Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:It impossible to break into ecnl if you don't get in the first year?
My daughter finishing up 2nd year of ECNL. Tryouts for next year is done. Some movement of players every year. So with our experience, there's movement possibility those 3 years. We're a mid table team. I see more movement on teams with worse league records. A few changes on teams who go to playoffs but not as many.
What I've seen are coaches willing to take a chance with a more athletic player and drop a more technical, less athletic player, hoping that helps the team. As someone said earlier, speed of play and physicality is becoming more important as my daughter gets older. Slower, more technical players stood out more when they were younger, on a smaller field.
This is exactly why you lose against California and Texas teams.
Size is nice but speed, skills, and team play can easily win against size and speed alone.
Focusing on size and speed 9 times out of 10 implies direct play.
Anonymous wrote:Dont forget sucking up to coaches. You generally have about a third of the team there because of a nepotism style view.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:It impossible to break into ecnl if you don't get in the first year?
My daughter finishing up 2nd year of ECNL. Tryouts for next year is done. Some movement of players every year. So with our experience, there's movement possibility those 3 years. We're a mid table team. I see more movement on teams with worse league records. A few changes on teams who go to playoffs but not as many.
What I've seen are coaches willing to take a chance with a more athletic player and drop a more technical, less athletic player, hoping that helps the team. As someone said earlier, speed of play and physicality is becoming more important as my daughter gets older. Slower, more technical players stood out more when they were younger, on a smaller field.
Anonymous wrote:It impossible to break into ecnl if you don't get in the first year?
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:My daughter is currently one of the top players on the third team, 2013. She wants to be on a top team. What is the path to securing one of these coveted ECNL spots? We are pretty clueless about the politics that going to all of this.
She needs to get bigger and faster. Seriously this is the ECNL. There is not much demand for technical players which results in a slow speed of play. This means straight line speed and physicality are coveted with size.
Anonymous wrote:My daughter is currently one of the top players on the third team, 2013. She wants to be on a top team. What is the path to securing one of these coveted ECNL spots? We are pretty clueless about the politics that going to all of this.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Still very young. Align her with reputable trainers/coaches and keep developing.
This. Feels way too young to be thinking about this.
How do you figure when ecnl is in 2 years? Some folks said there's not enough time.