Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Interesting report by the Aspen Institute on participation in youth sports.
https://assets.aspeninstitute.org/content/uploads/2018/10/StateofPlay2018_v4WEB_2-FINAL.pdf?_ga=2.107651328.32617992.1553087167-828947673.1553087167
A couple of interesting observations. The age change (i.e. kids lost friends on their teams) and the pay-to-play model is hurting youth soccer. There are also more choices now with Lacrosse, Ice Hockey, Volleyball, etc. picking up more participants on a percentage basis, albeit all still low compared to soccer. Video games / technology as an alternative pastime is also having some effect. I also found the discussion on youth coaches with training by sport interesting. Even though there is pay-to-play, not sure people are getting what they're paying for.
Here are some direct sections from the report:
"Soccer paid a heavy price for underestimating kids’ desire to play with friends. In an effort to develop better prospects for its national teams, the U.S. Soccer Federation two years ago began mandating that affiliated organizations down to the community level stop forming teams based on birthdates that fell within the school year. Instead, teams at every age level were reorganized based on calendar year birthdates, in which kids are less likely to play with same-grade peers. That broke up teams who have been playing together for years. Only 14.8 percent of children ages 6 to 12 played soccer in 2017, down from 17 percent in 2015.2 For children ages 6 to 17, soccer had the highest churn rate in 2017 among sports evaluated by the Sports & Fitness Industry Association (SFIA) — meaning 19.2 percent of youth returned to soccer or started playing, but 25.2 percent of youth who used to play soccer left the game."
"New study showed how few Virginia kids are served by the pay-to-play soccer model. George Mason University researcher Tyler Richardett created a project called 'Hidden Costs: Exploring Access to Youth Soccer in Virginia.' Using data from competitive youth soccer league schedules, the U.S. Census Bureau, and the clubs themselves, the project showed that children living in the southwest and southside regions of Virginia are “completely excluded” from the competitive pipeline and would require a 'massive' time commitment in order to play. Economic security was an effective predictor of opportunities for inclusion. Opportunities disappeared entirely once an area of Virginia’s nonwhite population exceeded 90 percent. The study also showed that the amount of required travel significantly increased as the competition level rose."
"Most youth coaches are still winging it. The percentage of adults trained in key competencies to engage kids remains stubbornly low, even as the value of having a trained coach has generally grown in the broader culture. The latest SFIA survey shows that less than four in 10 youth coaches say they are trained in any of the following areas: sport skills and tactics, effective motivational technique, or safety needs (CPR/basic first aid and concussion management). Many barriers exist to training the nation’s 6.5 million youth coaches, most of whom are volunteers."
This was a killer. The kids from our rec team moving into travel in 2nd/3rd grade were split up into different years---U9 and U10. It massively sucked. My oldest was a December 2005 and the year it took effect he bumped from U10 into U12. All but 2 kids on his travel team that had played U9&U10 together were also 2005s, the rest were 2006s. This was a very tight knit group. The year above was a very 'exclusionary, snotty' bunch of kids so the 2005s having to move up were miserable. We ended up switching Clubs.
But going forward with kids who never knew the difference it won't make a difference.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Interesting report by the Aspen Institute on participation in youth sports.
https://assets.aspeninstitute.org/content/uploads/2018/10/StateofPlay2018_v4WEB_2-FINAL.pdf?_ga=2.107651328.32617992.1553087167-828947673.1553087167
A couple of interesting observations. The age change (i.e. kids lost friends on their teams) and the pay-to-play model is hurting youth soccer. There are also more choices now with Lacrosse, Ice Hockey, Volleyball, etc. picking up more participants on a percentage basis, albeit all still low compared to soccer. Video games / technology as an alternative pastime is also having some effect. I also found the discussion on youth coaches with training by sport interesting. Even though there is pay-to-play, not sure people are getting what they're paying for.
Here are some direct sections from the report:
"Soccer paid a heavy price for underestimating kids’ desire to play with friends. In an effort to develop better prospects for its national teams, the U.S. Soccer Federation two years ago began mandating that affiliated organizations down to the community level stop forming teams based on birthdates that fell within the school year. Instead, teams at every age level were reorganized based on calendar year birthdates, in which kids are less likely to play with same-grade peers. That broke up teams who have been playing together for years. Only 14.8 percent of children ages 6 to 12 played soccer in 2017, down from 17 percent in 2015.2 For children ages 6 to 17, soccer had the highest churn rate in 2017 among sports evaluated by the Sports & Fitness Industry Association (SFIA) — meaning 19.2 percent of youth returned to soccer or started playing, but 25.2 percent of youth who used to play soccer left the game."
"New study showed how few Virginia kids are served by the pay-to-play soccer model. George Mason University researcher Tyler Richardett created a project called 'Hidden Costs: Exploring Access to Youth Soccer in Virginia.' Using data from competitive youth soccer league schedules, the U.S. Census Bureau, and the clubs themselves, the project showed that children living in the southwest and southside regions of Virginia are “completely excluded” from the competitive pipeline and would require a 'massive' time commitment in order to play. Economic security was an effective predictor of opportunities for inclusion. Opportunities disappeared entirely once an area of Virginia’s nonwhite population exceeded 90 percent. The study also showed that the amount of required travel significantly increased as the competition level rose."
"Most youth coaches are still winging it. The percentage of adults trained in key competencies to engage kids remains stubbornly low, even as the value of having a trained coach has generally grown in the broader culture. The latest SFIA survey shows that less than four in 10 youth coaches say they are trained in any of the following areas: sport skills and tactics, effective motivational technique, or safety needs (CPR/basic first aid and concussion management). Many barriers exist to training the nation’s 6.5 million youth coaches, most of whom are volunteers."
This was a killer. The kids from our rec team moving into travel in 2nd/3rd grade were split up into different years---U9 and U10. It massively sucked. My oldest was a December 2005 and the year it took effect he bumped from U10 into U12. All but 2 kids on his travel team that had played U9&U10 together were also 2005s, the rest were 2006s. This was a very tight knit group. The year above was a very 'exclusionary, snotty' bunch of kids so the 2005s having to move up were miserable. We ended up switching Clubs.
But going forward with kids who never knew the difference it won't make a difference.
They will split out from their rec friends when they all get to travel and it forces kids into travel too young. Now you have 1st graders trying out to start their U9 year in 2nd grade. They know in this area they have to get in the pipeline at big Clubs even when the parents feel it's too early for their kid. It is a clusterf*ck and you have kids not ready for 90min 3X a week practices nearly year-round and missing friend's bday parties in 2nd grade because of this 'commitment'. Burnout is real.
Anonymous wrote:There are many options in youth soccer and enough to tailor a program to the needs of your DC. Ignore the herd mentality and do your homework. Focus on what is important and when it is important. There is no need to jump into travel at the most competitive club at U8. Find a good coach who is focused on the player. Wins should not drive your decision. At u14, begin focusing on the coaches/clubs ability to prepare players for college/elite level soccer. Don't get caught up in the brand but recognize that the brand exists because the clubs are doing something right.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Interesting report by the Aspen Institute on participation in youth sports.
https://assets.aspeninstitute.org/content/uploads/2018/10/StateofPlay2018_v4WEB_2-FINAL.pdf?_ga=2.107651328.32617992.1553087167-828947673.1553087167
A couple of interesting observations. The age change (i.e. kids lost friends on their teams) and the pay-to-play model is hurting youth soccer. There are also more choices now with Lacrosse, Ice Hockey, Volleyball, etc. picking up more participants on a percentage basis, albeit all still low compared to soccer. Video games / technology as an alternative pastime is also having some effect. I also found the discussion on youth coaches with training by sport interesting. Even though there is pay-to-play, not sure people are getting what they're paying for.
Here are some direct sections from the report:
"Soccer paid a heavy price for underestimating kids’ desire to play with friends. In an effort to develop better prospects for its national teams, the U.S. Soccer Federation two years ago began mandating that affiliated organizations down to the community level stop forming teams based on birthdates that fell within the school year. Instead, teams at every age level were reorganized based on calendar year birthdates, in which kids are less likely to play with same-grade peers. That broke up teams who have been playing together for years. Only 14.8 percent of children ages 6 to 12 played soccer in 2017, down from 17 percent in 2015.2 For children ages 6 to 17, soccer had the highest churn rate in 2017 among sports evaluated by the Sports & Fitness Industry Association (SFIA) — meaning 19.2 percent of youth returned to soccer or started playing, but 25.2 percent of youth who used to play soccer left the game."
"New study showed how few Virginia kids are served by the pay-to-play soccer model. George Mason University researcher Tyler Richardett created a project called 'Hidden Costs: Exploring Access to Youth Soccer in Virginia.' Using data from competitive youth soccer league schedules, the U.S. Census Bureau, and the clubs themselves, the project showed that children living in the southwest and southside regions of Virginia are “completely excluded” from the competitive pipeline and would require a 'massive' time commitment in order to play. Economic security was an effective predictor of opportunities for inclusion. Opportunities disappeared entirely once an area of Virginia’s nonwhite population exceeded 90 percent. The study also showed that the amount of required travel significantly increased as the competition level rose."
"Most youth coaches are still winging it. The percentage of adults trained in key competencies to engage kids remains stubbornly low, even as the value of having a trained coach has generally grown in the broader culture. The latest SFIA survey shows that less than four in 10 youth coaches say they are trained in any of the following areas: sport skills and tactics, effective motivational technique, or safety needs (CPR/basic first aid and concussion management). Many barriers exist to training the nation’s 6.5 million youth coaches, most of whom are volunteers."
This was a killer. The kids from our rec team moving into travel in 2nd/3rd grade were split up into different years---U9 and U10. It massively sucked. My oldest was a December 2005 and the year it took effect he bumped from U10 into U12. All but 2 kids on his travel team that had played U9&U10 together were also 2005s, the rest were 2006s. This was a very tight knit group. The year above was a very 'exclusionary, snotty' bunch of kids so the 2005s having to move up were miserable. We ended up switching Clubs.
But going forward with kids who never knew the difference it won't make a difference.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Interesting report by the Aspen Institute on participation in youth sports.
https://assets.aspeninstitute.org/content/uploads/2018/10/StateofPlay2018_v4WEB_2-FINAL.pdf?_ga=2.107651328.32617992.1553087167-828947673.1553087167
A couple of interesting observations. The age change (i.e. kids lost friends on their teams) and the pay-to-play model is hurting youth soccer. There are also more choices now with Lacrosse, Ice Hockey, Volleyball, etc. picking up more participants on a percentage basis, albeit all still low compared to soccer. Video games / technology as an alternative pastime is also having some effect. I also found the discussion on youth coaches with training by sport interesting. Even though there is pay-to-play, not sure people are getting what they're paying for.
Here are some direct sections from the report:
"Soccer paid a heavy price for underestimating kids’ desire to play with friends. In an effort to develop better prospects for its national teams, the U.S. Soccer Federation two years ago began mandating that affiliated organizations down to the community level stop forming teams based on birthdates that fell within the school year. Instead, teams at every age level were reorganized based on calendar year birthdates, in which kids are less likely to play with same-grade peers. That broke up teams who have been playing together for years. Only 14.8 percent of children ages 6 to 12 played soccer in 2017, down from 17 percent in 2015.2 For children ages 6 to 17, soccer had the highest churn rate in 2017 among sports evaluated by the Sports & Fitness Industry Association (SFIA) — meaning 19.2 percent of youth returned to soccer or started playing, but 25.2 percent of youth who used to play soccer left the game."
"New study showed how few Virginia kids are served by the pay-to-play soccer model. George Mason University researcher Tyler Richardett created a project called 'Hidden Costs: Exploring Access to Youth Soccer in Virginia.' Using data from competitive youth soccer league schedules, the U.S. Census Bureau, and the clubs themselves, the project showed that children living in the southwest and southside regions of Virginia are “completely excluded” from the competitive pipeline and would require a 'massive' time commitment in order to play. Economic security was an effective predictor of opportunities for inclusion. Opportunities disappeared entirely once an area of Virginia’s nonwhite population exceeded 90 percent. The study also showed that the amount of required travel significantly increased as the competition level rose."
"Most youth coaches are still winging it. The percentage of adults trained in key competencies to engage kids remains stubbornly low, even as the value of having a trained coach has generally grown in the broader culture. The latest SFIA survey shows that less than four in 10 youth coaches say they are trained in any of the following areas: sport skills and tactics, effective motivational technique, or safety needs (CPR/basic first aid and concussion management). Many barriers exist to training the nation’s 6.5 million youth coaches, most of whom are volunteers."
This was a killer. The kids from our rec team moving into travel in 2nd/3rd grade were split up into different years---U9 and U10. It massively sucked. My oldest was a December 2005 and the year it took effect he bumped from U10 into U12. All but 2 kids on his travel team that had played U9&U10 together were also 2005s, the rest were 2006s. This was a very tight knit group. The year above was a very 'exclusionary, snotty' bunch of kids so the 2005s having to move up were miserable. We ended up switching Clubs.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:My son is aging out of youth travel soccer this year, and as I look around, I realize the same game keeps getting played on parents, over and over again. I was making a list the other day with my son on how many different leagues he'd played in, all of which we were told was where the 'best' players and coaches were.
DA
EDP
Super Y
CCL
ERL
National League
and now Boys ECNL.
Every single one of those leagues was sold to us (parents and player) as being the best, the future, the place a club and player needed to be. It's literally close to one new 'have to be in it' league per year over the last 10 years. Each one had clubs clamoring to be a founding club in the DMV, and each one was either abandoned or became a backwater within a couple years of its founding. At every iteration, the costs got a little higher, the travel commitment went up, and the need to be in Disney or Dallas or wherever for a tournament went from yearly to almost quarterly.
Just look at the DA - clubs were killing each other to get the designation, some clubs lost their Academy status locally, then the whole pre-Academy thing for the U12's, and now - poof, everyone over to Boys ECNL. I am so glad to be leaving this chaotic environment. It has become clear to me over time that all of this re-organizing and coming and going of leagues really has nothing to do with developing kids and everything to do with more money and less accountability for coaches and clubs.
The amazing thing to me as I look at my son's schedule for the spring it has the same teams that were in NCSL Division 1 when he was U10!
I thought this was going to be a good post, but you really lost me there.
Everyone over to the boys ECNL? No offense but wtf are you talking about?
He is probably talking about Loudoun boys' program that went from NCSL to CCL to DA to ECNL. McLean had a roughly similar path.
BRYC, Mclean, Maryland, Celtic are all now in Boys ECNL. Loudoun next year, probably more that will be announced this spring. A lot of these clubs are also starting to pull away (more than they have already) from USYS leagues - State Cup, etc. MLS talking about leaving the DA. ECNL requires that your 'best team' be playing in ECNL - just like DA and CCL did before.
I suspect Arlington will move soon too, says a little bird.
Anonymous wrote:Interesting report by the Aspen Institute on participation in youth sports.
https://assets.aspeninstitute.org/content/uploads/2018/10/StateofPlay2018_v4WEB_2-FINAL.pdf?_ga=2.107651328.32617992.1553087167-828947673.1553087167
A couple of interesting observations. The age change (i.e. kids lost friends on their teams) and the pay-to-play model is hurting youth soccer. There are also more choices now with Lacrosse, Ice Hockey, Volleyball, etc. picking up more participants on a percentage basis, albeit all still low compared to soccer. Video games / technology as an alternative pastime is also having some effect. I also found the discussion on youth coaches with training by sport interesting. Even though there is pay-to-play, not sure people are getting what they're paying for.
Here are some direct sections from the report:
"Soccer paid a heavy price for underestimating kids’ desire to play with friends. In an effort to develop better prospects for its national teams, the U.S. Soccer Federation two years ago began mandating that affiliated organizations down to the community level stop forming teams based on birthdates that fell within the school year. Instead, teams at every age level were reorganized based on calendar year birthdates, in which kids are less likely to play with same-grade peers. That broke up teams who have been playing together for years. Only 14.8 percent of children ages 6 to 12 played soccer in 2017, down from 17 percent in 2015.2 For children ages 6 to 17, soccer had the highest churn rate in 2017 among sports evaluated by the Sports & Fitness Industry Association (SFIA) — meaning 19.2 percent of youth returned to soccer or started playing, but 25.2 percent of youth who used to play soccer left the game."
"New study showed how few Virginia kids are served by the pay-to-play soccer model. George Mason University researcher Tyler Richardett created a project called 'Hidden Costs: Exploring Access to Youth Soccer in Virginia.' Using data from competitive youth soccer league schedules, the U.S. Census Bureau, and the clubs themselves, the project showed that children living in the southwest and southside regions of Virginia are “completely excluded” from the competitive pipeline and would require a 'massive' time commitment in order to play. Economic security was an effective predictor of opportunities for inclusion. Opportunities disappeared entirely once an area of Virginia’s nonwhite population exceeded 90 percent. The study also showed that the amount of required travel significantly increased as the competition level rose."
"Most youth coaches are still winging it. The percentage of adults trained in key competencies to engage kids remains stubbornly low, even as the value of having a trained coach has generally grown in the broader culture. The latest SFIA survey shows that less than four in 10 youth coaches say they are trained in any of the following areas: sport skills and tactics, effective motivational technique, or safety needs (CPR/basic first aid and concussion management). Many barriers exist to training the nation’s 6.5 million youth coaches, most of whom are volunteers."
Anonymous wrote:Interesting report by the Aspen Institute on participation in youth sports.
https://assets.aspeninstitute.org/content/uploads/2018/10/StateofPlay2018_v4WEB_2-FINAL.pdf?_ga=2.107651328.32617992.1553087167-828947673.1553087167
A couple of interesting observations. The age change (i.e. kids lost friends on their teams) and the pay-to-play model is hurting youth soccer. There are also more choices now with Lacrosse, Ice Hockey, Volleyball, etc. picking up more participants on a percentage basis, albeit all still low compared to soccer. Video games / technology as an alternative pastime is also having some effect. I also found the discussion on youth coaches with training by sport interesting. Even though there is pay-to-play, not sure people are getting what they're paying for.
Here are some direct sections from the report:
"Soccer paid a heavy price for underestimating kids’ desire to play with friends. In an effort to develop better prospects for its national teams, the U.S. Soccer Federation two years ago began mandating that affiliated organizations down to the community level stop forming teams based on birthdates that fell within the school year. Instead, teams at every age level were reorganized based on calendar year birthdates, in which kids are less likely to play with same-grade peers. That broke up teams who have been playing together for years. Only 14.8 percent of children ages 6 to 12 played soccer in 2017, down from 17 percent in 2015.2 For children ages 6 to 17, soccer had the highest churn rate in 2017 among sports evaluated by the Sports & Fitness Industry Association (SFIA) — meaning 19.2 percent of youth returned to soccer or started playing, but 25.2 percent of youth who used to play soccer left the game."
"New study showed how few Virginia kids are served by the pay-to-play soccer model. George Mason University researcher Tyler Richardett created a project called 'Hidden Costs: Exploring Access to Youth Soccer in Virginia.' Using data from competitive youth soccer league schedules, the U.S. Census Bureau, and the clubs themselves, the project showed that children living in the southwest and southside regions of Virginia are “completely excluded” from the competitive pipeline and would require a 'massive' time commitment in order to play. Economic security was an effective predictor of opportunities for inclusion. Opportunities disappeared entirely once an area of Virginia’s nonwhite population exceeded 90 percent. The study also showed that the amount of required travel significantly increased as the competition level rose."
"Most youth coaches are still winging it. The percentage of adults trained in key competencies to engage kids remains stubbornly low, even as the value of having a trained coach has generally grown in the broader culture. The latest SFIA survey shows that less than four in 10 youth coaches say they are trained in any of the following areas: sport skills and tactics, effective motivational technique, or safety needs (CPR/basic first aid and concussion management). Many barriers exist to training the nation’s 6.5 million youth coaches, most of whom are volunteers."
A couple of interesting observations. The age change (i.e. kids lost friends on their teams) and the pay-to-play model is hurting youth soccer. There are also more choices now with Lacrosse, Ice Hockey, Volleyball, etc. picking up more participants on a percentage basis, albeit all still low compared to soccer. Video games / technology as an alternative pastime is also having some effect. I also found the discussion on youth coaches with training by sport interesting. Even though there is pay-to-play, not sure people are getting what they're paying for.
Anonymous wrote:I don't understand how this is a great post. This is an over-simplified mediocre post at best that restates the obvious. OPs post is just the intro to 08:25s post that is really the great post of this thread (not me btw)
Nothing in our area has decreased in cost in the last decade, why would expect an organized leisure activity to go down that can basically continue to increase rates every year to supposedly differentiate with coaches, programs and activities.
Are we expecting a significant amount of new clubs/teams to appear in the DMV so that you aren't running into old competitors 10 years later? If so, why? the authorities responsible for organizing structure and constraint don't foster that, to include county support for fields and the expense of private complexes.
There is so much to address, I can't do it justice, but given that youth soccer participation in the US is decreasing, I would expect that we'll continue to see the rat race that is competitive soccer and all the good and bad that goes along with it.
Anonymous wrote:Are there any solutions to this? Almost every parent I know hates what has happened to youth sports and all feel powerless to fix it. Is there any way to take back youth sports and make them a beneficial part of growing up instead of a out of control tornado of wasted money and time spent traveling for kid games?