Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Arlington U10 boys Red and White have lots of undersized kids who are very athletic.
As a BSC parent that has played against both, I can attest to that.
Small, fast, and skilled. Red is very good, and White is probably the best "B" team in the region.
Disappointing they won't be at the Bethesda Tournament this year, but with the field situation I totally understand.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Arlington U10 boys Red and White have lots of undersized kids who are very athletic.
As a BSC parent that has played against both, I can attest to that.
Small, fast, and skilled. Red is very good, and White is probably the best "B" team in the region.
Disappointing they won't be at the Bethesda Tournament this year, but with the field situation I totally understand.
?Anonymous wrote:Arlington U10 boys Red and White have lots of undersized kids who are very athletic.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:At Arlington I have not seen bigger players selected for top teams, just faster or more skillful. There are other clubs that definitely have a size advantage.
I have seen smaller players drop from higher teams due to inability to be effective in game situations even though they were generally good with the ball.
I have seen larger less skillful players selected over faster smaller players for top team at Arlington.
Anonymous wrote:At Arlington I have not seen bigger players selected for top teams, just faster or more skillful. There are other clubs that definitely have a size advantage.
I have seen smaller players drop from higher teams due to inability to be effective in game situations even though they were generally good with the ball.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:At least for U9-U10:
Arlington's strategy at the younger ages seems to be to collect the top 97-99th percentile of athletically developed kids who have decent skills and put them on the red team together.
The players who are skilled but not in the top size percentile get put on White
The undersized, but skilled players are put on Blue
The oversized but unskilled players are put on Black
The less skilled, less athletic group of players who are still part of the program are on Silver
Gold is a developmental group and they are interchangeable with some kids in ADP.
To be fair, this is true in the majority of Clubs in the area (and around round the country) that have the benefit of a large player pool.
They do it to get wins. In theory, they all say when the kids grow they will be able to move up. In reality, with so many teams--even with vast improvement and later growth these players never materialize on the top team in the same Club. They have to leave entirely to get noticed.
This is because they will look at new players each following year vs digging deep into their player pool. Also, if they reach down and pull a kid up, they get massive complaints from other parents on why 'Timmy' got moved up and not 'Jimmy'. IT is just much easier to take a brand new kid of equal talent.
If you do have a talented, smart smaller U9-U12 player, you really have to protect their development. They will often get less chances, less competitive players in practice and games and the last pick for coaches. They are not getting the same product as the kids on the first team for the same $.
Then, anytime a kid is going to try to move somewhere the first thing they have to provide is former team/coach---many clubs won't bother looking at a Club's 3rd-5th team players or just place them on a similar team in their Club.
Anonymous wrote:At least for U9-U10:
Arlington's strategy at the younger ages seems to be to collect the top 97-99th percentile of athletically developed kids who have decent skills and put them on the red team together.
The players who are skilled but not in the top size percentile get put on White
The undersized, but skilled players are put on Blue
The oversized but unskilled players are put on Black
The less skilled, less athletic group of players who are still part of the program are on Silver
Gold is a developmental group and they are interchangeable with some kids in ADP.
Anonymous wrote:At least for U9-U10:
Arlington's strategy at the younger ages seems to be to collect the top 97-99th percentile of athletically developed kids who have decent skills and put them on the red team together.
The players who are skilled but not in the top size percentile get put on White
The undersized, but skilled players are put on Blue
The oversized but unskilled players are put on Black
The less skilled, less athletic group of players who are still part of the program are on Silver
Gold is a developmental group and they are interchangeable with some kids in ADP.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Disagree, think what you want, doesn't change that one poster thinks Arlington plays possession soccer.
I love the people on DCUM who think they know things they don’t the most of all. You are the winner of this thread. Glad all your garbage posts were deleted by the admin.
You are mixing posters. My children play soccer in Arlington and it has never been about possession, but I hope that changes. I have seen DA, and it is not much different. Other posters from page 1 have talked about the boys changing that though. Jury still out, but you are probably the guy that thinks some switch was flipped and naming coaches. The only posts I saw deleted were by the CLASSY GUY from Arlington who said the F-word to some poster (you?), another guy complaining about some guy (you?) who was monitoring the board against any criticism, and some other nonsense probably from you when you said you don't even have children that play there. I should report your post, but I won't. It can stand for itself.
NP - I think the problem is that we are all talking OVER each other. No one said that a switch was flipped (except for some very SARCASTIC poster). What was said was that the DA coaches are moving toward a possession style. That is the goal. Is it happening with the girls? Somewhat, depending on the competition. (And there was a very thoughtfully written post about this).
No one has said that Arlington DA has perfected the art of possession. These girls' teams have been practicing together for 2 1/2 months. They are learning but not always applying. Can we give it time and see what happens?
On another note, the girls play FCV this weekend. Since they are a good team, Arlington will most likely play a sloppy game. It won't be a fun to watch.
This is the best post in the thread to date. The post mentioning extreme is siding with the extreme view that all of the current DA teams are simply “kick and run” which anyone who has watched the games knows is false. People here are funny and not just in this thread. They write things with no basis in fact just to AstroTurf a viewpoint and expect people to agree, even those who have seen otherwise with their own eyes. It gets old, very fast.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Disagree, think what you want, doesn't change that one poster thinks Arlington plays possession soccer.
I love the people on DCUM who think they know things they don’t the most of all. You are the winner of this thread. Glad all your garbage posts were deleted by the admin.
You are mixing posters. My children play soccer in Arlington and it has never been about possession, but I hope that changes. I have seen DA, and it is not much different. Other posters from page 1 have talked about the boys changing that though. Jury still out, but you are probably the guy that thinks some switch was flipped and naming coaches. The only posts I saw deleted were by the CLASSY GUY from Arlington who said the F-word to some poster (you?), another guy complaining about some guy (you?) who was monitoring the board against any criticism, and some other nonsense probably from you when you said you don't even have children that play there. I should report your post, but I won't. It can stand for itself.
NP - I think the problem is that we are all talking OVER each other. No one said that a switch was flipped (except for some very SARCASTIC poster). What was said was that the DA coaches are moving toward a possession style. That is the goal. Is it happening with the girls? Somewhat, depending on the competition. (And there was a very thoughtfully written post about this).
No one has said that Arlington DA has perfected the art of possession. These girls' teams have been practicing together for 2 1/2 months. They are learning but not always applying. Can we give it time and see what happens?
On another note, the girls play FCV this weekend. Since they are a good team, Arlington will most likely play a sloppy game. It won't be a fun to watch.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Disagree, think what you want, doesn't change that one poster thinks Arlington plays possession soccer.
I love the people on DCUM who think they know things they don’t the most of all. You are the winner of this thread. Glad all your garbage posts were deleted by the admin.
You are mixing posters. My children play soccer in Arlington and it has never been about possession, but I hope that changes. I have seen DA, and it is not much different. Other posters from page 1 have talked about the boys changing that though. Jury still out, but you are probably the guy that thinks some switch was flipped and naming coaches. The only posts I saw deleted were by the CLASSY GUY from Arlington who said the F-word to some poster (you?), another guy complaining about some guy (you?) who was monitoring the board against any criticism, and some other nonsense probably from you when you said you don't even have children that play there. I should report your post, but I won't. It can stand for itself.