Anonymous wrote:.Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Well written but aweful analysis
How so?
You don't know enough about MU to understand why it is likely to succeed. What you said is a good outsider's lens, but the internal momentum is completely absent. If anything, the Spirit affiliation was part of the problem. They treated it like a longer term version of Super Y; it was a marketing tool and a money maker. That's why they wanted such large rosters.
Now, there is an energy from families and coaches alike that want better. It's why they left their old clubs.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Well written but aweful analysis
How so?
Where should I start?
.Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Well written but aweful analysis
How so?
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Here is another thing wrong. FCV going from Loudoun County to Springfield leaves good players in the area looking for DA or ECNL options. Many area families play DA but will not play for FCV in Springfield. MU as the only local DA will benefit from that. Loudoun too if a player is good with ECNL.
If they will drive to Restpn they will drive to Springfield
Anonymous wrote:Here is another thing wrong. FCV going from Loudoun County to Springfield leaves good players in the area looking for DA or ECNL options. Many area families play DA but will not play for FCV in Springfield. MU as the only local DA will benefit from that. Loudoun too if a player is good with ECNL.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Very fair analysis but can't you are that McLean has a deep coaching bench. Clyde is the TD and coaches younger ages but the coaches working with the older ages have a great track record.
Also, you are way too optimistic on Loudoun. They are a big club in terms of numbers and might retain more players if FCV stumbles, but their coaches are terrible at developing talent.
Anonymous wrote:Very fair analysis but can't you are that McLean has a deep coaching bench. Clyde is the TD and coaches younger ages but the coaches working with the older ages have a great track record.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Well written but aweful analysis
How so?
Anonymous wrote:Well written but aweful analysis
Anonymous wrote:any chance we can come full circle? Who thinks that all of the existing DA and ECNL teams will be around in 5 years? will there be consolidation or not? I think there will, even if it's consolidation by certain clubs becoming "destination" in this new age and others becoming less "elite." My vote is that FCV will remain a destination and Arlington will become a destination. BRYC and Mclean will no longer be destinations. MU will get absorbed into some larger club. I don't know much about Loudoun or VDA or the whole Maryland side of the river, although Bethesda/Mclean and Balt Armour/MD United may be stealing each others' players. My kids will be long gone by 5 years from now, but it will be interesting to see what happens.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Let's be serious. The top teams in DA and ECNL are probably the best teams around but the bottom half could easily get outplayed by the top EDP/NPL teams. The U14 MRM Rush team that just moved to Bethesda, and Pipeline, routinely beat ECNL teams in the same age group.
DD plays on one of the better ECNL teams in the area and this is probably right. Dilution is real.
Yes. And the people complaining about dilution are the same people that don't want to drive further than 10 minutes to training. Ergo the need for a ton of "elite" clubs. Cant have your cake and eat it too.
Because there is no reason to drive by 4-5 clubs to play in the same showcases and in front of the same college coaches.
Dilution is a reason.
The number of "elite" clubs in the area should be cut in half for them to be truly "elite".
No real reason to do that either. These are not "elite" leagues, they are showcase leagues. Understand that and the importance of wins and losses declines.
Wow. Brilliant. I don't remember saying anything about elite be determined by wins and losses.
So coaches have unlimited time and money to visit every club in every geographic area to find all the players? There is no advantage to a consolidation of talent for those coaches? And what about the top players? Is there no benefit to playing and training with a roster full of top players?
I am trying to ask these questions with as little snark as possible but the content of your post makes that difficult.
Both ECNL and DA showcases draw the same college coaches. ECNL showcases may draw more regionally among the smaller D1 and on programs but that is because there are simply more ECNL events than DA and many of the ECNL events are regional. Most players go to college within a half day drive anyways so this is more than sufficient.
DA showcases have fewer events but draw more coaches.
In either event coaches have limited time so they are there to look at players who have either reached out to them or their club coaches may have done so. But a college coach is still going to prioritize a player who is interested in their school over window shopping for a player who will become a bidding war. Top ten soccer programs are targeting YNT and YNTC players off the bar as well as statistical leaders and can afford to get into bidding wars.
If your DD is not one of the top 100 players in her age group then the player has to do the heavy lifting anyways. Frankly, a good player on a bad team playing against quality competition can stand out more to a coach than a good player on a great team. Think of it like trying to stand out at TJ if you are just average there. You are obviously still really smart but at that level you are average. The 3.7 at TJ may not pop the same as a 4.2 in run of the mill HS AP classes.
So for players to pop in front of non top ten, top twenty soccer coaches you need to show separation from your team and other players in the field. That doesn’t happen as easily if you are not the best player on your team.
It is nice that a club like FCV gets 40-70 coaches on their sideline but half of those coaches are really there to watch 2-3 players and the other half are there to watch up to 20 kids on two teams.
It is really about where your kid can both develop and be put in the best possible showcasing situation. And not to be forgotten is where is it the most fun to be. But a kid needs to be a top five player on their team in order to feel and play the part of a leading core player. Supporting role players, no matter how talented are just not alpha enough to pop.
Your top 5 player argument is false and it is getting old.
There are 333 D1 womens soccer programs (though not all fully funded). https://www.ncsasports.org/womens-soccer/division-1-colleges
The average roster size is 29.
The average recruiting class is 7.
333 D1 schools * 7 recruits per class = 2331
There are 52 ECNL clubs with a U18 team (from what I could find...this may be less)
There are 72 DA teams with a U18/19 team.
The average roster size is 18.
52+72=124 total teams
124*18=2232 total players
There are more openings for D1 schools than there are DA + ECNL players EVERY year.
This doesn't include D2 & D3 which are large in numbers. Only D1 & D2 offer athletic scholarships though.
If your DD doesn't completely suck, they can play in college at some level AND play D1 even if they come off the bench.
Play with the numbers all you want, the top 5 off of each team would only provide a player pool of 620 players to D1 teams.
You’re right. The argument is wrong and getting the old.
You can show this guy all the data you can find that shows he is wrong but his answer will continue to be that things are changing because (fill in the blank). His go-to is that Loudoun now has ECNL and that Loudoun ECNL is one of the biggest game-changers for the area in a decade.
Waste of time trying to use actual data and facts when he just keeps repeating the same crap over and over.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Let's be serious. The top teams in DA and ECNL are probably the best teams around but the bottom half could easily get outplayed by the top EDP/NPL teams. The U14 MRM Rush team that just moved to Bethesda, and Pipeline, routinely beat ECNL teams in the same age group.
DD plays on one of the better ECNL teams in the area and this is probably right. Dilution is real.
Yes. And the people complaining about dilution are the same people that don't want to drive further than 10 minutes to training. Ergo the need for a ton of "elite" clubs. Cant have your cake and eat it too.
Because there is no reason to drive by 4-5 clubs to play in the same showcases and in front of the same college coaches.
Dilution is a reason.
The number of "elite" clubs in the area should be cut in half for them to be truly "elite".
No real reason to do that either. These are not "elite" leagues, they are showcase leagues. Understand that and the importance of wins and losses declines.
Wow. Brilliant. I don't remember saying anything about elite be determined by wins and losses.
So coaches have unlimited time and money to visit every club in every geographic area to find all the players? There is no advantage to a consolidation of talent for those coaches? And what about the top players? Is there no benefit to playing and training with a roster full of top players?
I am trying to ask these questions with as little snark as possible but the content of your post makes that difficult.
Both ECNL and DA showcases draw the same college coaches. ECNL showcases may draw more regionally among the smaller D1 and on programs but that is because there are simply more ECNL events than DA and many of the ECNL events are regional. Most players go to college within a half day drive anyways so this is more than sufficient.
DA showcases have fewer events but draw more coaches.
In either event coaches have limited time so they are there to look at players who have either reached out to them or their club coaches may have done so. But a college coach is still going to prioritize a player who is interested in their school over window shopping for a player who will become a bidding war. Top ten soccer programs are targeting YNT and YNTC players off the bar as well as statistical leaders and can afford to get into bidding wars.
If your DD is not one of the top 100 players in her age group then the player has to do the heavy lifting anyways. Frankly, a good player on a bad team playing against quality competition can stand out more to a coach than a good player on a great team. Think of it like trying to stand out at TJ if you are just average there. You are obviously still really smart but at that level you are average. The 3.7 at TJ may not pop the same as a 4.2 in run of the mill HS AP classes.
So for players to pop in front of non top ten, top twenty soccer coaches you need to show separation from your team and other players in the field. That doesn’t happen as easily if you are not the best player on your team.
It is nice that a club like FCV gets 40-70 coaches on their sideline but half of those coaches are really there to watch 2-3 players and the other half are there to watch up to 20 kids on two teams.
It is really about where your kid can both develop and be put in the best possible showcasing situation. And not to be forgotten is where is it the most fun to be. But a kid needs to be a top five player on their team in order to feel and play the part of a leading core player. Supporting role players, no matter how talented are just not alpha enough to pop.
Your top 5 player argument is false and it is getting old.
There are 333 D1 womens soccer programs (though not all fully funded). https://www.ncsasports.org/womens-soccer/division-1-colleges
The average roster size is 29.
The average recruiting class is 7.
333 D1 schools * 7 recruits per class = 2331
There are 52 ECNL clubs with a U18 team (from what I could find...this may be less)
There are 72 DA teams with a U18/19 team.
The average roster size is 18.
52+72=124 total teams
124*18=2232 total players
There are more openings for D1 schools than there are DA + ECNL players EVERY year.
This doesn't include D2 & D3 which are large in numbers. Only D1 & D2 offer athletic scholarships though.
If your DD doesn't completely suck, they can play in college at some level AND play D1 even if they come off the bench.
Play with the numbers all you want, the top 5 off of each team would only provide a player pool of 620 players to D1 teams.