Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:No one cares
You do. We can keep doing this forever if you wish.
Actually, I don’t. One day, you won’t either. I’m
You keep replying. You care. Deeply.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:No one cares
You do. We can keep doing this forever if you wish.
Actually, I don’t. One day, you won’t either. I’m
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:No one cares
You do. We can keep doing this forever if you wish.
Anonymous wrote:Very cool to put this together, thanks OP. I find it interesting and a validation that my DS's club is relevant.
Anonymous wrote:No one cares
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Did you use a spread sheet with formulas or just pencil and paper to figure this out?
NP. Not sure what they did (assuming it would be a spread sheet), but it would be super easy with a spreadsheet and not difficult at all with pencil and paper.
Just looked on ECNL site and the math checks out. Lets use BRYC as an example: U13 0.00 + U14 0.08 + U15 0.33 + U16 1.11 + U17 0.36 + U19 1.00 = 2.88
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:OP how is this data relevant to ECNL? Does the league find any relevance on the stats? How does it relate to the ECNL mission, vision and goals? Is ECNL all about winning, developing, college, profits or individual player success? Is ECNL evaluating clubs based on the data or anything else? You are not the head of a club member therefore let people who know tell true.
It has little relevance. Point is to make another talking point on this message board. Its working.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:No one cares. It means zero to those who understand what it’s all about
Sounds like your team loses alot. Sure, it's about college recruiting in the end, but club performance affects that over time. Better clubs attract better coaching and better players. By practicing in that environment over time, player development improves. It matters.
No it is the opposite. The parents with bench warmers or kid barely hanging on are the ones who are always talking about the club’s 0 whatevers and how good they are, how good this or that player is on our team, how the team won the final but their kid was a non factor, etc. They are just a bunch of jock sniffers. The parents with players never talk about how the club is doing over all.
Here how it works. Big clubs have a big pool. They will have enough athleticism to beat 75% of the other clubs because of pool size. Every so often an age group gets lucky and has 5-6 top player vs 2-3 or a really dominant player in a key position. The coach and club have very little to do with it.
Also most posters here would not know a good coach from a bad coach. The way parents judge how good a coach is is if they select my kid for the top team the coach is great!.
Anonymous wrote:OP how is this data relevant to ECNL? Does the league find any relevance on the stats? How does it relate to the ECNL mission, vision and goals? Is ECNL all about winning, developing, college, profits or individual player success? Is ECNL evaluating clubs based on the data or anything else? You are not the head of a club member therefore let people who know tell true.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:No one cares. It means zero to those who understand what it’s all about
Sounds like your team loses alot. Sure, it's about college recruiting in the end, but club performance affects that over time. Better clubs attract better coaching and better players. By practicing in that environment over time, player development improves. It matters.
Exactly. College Coaches know which clubs are most successful from top to bottom and they tend to gravitate towards those clubs during recruiting cycles.