Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:The kids have one ball, some crappy nets, and no rules. There are usually 40 boys running after one ball. The guy on where who thinks kids are being developed by playing recess soccer is a turkey.
I think the turkey may have said this on a thread before. Like the quote below below where the turkey says Lamine Yamal trained with professional coaches for an insane amount of a time, but "the most important piece of the puzzle . . . [was recess]." still cracks me up.
"By the way, Lamine’s training from U10 until he hit the first team comprised of 5-6 days/weekly.
And no, it wasn’t just 90 mins each time. Of those 5-6 days 3 or 4 of them were double sessions. 2 hrs in the day and another 2 hrs after school.
After his club training guess what… probably the most important piece of the puzzle… take a deep breath for this one ok? he played in the streets, the town plaza, and in school yard during recess with his buddies and ZERO adult joysticking."
Lots of fiction in this Lamine Yamal story
Lamine Yamal didn't play recess style (he did online school).... he was highly programed, he had more programed training than the above poster mentioned.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:The kids have one ball, some crappy nets, and no rules. There are usually 40 boys running after one ball. The guy on where who thinks kids are being developed by playing recess soccer is a turkey.
I think the turkey may have said this on a thread before. Like the quote below below where the turkey says Lamine Yamal trained with professional coaches for an insane amount of a time, but "the most important piece of the puzzle . . . [was recess]." still cracks me up.
"By the way, Lamine’s training from U10 until he hit the first team comprised of 5-6 days/weekly.
And no, it wasn’t just 90 mins each time. Of those 5-6 days 3 or 4 of them were double sessions. 2 hrs in the day and another 2 hrs after school.
After his club training guess what… probably the most important piece of the puzzle… take a deep breath for this one ok? he played in the streets, the town plaza, and in school yard during recess with his buddies and ZERO adult joysticking."
Lots of fiction in this Lamine Yamal story
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:My rising 8th grader is at a private but it’s small and they don’t really have a field. She plays on the blacktop. She did in 7th anyway. Hoping it’s not weird in 8th and they still do.
Why do you have to say “rising”
You are probably 46 years old. What made you change ? You lean left?
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:The kids have one ball, some crappy nets, and no rules. There are usually 40 boys running after one ball. The guy on where who thinks kids are being developed by playing recess soccer is a turkey.
I think the turkey may have said this on a thread before. Like the quote below below where the turkey says Lamine Yamal trained with professional coaches for an insane amount of a time, but "the most important piece of the puzzle . . . [was recess]." still cracks me up.
"By the way, Lamine’s training from U10 until he hit the first team comprised of 5-6 days/weekly.
And no, it wasn’t just 90 mins each time. Of those 5-6 days 3 or 4 of them were double sessions. 2 hrs in the day and another 2 hrs after school.
After his club training guess what… probably the most important piece of the puzzle… take a deep breath for this one ok? he played in the streets, the town plaza, and in school yard during recess with his buddies and ZERO adult joysticking."
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:The kids have one ball, some crappy nets, and no rules. There are usually 40 boys running after one ball. The guy on where who thinks kids are being developed by playing recess soccer is a turkey.
I think the turkey may have said this on a thread before. Like the quote below below where the turkey says Lamine Yamal trained with professional coaches for an insane amount of a time, but "the most important piece of the puzzle . . . [was recess]." still cracks me up.
"By the way, Lamine’s training from U10 until he hit the first team comprised of 5-6 days/weekly.
And no, it wasn’t just 90 mins each time. Of those 5-6 days 3 or 4 of them were double sessions. 2 hrs in the day and another 2 hrs after school.
After his club training guess what… probably the most important piece of the puzzle… take a deep breath for this one ok? he played in the streets, the town plaza, and in school yard during recess with his buddies and ZERO adult joysticking."
Anonymous wrote:The kids have one ball, some crappy nets, and no rules. There are usually 40 boys running after one ball. The guy on where who thinks kids are being developed by playing recess soccer is a turkey.
Anonymous wrote:The kids have one ball, some crappy nets, and no rules. There are usually 40 boys running after one ball. The guy on where who thinks kids are being developed by playing recess soccer is a turkey.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:My rising 8th grader is at a private but it’s small and they don’t really have a field. She plays on the blacktop. She did in 7th anyway. Hoping it’s not weird in 8th and they still do.
Why do you have to say “rising”
You are probably 46 years old. What made you change ? You lean left?
Snowflake says what? Are you triggered by the word "rising"? You must lean right.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:My rising 8th grader is at a private but it’s small and they don’t really have a field. She plays on the blacktop. She did in 7th anyway. Hoping it’s not weird in 8th and they still do.
Why do you have to say “rising”
You are probably 46 years old. What made you change ? You lean left?
Anonymous wrote:My kid plays during recess at Ashburton. Apparently it’s ruthless and girls don’t even dare to play anymore. I was off one day and snuck over during lunch time to see for myself. It was crazy aggressive. Anyhow I asked him to just play goalie during recess cause he started acting tired during practices with his travel team. He didn’t listen 😂