Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Arlington could easily support 3 teams per grade especially for 5th grade with a large turnouts for tryouts. I was told ATB had trouble finding enough coaches for boys because season so long.
Last year, there were 3 teams for 6th grade but not sure if 7th grade will continue with 3 or only 2 teams. It will be tough to cut a whole team of boys.
The outline the league circulated this week had two Arlington boys 7th grade first division teams and one Arlington boys 7th grade third division team.
thank you
Can you check Mclean 7th and 8th boys teams please
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Don’t skip the last day of tryouts or your kid may not make a team. A few very good players we know who skipped last day were not selected for a team probably because coaches were overwhelmed and forgot who was very strong on day one.
For Arlington or another team?
Any team. I've literally stood next to a coach when a parent said his kid wouldn't be able to make the final try out day. Coach told him his kid was good and was the B team and didn't need to come out the last day When the roster came out, he wasn't on any team (he'd been on A and B team before). Talked to kids dad and he said he was told a bunch of strong players came out last day. I was at all three day (outside at least) and there wasn't any new players. Take that for what you will.
Wow, That sucks.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Arlington could easily support 3 teams per grade especially for 5th grade with a large turnouts for tryouts. I was told ATB had trouble finding enough coaches for boys because season so long.
Last year, there were 3 teams for 6th grade but not sure if 7th grade will continue with 3 or only 2 teams. It will be tough to cut a whole team of boys.
The outline the league circulated this week had two Arlington boys 7th grade first division teams and one Arlington boys 7th grade third division team.
thank you
Anonymous wrote:The entire league is run by volunteers, people who have demanding full time jobs. Commenters here are acting like it is travel soccer or volleyball that makes money and pays coaches. ATB has never been that.
Anonymous wrote:The entire league is run by volunteers, people who have demanding full time jobs. Commenters here are acting like it is travel soccer or volleyball that makes money and pays coaches. ATB has never been that.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Arlington could easily support 3 teams per grade especially for 5th grade with a large turnouts for tryouts. I was told ATB had trouble finding enough coaches for boys because season so long.
Last year, there were 3 teams for 6th grade but not sure if 7th grade will continue with 3 or only 2 teams. It will be tough to cut a whole team of boys.
The outline the league circulated this week had two Arlington boys 7th grade first division teams and one Arlington boys 7th grade third division team.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:For boys typically they do 2 nights and the 3rd night is for those who made the initial cut. Roster decisions are determined by the following Saturday. There are no other places for Arlington kids to go so they don’t have to worry about poaching. That scheduled holds true yearly for 5th grade. After 5th they play the 3rd night by ear. One year they may only do 2 nights or they may opt to do the initial cut and hold a 3rd night for a smaller group.
its intersting how different the dynamics are for places where the kids have no other choices vs. the places where the coaches are haveing to compete for players. last year my ds coach sent some invites out the night after tryout 1 to try and lock in some players. and the coaches try to do their first tryout the very first night.
Correct. Arlington (and I think Gainsville) has numerous restrictions placed on it to participate in the Fairfax league that all the other youth teams do not. Whether those restrictions would stand up to litigation would certainly be an interesting outcome.
Litigation. Its a private sports league, they can run it how they choose.
NCAA is a private sports league, they can run it how they choose. ..must why the NCAA has been so successful beating off all that litigation recently.
There is an argument the FYBLL is restraining the ability of consumers (i.e. youth basketball players) to participate and play basketball for what organization they want via restrictions on who a player can play for and who they can't. (E.g. the zip code rule and Arlingtons conplete ban). The argument in support of this is to prevent recruiting and I guess Arlingtons numbers to swamp other local organizations.
Any type of restrictions on consumer choice is generally anti-competitive. Whether it rises to a restraint of trade and antitrust is up for debate.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:For boys typically they do 2 nights and the 3rd night is for those who made the initial cut. Roster decisions are determined by the following Saturday. There are no other places for Arlington kids to go so they don’t have to worry about poaching. That scheduled holds true yearly for 5th grade. After 5th they play the 3rd night by ear. One year they may only do 2 nights or they may opt to do the initial cut and hold a 3rd night for a smaller group.
its intersting how different the dynamics are for places where the kids have no other choices vs. the places where the coaches are haveing to compete for players. last year my ds coach sent some invites out the night after tryout 1 to try and lock in some players. and the coaches try to do their first tryout the very first night.
Correct. Arlington (and I think Gainsville) has numerous restrictions placed on it to participate in the Fairfax league that all the other youth teams do not. Whether those restrictions would stand up to litigation would certainly be an interesting outcome.
Litigation. Its a private sports league, they can run it how they choose.
Anonymous wrote:Arlington could easily support 3 teams per grade especially for 5th grade with a large turnouts for tryouts. I was told ATB had trouble finding enough coaches for boys because season so long.
Last year, there were 3 teams for 6th grade but not sure if 7th grade will continue with 3 or only 2 teams. It will be tough to cut a whole team of boys.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:For boys typically they do 2 nights and the 3rd night is for those who made the initial cut. Roster decisions are determined by the following Saturday. There are no other places for Arlington kids to go so they don’t have to worry about poaching. That scheduled holds true yearly for 5th grade. After 5th they play the 3rd night by ear. One year they may only do 2 nights or they may opt to do the initial cut and hold a 3rd night for a smaller group.
its intersting how different the dynamics are for places where the kids have no other choices vs. the places where the coaches are haveing to compete for players. last year my ds coach sent some invites out the night after tryout 1 to try and lock in some players. and the coaches try to do their first tryout the very first night.
Correct. Arlington (and I think Gainsville) has numerous restrictions placed on it to participate in the Fairfax league that all the other youth teams do not. Whether those restrictions would stand up to litigation would certainly be an interesting outcome.
. Its a private sports league, they can run it how they choose. Anonymous wrote:The other thing to keep in mind with tryouts is if there is a parent coach AND a preselected parent assistant coach, then each team only has maybe 8 open spots. That's tough.