Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:As someone who coaches in the area, no ECNL club has a style of play and any club that tells you they do is lying to you.
You must not watch much ECNL. Union has a very complicated and specialized style of play. Much different than the area clubs.
Anonymous wrote:As someone who coaches in the area, no ECNL club has a style of play and any club that tells you they do is lying to you.
This situation is not specific to Arlington.Anonymous wrote:this
In the younger age groups, particularly in the U13/U14 category, Arlington's success heavily hinges on the presence of skilled and swift athletes, enabling them to score prolifically. However, as the age groups progress into U15/U16, Arlington encounters challenges due to a shortage of proficient midfield players. This deficiency impedes their offensive efforts, especially when opposing defenders are capable of neutralizing Arlington's wingers.
By the time Arlington players reaches the U16/U17 groups, defenders have honed their strategies and soccer IQ, resulting in a more balanced defensive performance from Arlington. Arlington's defensive vulnerabilities become less pronounced as defenders adapt and improve their defensive tactics.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:In general, Arlington builds out of the back at the younger ages and just doesn't focus on finishing they way they need to. I'm not sure what PP means about "individualistic style" of soccer, because most of the Arlington teams work quite a bit on passing -- they just can score.
This is Alexandria too. It was Barca when my kids were there too.
It's a big frustration for everyone that nobody can finish these days.
It's funny---when I was a kid everyone wanted to be a goal-scoring striker. You had some amazing strikers with creativity and finishing ability. It is next to impossible to find a good "9" these days.
I have a kid U18/19 MLSNext and if the one '9' is injured, nobody else can finish--but at least they have one 9. On my other kid's ECNL team, the forwards could not finish on a wide open goal.
Beautiful building and zero finishing. Gone are beautiful long shots (which you still see in FIFA games).
My older son was a goal scoring machine--total nose for the goal...which was pretty much beat out of him. Then it became so he would never take a gddamn shot. He'd always pass it---even when the shot was the correct thing for that moment/space, etc.
Happens when a coach wants to play the easy pass. Players have in mind the coach voice “easy pass easy pass” and miss shooting on time.
Anonymous wrote:Where do Arlington’s female ECNL teams train?
Anonymous wrote:What team are you coming from?
Anonymous wrote:OP
So it sounds like Arlington doesn’t play some kind of Neanderthal soccer, and the coaching/training is reasonable, but that there’s no real club style. That’s completely fine. Selfishly, Arlington is probably the closest club for where we are looking for housing, so I was hoping for a decent answer (yes, we understand DD has to try out, and there’s no certainty for any of the ECNL/GA clubs in the area).
IF there are other insights about Arlington play style that would be helpful for a girl trying out, I am all ears.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:c'mon DCUM you can be better. The OP asked a very specific question about a specific club and their style of play. One person answered the question (kudos). One person wants to give commuting advice. One person wants to know the OPs personal history (probably so they can judge their daughter). And one person inaccurately tears down the entire region's soccer landscape. Good lord.
And one person wasted a post complaining about the first 6 posts.