Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:
My daughter is one of the top players in her age group and she will not be playing for Metro or Paramount despite being recruited by both. The blunt and honest reason why: Metro practice is too far, Paramount coaching style is not what we want for our DD, nor does she.
Can you say something more about "Paramount coaching style"? We are new to club volleyball and would appreciate anything you can share about the clubs around here.
If you are new to club volleyball, you should not worry too much about Paramount - your DD is unlikely to make one of their teams. There are always exceptions, but they are rare. Consider Paramount if your DD is very young or very tall and athletic.
How do you know my DD is not very young, very tall, or very athletic?
Parents who are new to volleyball (and probably other sports as well) tend to be clueless about their kids' skills and abilities. I've been there myself and made pretty poor decisions early on. I am still making poor decisions, but now I know for sure that my DD doesn't have any chance of playing for Metro or Paramount. And MVSA. And I could add a few more on the list, but I will stop here.
Haha. I am getting there myself (new poster). When my daughter started playing in middle school I thought, hey! here’s something she’s really pretty good at, better than her peers, even! And I had delusions about MVSA and Metro etc. But now that she’s a rising sophomore, and have watched IG reels of D3 players, I realize she’s good but not great and will probably continue playing in college on a club-level team. I mean, I don’t want to see her short, but I laughed when I read your post because it seemed like me! I follow this forum, though, because I’m trying to find a MD club that isn’t Metro but that’s mid-level. The knowledgeable folks on here are too deep in it, though, and I haven’t actually gotten great info. Plz share if you know of good mid-level clubs in MD/DC!!
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:
I don't have a perfectly updated list for 2025, but here's what I have. Feel free to add to the list/update the numbers if you have better info. Stars indicate at least 1 D1 commit:
Metro - 16*
VAE - 11*
Paramount - 10*
MD JRS - 9*
Blue Ridge - 7*
Columbia - 7* (initially listed as 13, couldn't verify)
LEVBC - 6*
VA JRS - 5*
MOCO - 3*
MVSA - 3*
MOJO - 2
VAVA - 1
Metro North - 1
SRVC - 1
82 players total
I appreciate the hard work that went into this, but when I look at the Columbia 18s roster from Cap Hill on SportWrench, they only have 12 players on the roster and I know at least one who is not playing in college.and another who was a 2026 playing up to 18s. Were there 2025s who were young and played on 17s? What was the source for the 13 figure?
You were right. I double checked from sources other than the club page and the total I could verify was 7. I updated the above to fix it. Thanks for the info.
Anonymous wrote:
I don't have a perfectly updated list for 2025, but here's what I have. Feel free to add to the list/update the numbers if you have better info. Stars indicate at least 1 D1 commit:
Metro - 16*
VAE - 11*
Paramount - 10*
MD JRS - 9*
Blue Ridge - 7*
Columbia - 7* (initially listed as 13, couldn't verify)
LEVBC - 6*
VA JRS - 5*
MOCO - 3*
MVSA - 3*
MOJO - 2
VAVA - 1
Metro North - 1
SRVC - 1
82 players total
I appreciate the hard work that went into this, but when I look at the Columbia 18s roster from Cap Hill on SportWrench, they only have 12 players on the roster and I know at least one who is not playing in college.and another who was a 2026 playing up to 18s. Were there 2025s who were young and played on 17s? What was the source for the 13 figure?
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:
My daughter is one of the top players in her age group and she will not be playing for Metro or Paramount despite being recruited by both. The blunt and honest reason why: Metro practice is too far, Paramount coaching style is not what we want for our DD, nor does she.
Can you say something more about "Paramount coaching style"? We are new to club volleyball and would appreciate anything you can share about the clubs around here.
If you are new to club volleyball, you should not worry too much about Paramount - your DD is unlikely to make one of their teams. There are always exceptions, but they are rare. Consider Paramount if your DD is very young or very tall and athletic.
How do you know my DD is not very young, very tall, or very athletic?
Parents who are new to volleyball (and probably other sports as well) tend to be clueless about their kids' skills and abilities. I've been there myself and made pretty poor decisions early on. I am still making poor decisions, but now I know for sure that my DD doesn't have any chance of playing for Metro or Paramount. And MVSA. And I could add a few more on the list, but I will stop here.
Haha. I am getting there myself (new poster). When my daughter started playing in middle school I thought, hey! here’s something she’s really pretty good at, better than her peers, even! And I had delusions about MVSA and Metro etc. But now that she’s a rising sophomore, and have watched IG reels of D3 players, I realize she’s good but not great and will probably continue playing in college on a club-level team. I mean, I don’t want to see her short, but I laughed when I read your post because it seemed like me! I follow this forum, though, because I’m trying to find a MD club that isn’t Metro but that’s mid-level. The knowledgeable folks on here are too deep in it, though, and I haven’t actually gotten great info. Plz share if you know of good mid-level clubs in MD/DC!!
I think the obvious place to start for mid-level club in MD/DC is MOCO. They practice in mostly close-in Montgomery County and have grown quite a bit in the past few years. The club director/founder was a long time MVSA coach so it has some aspects that resemble MVSA. Specifically, lower prices and lots of parent involvement, including some coaches. Because they have grown pretty quickly, the consensus seems to be as they have had to find more coaches, there can be a lot of variability in the quality of coaching between teams. Some are great and others less so.
Another close-in MD/DC accessible option is Metro Central. The Central teams are generally similar in level to MVSA 2s teams. Other options might be DMV (which is the Maryland branch of Vienna Elite in Rockville) although I've heard mixed things about the quality of coaching and the pricing is pretty high. Academy was started by a former MOCO coach with good credentials but I think the club is still pretty small and don't have teams at every age group.
If you're willing to venture further out, there are more Maryland options, but what's practical really depends on where you live and how far you are willing to travel for practice.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:
My daughter is one of the top players in her age group and she will not be playing for Metro or Paramount despite being recruited by both. The blunt and honest reason why: Metro practice is too far, Paramount coaching style is not what we want for our DD, nor does she.
Can you say something more about "Paramount coaching style"? We are new to club volleyball and would appreciate anything you can share about the clubs around here.
If you are new to club volleyball, you should not worry too much about Paramount - your DD is unlikely to make one of their teams. There are always exceptions, but they are rare. Consider Paramount if your DD is very young or very tall and athletic.
How do you know my DD is not very young, very tall, or very athletic?
Parents who are new to volleyball (and probably other sports as well) tend to be clueless about their kids' skills and abilities. I've been there myself and made pretty poor decisions early on. I am still making poor decisions, but now I know for sure that my DD doesn't have any chance of playing for Metro or Paramount. And MVSA. And I could add a few more on the list, but I will stop here.
Haha. I am getting there myself (new poster). When my daughter started playing in middle school I thought, hey! here’s something she’s really pretty good at, better than her peers, even! And I had delusions about MVSA and Metro etc. But now that she’s a rising sophomore, and have watched IG reels of D3 players, I realize she’s good but not great and will probably continue playing in college on a club-level team. I mean, I don’t want to see her short, but I laughed when I read your post because it seemed like me! I follow this forum, though, because I’m trying to find a MD club that isn’t Metro but that’s mid-level. The knowledgeable folks on here are too deep in it, though, and I haven’t actually gotten great info. Plz share if you know of good mid-level clubs in MD/DC!!
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:
My daughter is one of the top players in her age group and she will not be playing for Metro or Paramount despite being recruited by both. The blunt and honest reason why: Metro practice is too far, Paramount coaching style is not what we want for our DD, nor does she.
Can you say something more about "Paramount coaching style"? We are new to club volleyball and would appreciate anything you can share about the clubs around here.
If you are new to club volleyball, you should not worry too much about Paramount - your DD is unlikely to make one of their teams. There are always exceptions, but they are rare. Consider Paramount if your DD is very young or very tall and athletic.
How do you know my DD is not very young, very tall, or very athletic?
Parents who are new to volleyball (and probably other sports as well) tend to be clueless about their kids' skills and abilities. I've been there myself and made pretty poor decisions early on. I am still making poor decisions, but now I know for sure that my DD doesn't have any chance of playing for Metro or Paramount. And MVSA. And I could add a few more on the list, but I will stop here.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:
My daughter is one of the top players in her age group and she will not be playing for Metro or Paramount despite being recruited by both. The blunt and honest reason why: Metro practice is too far, Paramount coaching style is not what we want for our DD, nor does she.
Can you say something more about "Paramount coaching style"? We are new to club volleyball and would appreciate anything you can share about the clubs around here.
If you are new to club volleyball, you should not worry too much about Paramount - your DD is unlikely to make one of their teams. There are always exceptions, but they are rare. Consider Paramount if your DD is very young or very tall and athletic.
How do you know my DD is not very young, very tall, or very athletic?
Parents who are new to volleyball (and probably other sports as well) tend to be clueless about their kids' skills and abilities. I've been there myself and made pretty poor decisions early on. I am still making poor decisions, but now I know for sure that my DD doesn't have any chance of playing for Metro or Paramount. And MVSA. And I could add a few more on the list, but I will stop here.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:
My daughter is one of the top players in her age group and she will not be playing for Metro or Paramount despite being recruited by both. The blunt and honest reason why: Metro practice is too far, Paramount coaching style is not what we want for our DD, nor does she.
Can you say something more about "Paramount coaching style"? We are new to club volleyball and would appreciate anything you can share about the clubs around here.
If you are new to club volleyball, you should not worry too much about Paramount - your DD is unlikely to make one of their teams. There are always exceptions, but they are rare. Consider Paramount if your DD is very young or very tall and athletic.
How do you know my DD is not very young, very tall, or very athletic?
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:I saw an Instagram post about Metro 15-17 National. What is this all about? Are they expanding to have 2 travel teams for 15-17?
Looks like Metro is adding 11-1, 15-2, 16-2, and 17-2 teams, and Paramount is planning to add 14-3 and 15-3 teams. Should be a lot of movement among the clubs?
I thought Metro North teams are basically Metro second teams, but maybe these "National" team will go to more qualifiers.
I think I know where we will see the MOCO-1 players during the next season. Probably some of the MVSA-1 players as well.
Anonymous wrote:Could someone start a new thread just for Paramount and Metro ppl to continuously argue back and forth and leave the rest free to discuss like anonymous adults? FFS there are thousands of other players and many clubs in the DMV.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:There are lots of players in the DMV playing in college. Last count the 2025 class had 70+ commits, from D1-D3. The actual number is probably higher, haven’t seen a recent count as final decisions happened this year. They do tend to come from a small number of clubs though, generally those that have teams competing at CHRVA bids/qualifiers and traveling. Last check there were 10-12 clubs with at least 3 commits on their 18s teams.
There are a number of high academic players as well, but they tend to be more spread out amongst clubs—-metro and paramount aren’t generally getting many players into those schools, but there are certainly exceptions.
High academic volleyball recruiting correlates more with the players HS than their club, at least in the DMV. You often see players from the DMV private schools like GDS, Bullis, Sidwell, etc. going to those schools. There’s also a reasonable number from MCPS schools in MD.
The real reason CA outnumbers DMV is because there is more population in CA, and proportionally more of that population play volleyball. They’ve been playing it longer there, and it’s a bigger sport with more established recruiting pathways.
Playing a sport in college is hard, and it isn’t for everyone. There’s nothing wrong with playing club volleyball-at any level-and then moving on to other things in college. Certain clubs absolutely focus (arguably over focus) on the college recruiting as a way to differentiate, but there are lots of clubs that’s don’t—even if they are successfully getting players onto college teams.
Curious if you know of the 2025 commits how that shakes out by club? Which clubs have the highest placement counts? Maybe besides the obvious 2.
I don't have a perfectly updated list for 2025, but here's what I have. Feel free to add to the list/update the numbers if you have better info. Stars indicate at least 1 D1 commit:
Metro - 16*
Columbia - 13*
VAE - 11*
Paramount - 10*
MD JRS - 9*
Blue Ridge - 7*
LEVBC - 6*
VA JRS - 5*
MOCO - 3*
MVSA - 3*
MOJO - 2
VAVA - 1
Metro North - 1
SRVC - 1
88 players total
I appreciate the hard work that went into this, but when I look at the Columbia 18s roster from Cap Hill on SportWrench, they only have 12 players on the roster and I know at least one who is not playing in college.and another who was a 2026 playing up to 18s. Were there 2025s who were young and played on 17s? What was the source for the 13 figure?
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:There are lots of players in the DMV playing in college. Last count the 2025 class had 70+ commits, from D1-D3. The actual number is probably higher, haven’t seen a recent count as final decisions happened this year. They do tend to come from a small number of clubs though, generally those that have teams competing at CHRVA bids/qualifiers and traveling. Last check there were 10-12 clubs with at least 3 commits on their 18s teams.
There are a number of high academic players as well, but they tend to be more spread out amongst clubs—-metro and paramount aren’t generally getting many players into those schools, but there are certainly exceptions.
High academic volleyball recruiting correlates more with the players HS than their club, at least in the DMV. You often see players from the DMV private schools like GDS, Bullis, Sidwell, etc. going to those schools. There’s also a reasonable number from MCPS schools in MD.
The real reason CA outnumbers DMV is because there is more population in CA, and proportionally more of that population play volleyball. They’ve been playing it longer there, and it’s a bigger sport with more established recruiting pathways.
Playing a sport in college is hard, and it isn’t for everyone. There’s nothing wrong with playing club volleyball-at any level-and then moving on to other things in college. Certain clubs absolutely focus (arguably over focus) on the college recruiting as a way to differentiate, but there are lots of clubs that’s don’t—even if they are successfully getting players onto college teams.
Curious if you know of the 2025 commits how that shakes out by club? Which clubs have the highest placement counts? Maybe besides the obvious 2.
I don't have a perfectly updated list for 2025, but here's what I have. Feel free to add to the list/update the numbers if you have better info. Stars indicate at least 1 D1 commit:
Metro - 16*
Columbia - 13*
VAE - 11*
Paramount - 10*
MD JRS - 9*
Blue Ridge - 7*
LEVBC - 6*
VA JRS - 5*
MOCO - 3*
MVSA - 3*
MOJO - 2
VAVA - 1
Metro North - 1
SRVC - 1
88 players total
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:There are lots of players in the DMV playing in college. Last count the 2025 class had 70+ commits, from D1-D3. The actual number is probably higher, haven’t seen a recent count as final decisions happened this year. They do tend to come from a small number of clubs though, generally those that have teams competing at CHRVA bids/qualifiers and traveling. Last check there were 10-12 clubs with at least 3 commits on their 18s teams.
There are a number of high academic players as well, but they tend to be more spread out amongst clubs—-metro and paramount aren’t generally getting many players into those schools, but there are certainly exceptions.
High academic volleyball recruiting correlates more with the players HS than their club, at least in the DMV. You often see players from the DMV private schools like GDS, Bullis, Sidwell, etc. going to those schools. There’s also a reasonable number from MCPS schools in MD.
The real reason CA outnumbers DMV is because there is more population in CA, and proportionally more of that population play volleyball. They’ve been playing it longer there, and it’s a bigger sport with more established recruiting pathways.
Playing a sport in college is hard, and it isn’t for everyone. There’s nothing wrong with playing club volleyball-at any level-and then moving on to other things in college. Certain clubs absolutely focus (arguably over focus) on the college recruiting as a way to differentiate, but there are lots of clubs that’s don’t—even if they are successfully getting players onto college teams.
Curious if you know of the 2025 commits how that shakes out by club? Which clubs have the highest placement counts? Maybe besides the obvious 2.
I don't have a perfectly updated list for 2025, but here's what I have. Feel free to add to the list/update the numbers if you have better info. Stars indicate at least 1 D1 commit:
Metro - 16*
Columbia - 13*
VAE - 11*
Paramount - 10*
MD JRS - 9*
Blue Ridge - 7*
LEVBC - 6*
VA JRS - 5*
MOCO - 3*
MVSA - 3*
MOJO - 2
VAVA - 1
Metro North - 1
SRVC - 1
88 players total
Anonymous wrote:There are lots of players in the DMV playing in college. Last count the 2025 class had 70+ commits, from D1-D3. The actual number is probably higher, haven’t seen a recent count as final decisions happened this year. They do tend to come from a small number of clubs though, generally those that have teams competing at CHRVA bids/qualifiers and traveling. Last check there were 10-12 clubs with at least 3 commits on their 18s teams.
There are a number of high academic players as well, but they tend to be more spread out amongst clubs—-metro and paramount aren’t generally getting many players into those schools, but there are certainly exceptions.
High academic volleyball recruiting correlates more with the players HS than their club, at least in the DMV. You often see players from the DMV private schools like GDS, Bullis, Sidwell, etc. going to those schools. There’s also a reasonable number from MCPS schools in MD.
The real reason CA outnumbers DMV is because there is more population in CA, and proportionally more of that population play volleyball. They’ve been playing it longer there, and it’s a bigger sport with more established recruiting pathways.
Playing a sport in college is hard, and it isn’t for everyone. There’s nothing wrong with playing club volleyball-at any level-and then moving on to other things in college. Certain clubs absolutely focus (arguably over focus) on the college recruiting as a way to differentiate, but there are lots of clubs that’s don’t—even if they are successfully getting players onto college teams.
Curious if you know of the 2025 commits how that shakes out by club? Which clubs have the highest placement counts? Maybe besides the obvious 2.