Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Too much soccer is definitely possible. The problem is that most parents in our area want their kid to be stand out players but they don't understand that the development of their child is a marathon not a sprint. 90 percent of serious soccer parents in our area are sprinting with their kids development with a the more they play the better they will be approach. While that concept is true to a certain extent there is a limit to how much a young body can sustain for a period of time. What they don't realize is that they are setting their kids up for injuries down the road as they get older from overuse at younger ages. Why the current crop of USNT players are injured more often than not. They were the first generation of really intense soccer parents in the country. A player needs to put in the time on their feet to be good there is no question about that. But the time needs to be spent developing SKILLS not necessarily playing games. The games are where you test the skills you've been working on. If you go around to Bethesda games or really any other clubs games in our area there are tons of kids with below average skills but above average desire to win a game. Those two things are in conflict and it manifest itself on the sidelines. This problem is widespread in youth soccer in our country. Once we get away from.the winning culture and start promoting a skill development culture we will.be better off. I can see hundreds of kids on Instagram that can do fancy cone moves but those same players can't control the ball out of the air with pressure. Very different skills and the former is ok to have, the latter is a must have in high level football. Back to the original point...you can definitely over train and play too much soccer and if you do that in this country, chances are your kid won't be that good because more likely than not you're training on the wrong things and clubs like Bethesda bank on your ignorance to sell you things and extract money from your pocket. It's that simple.
Too many generalizations and inexact science and personal opinions here to address
Not to mention lack of causation or correlation conclusions.
Ramblings without substance that can't be verified by facts
Anonymous wrote:Too much soccer is definitely possible. The problem is that most parents in our area want their kid to be stand out players but they don't understand that the development of their child is a marathon not a sprint. 90 percent of serious soccer parents in our area are sprinting with their kids development with a the more they play the better they will be approach. While that concept is true to a certain extent there is a limit to how much a young body can sustain for a period of time. What they don't realize is that they are setting their kids up for injuries down the road as they get older from overuse at younger ages. Why the current crop of USNT players are injured more often than not. They were the first generation of really intense soccer parents in the country. A player needs to put in the time on their feet to be good there is no question about that. But the time needs to be spent developing SKILLS not necessarily playing games. The games are where you test the skills you've been working on. If you go around to Bethesda games or really any other clubs games in our area there are tons of kids with below average skills but above average desire to win a game. Those two things are in conflict and it manifest itself on the sidelines. This problem is widespread in youth soccer in our country. Once we get away from.the winning culture and start promoting a skill development culture we will.be better off. I can see hundreds of kids on Instagram that can do fancy cone moves but those same players can't control the ball out of the air with pressure. Very different skills and the former is ok to have, the latter is a must have in high level football. Back to the original point...you can definitely over train and play too much soccer and if you do that in this country, chances are your kid won't be that good because more likely than not you're training on the wrong things and clubs like Bethesda bank on your ignorance to sell you things and extract money from your pocket. It's that simple.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:This burnout stuff for these kids is funny made-up stuff
It's easy to push and repeat theories that can't be proven.
If our kids are burning out doing less than others who aren't we must be weak
You havent been around enough. Its real. Many kids just call it quits before college. Some are actually pretty good. No desire to keep up the grind which is really what it takes to be good at soccer. Keep telling yourself its great that a 14 year old should play 60 games a year. Never mind injury risk and burnout, kids probably need more time to train on weaknesses or work in gym on strength vs the pressure of winning another game or another team practice
Anonymous wrote:This burnout stuff for these kids is funny made-up stuff
It's easy to push and repeat theories that can't be proven.
If our kids are burning out doing less than others who aren't we must be weak
Anonymous wrote:This burnout stuff for these kids is funny made-up stuff
It's easy to push and repeat theories that can't be proven.
If our kids are burning out doing less than others who aren't we must be weak
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Repeating, for those who respond but don’t read:
There is no such thing as too much soccer. There is such thing as too much pressure and unrealistic expectations. That’s what burns kids out.
There absolutely is "too much soccer". Rest/recovery is a huge part of growing in any sport/athletic pursuit.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Did Bethesda buy SOFIVE Rockville? Or is their indoor facility different (address and location looks slightly different) but using Sofive clip art/images?
https://www.bethesdasoccer.org/indoor-facility/
The Bethesda facility is separate from Sofive but seems modeled after it, five small fields with boards.
There's a Sofive stock photo on the page![]()
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Someone got a little lazy
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Did Bethesda buy SOFIVE Rockville? Or is their indoor facility different (address and location looks slightly different) but using Sofive clip art/images?
https://www.bethesdasoccer.org/indoor-facility/
The Bethesda facility is separate from Sofive but seems modeled after it, five small fields with boards.
Anonymous wrote:Repeating, for those who respond but don’t read:
There is no such thing as too much soccer. There is such thing as too much pressure and unrealistic expectations. That’s what burns kids out.
Anonymous wrote:Did Bethesda buy SOFIVE Rockville? Or is their indoor facility different (address and location looks slightly different) but using Sofive clip art/images?
https://www.bethesdasoccer.org/indoor-facility/