ass cheeks. Don’t miss those sidelines.
Right, poor practice attendance is refreshing because you had to share sidelines with a couple high strung parents at your previous club?
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:because it is a low-key program to begin with
I wouldn’t say Barcelona is a “low key” organization. Seems a good number of parents/kids there may be though, from these descriptions.
Yes. Very refreshing after being many at other Clubs where parents are wound so tight they could polish a nickel between their ass cheeks. Don’t miss those sidelines.
Right, poor practice attendance is refreshing because you had to share sidelines with a couple high strung parents at your previous club?
There is not an attendance problem on the first teams that I’ve seen. We have 3 kids in the program and the EDP first teams have a full roster every practice/game.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:because it is a low-key program to begin with
I wouldn’t say Barcelona is a “low key” organization. Seems a good number of parents/kids there may be though, from these descriptions.
Yes. Very refreshing after being many at other Clubs where parents are wound so tight they could polish a nickel between their ass cheeks. Don’t miss those sidelines.
Right, poor practice attendance is refreshing because you had to share sidelines with a couple high strung parents at your previous club?
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:because it is a low-key program to begin with
I wouldn’t say Barcelona is a “low key” organization. Seems a good number of parents/kids there may be though, from these descriptions.
Yes. Very refreshing after being many at other Clubs where parents are wound so tight they could polish a nickel between their ass cheeks. Don’t miss those sidelines.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:because it is a low-key program to begin with
I wouldn’t say Barcelona is a “low key” organization. Seems a good number of parents/kids there may be though, from these descriptions.
Anonymous wrote:because it is a low-key program to begin with
Anonymous wrote:As much as I like the coaching methodology, I am seriously considering leaving the club. My kid is passionate about the game and works hard in every game/practice, but many of his teammates don't come to practices and games. I can certainly understand that there may be significant differences in player quality between different teams or even within the same team, but I don't understand why complete lack of commitment is tolerated.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:BARCA has been full of crap since day one. We left over the winter after 1.5 years. Don't believe the hype the folks here toss out.
Communication is horrible, they keep tossing out the word family, but yet there is not interaction between the coach and parent. They aren't competitive (not because of coaching) due to the player pool, lots of kids left over from Evergreen which was a crap club. What you have a is group of adults who love the idea of their kid playing for Barca, the same badge worn by Messi.
If you took their coaches and fed them a player pool that you would find with one of the bigger clubs, then you have something. Until then, you have a good program with players that cannot execute.
You left a club with admittedly good coaching because the player pool wasn’t good enough and you didn’t have a direct relationship with the coach? I’m curious how did your player feel about the experience? Was he/she developing?
My child was learning from the coaches but could never get more than a few passes before others on the team collapsed. How can you develop when you are stuck with a team that can't execute simple drills. Go watch, some of the teams are pretty good and can ball, others (if you are lucky to be placed with them) don't understand the basics. Just to be clear, we left at the request of my child, I paid in full and would have preferred to stick it out.