Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:My boy did Super Y several summers when he was younger and before he was playing such a rigorous MLS NEXT schedule (being younger and also not being pressed as hard during the regular fall/spring season, plus winter futsal, reduced any concerns I might have had later on about overuse).
He had fun with Super Y - he played for Arlington, which was different club than his usual club, and it helped keep him active and engaged with the game during the summer. Coaches are understanding of the summer vacation schedules many players have -- they overload the roster a bit to ensure that on any given weekend they have enough kids to play.
If you have a kid who loves soccer and you want to keep him active during the summer and give him more touches and time to develop, I'd say Super Y is a great option. In particular, for kids under 12 who have boundless energy and haven't hit the age where overuse becomes a real thing.
Overuse is my biggest concern.
At what age did your kid play super Y?
He played for 3 summers: when he was 8/9/10. I think the first year he had to play up a year (he was smaller than the other kids but a strong player so he was able to keep up).
We approached it for what it was -- a fun summer activity for a kid who loves the game. It gave him something to do with a couple practices a week and the challenge of a game most weekends. Kids that age have a LOT of energy and a LOT of free time during the summer, so we're glad we did it.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:My boy did Super Y several summers when he was younger and before he was playing such a rigorous MLS NEXT schedule (being younger and also not being pressed as hard during the regular fall/spring season, plus winter futsal, reduced any concerns I might have had later on about overuse).
He had fun with Super Y - he played for Arlington, which was different club than his usual club, and it helped keep him active and engaged with the game during the summer. Coaches are understanding of the summer vacation schedules many players have -- they overload the roster a bit to ensure that on any given weekend they have enough kids to play.
If you have a kid who loves soccer and you want to keep him active during the summer and give him more touches and time to develop, I'd say Super Y is a great option. In particular, for kids under 12 who have boundless energy and haven't hit the age where overuse becomes a real thing.
Overuse is my biggest concern.
At what age did your kid play super Y?
Anonymous wrote:My boy did Super Y several summers when he was younger and before he was playing such a rigorous MLS NEXT schedule (being younger and also not being pressed as hard during the regular fall/spring season, plus winter futsal, reduced any concerns I might have had later on about overuse).
He had fun with Super Y - he played for Arlington, which was different club than his usual club, and it helped keep him active and engaged with the game during the summer. Coaches are understanding of the summer vacation schedules many players have -- they overload the roster a bit to ensure that on any given weekend they have enough kids to play.
If you have a kid who loves soccer and you want to keep him active during the summer and give him more touches and time to develop, I'd say Super Y is a great option. In particular, for kids under 12 who have boundless energy and haven't hit the age where overuse becomes a real thing.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Just be careful with Super Y / USL if you make nationals — some clubs will not take the players who played all summer and qualified but instead swap out and take their ECNL team to play at nationals leaving the players who actually played through the summer high and dry.
No way. You played all summer and they won’t let you go to nationals? Which club did that?
Arlington 2011 girls does this every year. The majority of the ECNL players do not play over the summer but they go to the nationals.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Just be careful with Super Y / USL if you make nationals — some clubs will not take the players who played all summer and qualified but instead swap out and take their ECNL team to play at nationals leaving the players who actually played through the summer high and dry.
No way. You played all summer and they won’t let you go to nationals? Which club did that?
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:You must believe the earth is flat too.Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:My son did it and liked it, but he has pretty good tolerance for the heat. For kids who are on the cusp (in the pool of kids who may move up to a higher team), I think it is a good opportunity to get to know another coach and different players. For kids already on the team where they want to be, or solidly placed where they are, unless you really want to do the activity, I would take a pass.
Many of the coaches who coach Super Y are third or fourth team coaches. You will NEVER see a top team coach waste time with super y.
Take this for what it is worth, but GFR always put a top coach on their super Y team
Again, its GFR. What league do you play in NCSL?
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:You must believe the earth is flat too.Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:My son did it and liked it, but he has pretty good tolerance for the heat. For kids who are on the cusp (in the pool of kids who may move up to a higher team), I think it is a good opportunity to get to know another coach and different players. For kids already on the team where they want to be, or solidly placed where they are, unless you really want to do the activity, I would take a pass.
Many of the coaches who coach Super Y are third or fourth team coaches. You will NEVER see a top team coach waste time with super y.
Take this for what it is worth, but GFR always put a top coach on their super Y team
Anonymous wrote:You must believe the earth is flat too.Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:My son did it and liked it, but he has pretty good tolerance for the heat. For kids who are on the cusp (in the pool of kids who may move up to a higher team), I think it is a good opportunity to get to know another coach and different players. For kids already on the team where they want to be, or solidly placed where they are, unless you really want to do the activity, I would take a pass.
Many of the coaches who coach Super Y are third or fourth team coaches. You will NEVER see a top team coach waste time with super y.
You must believe the earth is flat too.Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:My son did it and liked it, but he has pretty good tolerance for the heat. For kids who are on the cusp (in the pool of kids who may move up to a higher team), I think it is a good opportunity to get to know another coach and different players. For kids already on the team where they want to be, or solidly placed where they are, unless you really want to do the activity, I would take a pass.
Many of the coaches who coach Super Y are third or fourth team coaches. You will NEVER see a top team coach waste time with super y.