Anonymous wrote:What if you have two left feet? Is that better than one, or are you just clumsy at that point? Rim shot.
Seriously, this is gotta be the dumbest thread ever. Someone is actually asking if left footed players have an advantage? Or, is this really a KGB means of sending encoded messages? Sheesh.
Anonymous wrote:
DS went to tryout for a travel team, and ends up training with the team, I found out that other new kid (from tryout) also in the training with the team is not as good as my DS.
I suspect that coach picked up him only because he is left-footed.
I would be very disappointed if that kid is chosen in the end but not my DS only because of left-footed advantage.
Is that big advantage being left-footed in soccer (or other body-contact team sports such as basketball, hockey, lacrosse...) ?
Anonymous wrote:Good lefties are just a rare commodity. Sorry to say but a righty will just not open up the left side of the field as well
Anonymous wrote:Good lefties are just a rare commodity. Sorry to say but a righty will just not open up the left side of the field as well
Anonymous wrote:
DS went to tryout for a travel team, and ends up training with the team, I found out that other new kid (from tryout) also in the training with the team is not as good as my DS.
I suspect that coach picked up him only because he is left-footed.
I would be very disappointed if that kid is chosen in the end but not my DS only because of left-footed advantage.
Is that big advantage being left-footed in soccer (or other body-contact team sports such as basketball, hockey, lacrosse...) ?
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:u10Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:
DS went to tryout for a travel team, and ends up training with the team, I found out that other new kid (from tryout) also in the training with the team is not as good as my DS.
I suspect that coach picked up him only because he is left-footed.
I would be very disappointed if that kid is chosen in the end but not my DS only because of left-footed advantage.
Is that big advantage being left-footed in soccer (or other body-contact team sports such as basketball, hockey, lacrosse...) ?
Players should be near equal with both feet but that is not very common at younger ages. It is a slight advantage to have a naturally left footed player at younger ages but it is rarely a reason for a player to be selected.
At what age should the be near equal with both feet?
LOL. Ask Gareth Bale to strike a ball with his right foot!
Arjun Robbin's right foot is just a peg held in place there with twine and duct tape
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:u10Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:
DS went to tryout for a travel team, and ends up training with the team, I found out that other new kid (from tryout) also in the training with the team is not as good as my DS.
I suspect that coach picked up him only because he is left-footed.
I would be very disappointed if that kid is chosen in the end but not my DS only because of left-footed advantage.
Is that big advantage being left-footed in soccer (or other body-contact team sports such as basketball, hockey, lacrosse...) ?
Players should be near equal with both feet but that is not very common at younger ages. It is a slight advantage to have a naturally left footed player at younger ages but it is rarely a reason for a player to be selected.
At what age should the be near equal with both feet?
PP must be joking. Watch the pros - many aren't equal and run around their non-dominant foot. There's no magic age .
This can’t be right. Half the kids on my U11 DD team can’t kick well even with their dominant foot.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:u10Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:
DS went to tryout for a travel team, and ends up training with the team, I found out that other new kid (from tryout) also in the training with the team is not as good as my DS.
I suspect that coach picked up him only because he is left-footed.
I would be very disappointed if that kid is chosen in the end but not my DS only because of left-footed advantage.
Is that big advantage being left-footed in soccer (or other body-contact team sports such as basketball, hockey, lacrosse...) ?
Players should be near equal with both feet but that is not very common at younger ages. It is a slight advantage to have a naturally left footed player at younger ages but it is rarely a reason for a player to be selected.
At what age should the be near equal with both feet?
LOL. Ask Gareth Bale to strike a ball with his right foot!
Anonymous wrote:u10Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:
DS went to tryout for a travel team, and ends up training with the team, I found out that other new kid (from tryout) also in the training with the team is not as good as my DS.
I suspect that coach picked up him only because he is left-footed.
I would be very disappointed if that kid is chosen in the end but not my DS only because of left-footed advantage.
Is that big advantage being left-footed in soccer (or other body-contact team sports such as basketball, hockey, lacrosse...) ?
Players should be near equal with both feet but that is not very common at younger ages. It is a slight advantage to have a naturally left footed player at younger ages but it is rarely a reason for a player to be selected.
At what age should the be near equal with both feet?