
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Does this mean no training while schools are closed
Training (like schools) is done for the year.
You can't possibly know this. Posting fake news so you seem smart (anonymously, mind you) is pathetic. Please stop.
Sounds extreme, but it's true. All school facilities are closed for the school year which includes the rental agreements made with the clubs. There are a few clubs that can get away with sneaking in some training that own their own fields like Loudoun, SYA, and a few others. But the safety issue still persist.
At some point, people will realize lockdown only reduces the rate of infection, not the number of total cases, and increases the length of time of significant disease activity. This will go on for some time. But nobody should be under the illusions that either will be on lockdown for 12-18 months or that everybody will resume activity when lockdown lifts. This will eventually become an individual decision. 60-70% of the population will be exposed at some point before herd immunity ends the spread. Locking ourselves down simply postpones the inevitable level of probable exposure while our hospitals handle the initial surge. It will resume thereafter and we will have a better idea on actual mortality rates across age groups.
So as a practical matter, in NOVA, a serious bubble parenting area, a lot of parents are not gonna rush their kids out there until vaccines emerge. It is probably based on a fundamental misconception or conceit that their kid won’t get exposed anywhere else, or the fantasy that their children will happily stay indoors for 12-18 months, but there you have it. Who knows.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Does this mean no training while schools are closed
Training (like schools) is done for the year.
You can't possibly know this. Posting fake news so you seem smart (anonymously, mind you) is pathetic. Please stop.
Sounds extreme, but it's true. All school facilities are closed for the school year which includes the rental agreements made with the clubs. There are a few clubs that can get away with sneaking in some training that own their own fields like Loudoun, SYA, and a few others. But the safety issue still persist.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Does this mean no training while schools are closed
Training (like schools) is done for the year.
You can't possibly know this. Posting fake news so you seem smart (anonymously, mind you) is pathetic. Please stop.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Does this mean no training while schools are closed
Training (like schools) is done for the year.
Anonymous wrote:Does this mean no training while schools are closed
Does this mean no training while schools are closed
Anonymous wrote:Does this mean no training while schools are closed
Anonymous wrote:yes. especially since they practice on school grounds.
Anonymous wrote:In Fairfax County, the parks are still open and available for non-group use. So we can go and practice finishing, pinging, and bending passes--things we can't otherwise practice at home.
PLEASE don't let your kids join pick-up games! In addition to being at risk of spreading COVID, there's also the risk of getting the parks closed. Don't be that guy.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Cya keeps
Sending virtually coaching. I assume they want to keep the coaches paid.
Our Club as well.
Frankly, I work full time from home and now so does my spouse (thankful for this) and with having to take over schooling on top of a full-time job--soccer has been a low priority.
There are too many things to be thinking about in terms of basic survival needs (food) and if work will continue for one of us to really even care about soccer. AT.ALL
Once I get my bearings, maybe. But, right now, getting a million messages and 'soccer homework' is annoying.
What is your plan now? Have your kids play video games so it is going to be easier for you and your husband? Many of the greatest soccer players come from poor countries. All kids need is a ball....
Ya genius, but that's because the kids can play together, often. Harder in the age of social distancing.