Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Enjoy the lighter course load while you prepare to play in college. Once you are done, my kid that didn't make the cut to play college soccer, will send you his U9 for you to coach. The numbers don't lie, less than 3% will make it to college, less than 3% of those will move onto a pro career. I say "pro" as in MLS which means you not getting those Million dollar contracts.
Why does everybody think of million $$ contracts.
Some people hate fraternities and love a sport. So they go to college... D1, they get some playing time junior and senior year... never go pro, have a college degree and friends from their sport... and they enjoy it.
What don't people understand.
So you got a degree in English and you will never write a book... or you got a degree in chemistry and never published a paper... who cares!
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Wake up parents, u14 kids from DA clubs already doing home school to prepare for the professional soccer career, who needs high school or college!!!
Lol. That will work for exactly one child in the metro area in all sports. But I am sure it is yours and yours and yours and mine.
Remember Dexter Manley? A Washington Redskins player that couldn’t read/write.
Thanks telling this, right fit in.
"After his career in the United States ended, he revealed that he was functionally illiterate, despite having studied at Oklahoma State University for four years."
He did go to "Oklahoma State University"
Anonymous wrote:Enjoy the lighter course load while you prepare to play in college. Once you are done, my kid that didn't make the cut to play college soccer, will send you his U9 for you to coach. The numbers don't lie, less than 3% will make it to college, less than 3% of those will move onto a pro career. I say "pro" as in MLS which means you not getting those Million dollar contracts.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Educate your brains people. Why would you skimp on academics for soccer unless you were a professional being paid? That seems really really misguided. Don't do that.
High school is just a way to get to college.
Everybody has different paths.
Some overload APs and some have a talent.
Neither is right or wrong .
I'm not the poster you responded to but I agree with them. The vast majority of kids will do absolutely nothing with their sport beyond college and may not even play in college. There are so few scholarships that in most cases, sports is not getting a kid into college who would not go otherwise. I've seen kids who got in to good colleges who chose a crappy, small, never heard of college just because kids are impressed by being "signed". Would you feel good if your kid went to Chowan University because they got signed there where kid could have gone to umd or vt?
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Educate your brains people. Why would you skimp on academics for soccer unless you were a professional being paid? That seems really really misguided. Don't do that.
High school is just a way to get to college.
Everybody has different paths.
Some overload APs and some have a talent.
Neither is right or wrong .
I'm not the poster you responded to but I agree with them. The vast majority of kids will do absolutely nothing with their sport beyond college and may not even play in college. There are so few scholarships that in most cases, sports is not getting a kid into college who would not go otherwise. I've seen kids who got in to good colleges who chose a crappy, small, never heard of college just because kids are impressed by being "signed". Would you feel good if your kid went to Chowan University because they got signed there where kid could have gone to umd or vt?
Anonymous wrote:Wake up parents, u14 kids from DA clubs already doing home school to prepare for the professional soccer career, who needs high school or college!!!
Anonymous wrote:I see no problem with reducing academic load to provide balance. It goes both ways, a kid should not play DA at the detriment of academics but a kid should not just study all the time with no physical outlet or ever having risen to the highest level of some activity. Playing at the highest level of the sport is also a learning tool.
The commitment, teamwork, dedication, and expertise to play at the DA level should not be overlooked as a learning tool to create a well balanced member of society.
I would rather work with a well balanced person than one who spent all his/her time in the books or vice versa on the soccer field.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Wake up parents, u14 kids from DA clubs already doing home school to prepare for the professional soccer career, who needs high school or college!!!
Lol. That will work for exactly one child in the metro area in all sports. But I am sure it is yours and yours and yours and mine.
Remember Dexter Manley? A Washington Redskins player that couldn’t read/write.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Educate your brains people. Why would you skimp on academics for soccer unless you were a professional being paid? That seems really really misguided. Don't do that.
High school is just a way to get to college.
Everybody has different paths.
Some overload APs and some have a talent.
Neither is right or wrong .
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Wake up parents, u14 kids from DA clubs already doing home school to prepare for the professional soccer career, who needs high school or college!!!
Lol. That will work for exactly one child in the metro area in all sports. But I am sure it is yours and yours and yours and mine.