Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:
And this is why you do a DP position at a great club-to eventually get these FT offers even if not at that club but elsewhere. You have to look at it as development and not be concerned about games.
Yeah -- no way.
The kid will not fit in on any team. That's a bad way to get better. Cannon fodder for the DA team with practices, and not fitting in on their club team, because the DA team gets first access for practice and games.
Look to join a team where they fit in and will get good practice and game time.
You have no clue.
To each his/her own. Depends on what your kid wants. To play in games and to get better or to just get better. Most kids want to play in games, at least some of the time. But again, be careful of the overtraining / injury / burnout risk at a young age by participating on two teams.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:
And this is why you do a DP position at a great club-to eventually get these FT offers even if not at that club but elsewhere. You have to look at it as development and not be concerned about games.
Yeah -- no way.
The kid will not fit in on any team. That's a bad way to get better. Cannon fodder for the DA team with practices, and not fitting in on their club team, because the DA team gets first access for practice and games.
Look to join a team where they fit in and will get good practice and game time.
You have no clue.
Anonymous wrote:Yeah -- no way.
The kid will not fit in on any team. That's a bad way to get better. Cannon fodder for the DA team with practices, and not fitting in on their club team, because the DA team gets first access for practice and games.
Look to join a team where they fit in and will get good practice and game time.
Anonymous wrote:Is DP being replaced by PT?
The PT player would have to be way way better than his FT counterpart in order to displace him/her. In the U14-U15 group, size and development play a part.
Anonymous wrote:My child is dual rostered and I'm not really happy with the results.
Despite playing at a level "better than half the Academy team" according to the coaches' feedback, they aren't going to open a full spot unless someone is a "game-changer". They don't want the political flack of sending someone down for someone who his just mid-roster. As a result, we train with the higher team but when the roster is released each weekend we're playing with our original, lower club.
This comes back to haunt my child who works their butt off at the higher level but gets snide comments from other players like "yea that was a good move but you still aren't going to be on the team this weekend". The self-confidence hit has been pretty hard and some of his teammates on the higher team are all too willing to rub it in. Parents are polite but not really welcoming (especially the parent of the kid my child is competing with--they avoid me at all events).
We just had tryouts and if they are truly ability based, our child should be moving up. If we are stuck in the same situation next year we will switch clubs (we have a DA offer from another club already).
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:My child is dual rostered and I'm not really happy with the results.
Despite playing at a level "better than half the Academy team" according to the coaches' feedback, they aren't going to open a full spot unless someone is a "game-changer". They don't want the political flack of sending someone down for someone who his just mid-roster. As a result, we train with the higher team but when the roster is released each weekend we're playing with our original, lower club.
This comes back to haunt my child who works their butt off at the higher level but gets snide comments from other players like "yea that was a good move but you still aren't going to be on the team this weekend". The self-confidence hit has been pretty hard and some of his teammates on the higher team are all too willing to rub it in. Parents are polite but not really welcoming (especially the parent of the kid my child is competing with--they avoid me at all events).
We just had tryouts and if they are truly ability based, our child should be moving up. If we are stuck in the same situation next year we will switch clubs (we have a DA offer from another club already).
Shouldn’t you already have an offer by now?
Anonymous wrote:My child is dual rostered and I'm not really happy with the results.
Despite playing at a level "better than half the Academy team" according to the coaches' feedback, they aren't going to open a full spot unless someone is a "game-changer". They don't want the political flack of sending someone down for someone who his just mid-roster. As a result, we train with the higher team but when the roster is released each weekend we're playing with our original, lower club.
This comes back to haunt my child who works their butt off at the higher level but gets snide comments from other players like "yea that was a good move but you still aren't going to be on the team this weekend". The self-confidence hit has been pretty hard and some of his teammates on the higher team are all too willing to rub it in. Parents are polite but not really welcoming (especially the parent of the kid my child is competing with--they avoid me at all events).
We just had tryouts and if they are truly ability based, our child should be moving up. If we are stuck in the same situation next year we will switch clubs (we have a DA offer from another club already).
Anonymous wrote:My child is dual rostered and I'm not really happy with the results.
Despite playing at a level "better than half the Academy team" according to the coaches' feedback, they aren't going to open a full spot unless someone is a "game-changer". They don't want the political flack of sending someone down for someone who his just mid-roster. As a result, we train with the higher team but when the roster is released each weekend we're playing with our original, lower club.
This comes back to haunt my child who works their butt off at the higher level but gets snide comments from other players like "yea that was a good move but you still aren't going to be on the team this weekend". The self-confidence hit has been pretty hard and some of his teammates on the higher team are all too willing to rub it in. Parents are polite but not really welcoming (especially the parent of the kid my child is competing with--they avoid me at all events).
We just had tryouts and if they are truly ability based, our child should be moving up. If we are stuck in the same situation next year we will switch clubs (we have a DA offer from another club already).
Anonymous wrote:DP or PT (DA) or Discovery Player (ECNL) is simply a way for clubs to keep their best “bubble” players at their club playing on their top non-DA or non-ECNL team. If used smartly from a soccer development perspective it can result in smaller rosters for DA and ECNL teams and more overall game playing time for non-starters on those teams. Most clubs don’t use it that way, opting for larger rosters and therefore more fee revenue. Many of these bubble players realize this and end up leaving for another club’s DA or ECNL team (one they can make as a FT player) once they realize the deal. It is also tough physically on these PT players as they are practicing more than their teammates on both teams as their base team’s coach wants them at their practices as does the DA/ECNL coach.