Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Our DD already received her offer and we accepted with deposit only. She's 90% staying with this club, but she's still trying out for three other clubs in the area.
1) It's good practice.
2) Always nice to see where you stand in other clubs.
3. Might find yourself more comfortable with another team/coach.
In the end, it doesn't hurt. However, I wouldn't flaunt that information around. I'd keep it quiet.
If you have already committed by making a deposit, how can you accept a better offer?
The deposit holds your spot. The next payment isn't due until summer. If you choose to leave the club you just lose the deposit. Well worth it if you find a better team.
Anonymous wrote:
You don’t owe your coach or club anything. You are signing 1 year renewable agreements for your kids (& family). As another poster wrote, if another skilled player came along, they wouldn’t hesitate to drop your kid’s time or roster slot.
Find the best team, coach, and environment for your player. That may mean tryouts at several clubs.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Our DD already received her offer and we accepted with deposit only. She's 90% staying with this club, but she's still trying out for three other clubs in the area.
1) It's good practice.
2) Always nice to see where you stand in other clubs.
3. Might find yourself more comfortable with another team/coach.
In the end, it doesn't hurt. However, I wouldn't flaunt that information around. I'd keep it quiet.
If you have already committed by making a deposit, how can you accept a better offer?
Anonymous wrote:If you try out for another club, you should absolutely expect that it will get back to your current coach. Coaches talk, and parents rat each other out all the time. At the lower levels and age groups, trying out for multiple clubs is very common and coaches usually don’t care. It’s also generally accepted for a player to try to move from the “A” team of a local club to an ECNL/MLS Next/GA team. In this scenario, it’s usually best to be honest with the current coach who would hopefully be happy for your kid. Once you’re at the ECNL/MLS Next/GA level, trying out for another club is a big deal. A lot of teams pretty much guarantee returning players a spot, but all bets are off once you go to another tryout.
Anonymous wrote:Yes.
We were trying to escape an abusive coach and kid tried out elsewhere. The prospective coach told the old coach, and we all got screamed at.
Anonymous wrote:Yes.
We were trying to escape an abusive coach and kid tried out elsewhere. The prospective coach told the old coach, and we all got screamed at.
Anonymous wrote:Yes.
We were trying to escape an abusive coach and kid tried out elsewhere. The prospective coach told the old coach, and we all got screamed at.
Anonymous wrote:Yes.
We were trying to escape an abusive coach and kid tried out elsewhere. The prospective coach told the old coach, and we all got screamed at.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:I learned with my first kid that several people do this, some people narc on other families (not sure why they use that info as currency but I believe they think if they narc it will some how give an advantage to their family, not sure), and there is zero loyalty in club sports. Zero. And I am not talking exclusively about soccer.
Typical rat behavior. Backfires a lot. People with talented kids don’t rat. They don’t need to try to squash others to make top teams.
Snitches get stitches. Lol
Anonymous wrote:
Be honest with the coach about why you’re looking around. Higher level, more playing time, wary of the new coach the team will have next year, closer to home, whatever your reasons are they are valid to you.