Anonymous
Post 01/11/2025 14:28     Subject: Kids and social media

Anonymous wrote:
Anonymous wrote:I’m old enough to remember other new technologies that were going to harm kids and be the downfall of society. Video games in the 80s. Before that it was TV. Remember how latch key kids were going to be depressed and forgotten? Turned out it made for a lot of independent capable kids. Social media is here to stay. So is AI. It’s not going to be disastrous. It will be different than how we grew up just like it was different for us.


I agree. And new technology like veo sure makes analyzing games and collecting clips for recruiting a lot more accessible. It also provides a great platform for teams and clubs to recruit.


VEO and Trace, when supporting TAKA.IO, are great.
Anonymous
Post 01/08/2025 18:40     Subject: Kids and social media

This rant sounds like parents pissed off that they are paying all this money to private trainers and the kid is still not good enough for you to make a decent highlight. Get over it or find a sport your kid is good at. Lol
Anonymous
Post 01/08/2025 17:45     Subject: Kids and social media

Anonymous wrote:
Anonymous wrote:
Anonymous wrote:Its for grandparents as much as it is for recruiting down the road. Chill... the tech is here to stay utilize it to connect don't see much harm in that at any age




No one is recruiting your eight year old or watching their F8 clips

What’s f8?
Anonymous
Post 01/08/2025 13:47     Subject: Kids and social media

Anonymous wrote:
Anonymous wrote:
Anonymous wrote:Its for grandparents as much as it is for recruiting down the road. Chill... the tech is here to stay utilize it to connect don't see much harm in that at any age




No one is recruiting your eight year old or watching their F8 clips


Not even their grandparents, after the first few.
Anonymous
Post 01/08/2025 13:45     Subject: Kids and social media

FYI Plenty of 8 year olds making money on IG doing silly fun things like kicking a ball
Anonymous
Post 01/08/2025 13:43     Subject: Kids and social media

Anonymous wrote:
Anonymous wrote:Its for grandparents as much as it is for recruiting down the road. Chill... the tech is here to stay utilize it to connect don't see much harm in that at any age




No one is recruiting your eight year old or watching their F8 clips
Anonymous
Post 01/08/2025 13:41     Subject: Kids and social media

NIL is real and not just a NCAA thing. Watch Money Game on PRIME documenting LSU's embracing all things NIL and how it started with all of them early well before college. Its the new marketplace. I hate it too, but makes not sense staying ignorant about it
Anonymous
Post 01/08/2025 13:23     Subject: Kids and social media

The fact is....there are many accts that are set up and managed by parents to create a brand/following for their kids. It's sad.
Anonymous
Post 01/08/2025 12:54     Subject: Kids and social media

Anonymous wrote:Its for grandparents as much as it is for recruiting down the road. Chill... the tech is here to stay utilize it to connect don't see much harm in that at any age


Anonymous
Post 01/08/2025 12:53     Subject: Kids and social media

Its for grandparents as much as it is for recruiting down the road. Chill... the tech is here to stay utilize it to connect don't see much harm in that at any age
Anonymous
Post 01/07/2025 20:58     Subject: Kids and social media

It would be absurd for those matchups to be scheduled. I’ve seen ECNL vs -R but usually both have bench on ECNL playing most mins to even out time.
Anonymous
Post 01/07/2025 18:57     Subject: Kids and social media

Anonymous wrote:
Anonymous wrote:Social media is singlehandedly killing youth soccer in this country...



I hear you but let's play devils advocate. It could possibly be making it better. For those kids with high hopes and super competitive it may be what drives some of these kids watching their current and potentially future competition putting in work. Also when we were younger the only training vids we had available were Coever coaching vhs tapes lol, now you can pop on and see how your favorite pro or even teammate prepares and trains. Like anything with the internet it can definitely be advantageous and there will always be people that use it incorrectly.



I agree with this post. Only issue I have with these accounts is the disparity in level of play. It isn’t impressive to be ECNL/pre ECNL/MLS Next and play against a third team and post highlights
Anonymous
Post 01/07/2025 17:19     Subject: Kids and social media

If your club, team, training has "elite" in the name it is, with very few exceptions, not elite.
Anonymous
Post 01/07/2025 17:17     Subject: Kids and social media

Anonymous wrote:
Anonymous wrote:
Anonymous wrote:
Anonymous wrote:
Anonymous wrote:
Anonymous wrote:I’m old enough to remember other new technologies that were going to harm kids and be the downfall of society. Video games in the 80s. Before that it was TV. Remember how latch key kids were going to be depressed and forgotten? Turned out it made for a lot of independent capable kids. Social media is here to stay. So is AI. It’s not going to be disastrous. It will be different than how we grew up just like it was different for us.

IDK. Does feel like some are definitely letting it rip from midfield hoping for a clip.


I'm sure some are just like in basketball they're pulling up from half court, baseball going for a grand slam rather than bringing a runner in from 3rd. There's definitely going to be those in every sport looking for likes but that shouldn't create a blanket stigma for every kid on there. The part I like for the game is I've never seen so many American kids focusing on foot skills and technical drills. Will it pan out for the US game in future remains to be determined


I hear you. But I've never seen so many kids that practice on cones in small areas, with their head down and with no pressure. Those same.kids have foot skills that look flashy but in my opinion, most of them can't fully translate them to the field or execute under pressure and absolutely struggle when the ball is not on the ground or when it's messy. Our country needs to start focusing on dynamic practice with unpredictable play, intense pressure and constant decision making if we want to produce higher caliber players. All of these IG drills you see can help to an extent but too many kids just do that and think it's going to get them somewhere on its own. This is the social media effect. My prediction is that in 5 years we will have a wealth of players that can do fancy moves and move their feet quickly but they have low tactical understanding of the game and one dimensional skill sets. It's interesting because as a player progresses to higher levels the marker of quality is how few touches can a player take to get results. Not how many touches can a player take which is what IG is conditioning our players to do. I would much rather see kids getting stuffed making one move and then figuring out how to be successful with that one move than conditioning themselves to take a million touches on the ball no matter what the situation. Sometimes a lot of touches may be needed, but watch any pro league ANYWHERE, and see how many touches pro players are taking when in possession. Not many. There just isn't enough time. But we don't have enough people in our country to educate our youth about the realities of higher levels of the game. But that is a totally different subject.

All these club agnostic trainers videos are hilarious. Sure lots of touches but you don't have to be flashy to be efficient, but your head definitely needs to be up. That's off the topic of parents pimping out their kids though.


All of them claiming to be the most excellent of high level training experiences with only the top players participating! It really isn't off topic because all parents and training groups do is repost each other's post over and over. I get it the content drives new eyes and new participants but it's just absurd.


"High level training" has become what the word "elite" has become in youth soccer. Almost meaningless.
Anonymous
Post 01/07/2025 14:54     Subject: Kids and social media

Anonymous wrote:
Anonymous wrote:
Anonymous wrote:
Anonymous wrote:
Anonymous wrote:I’m old enough to remember other new technologies that were going to harm kids and be the downfall of society. Video games in the 80s. Before that it was TV. Remember how latch key kids were going to be depressed and forgotten? Turned out it made for a lot of independent capable kids. Social media is here to stay. So is AI. It’s not going to be disastrous. It will be different than how we grew up just like it was different for us.

IDK. Does feel like some are definitely letting it rip from midfield hoping for a clip.


I'm sure some are just like in basketball they're pulling up from half court, baseball going for a grand slam rather than bringing a runner in from 3rd. There's definitely going to be those in every sport looking for likes but that shouldn't create a blanket stigma for every kid on there. The part I like for the game is I've never seen so many American kids focusing on foot skills and technical drills. Will it pan out for the US game in future remains to be determined


I hear you. But I've never seen so many kids that practice on cones in small areas, with their head down and with no pressure. Those same.kids have foot skills that look flashy but in my opinion, most of them can't fully translate them to the field or execute under pressure and absolutely struggle when the ball is not on the ground or when it's messy. Our country needs to start focusing on dynamic practice with unpredictable play, intense pressure and constant decision making if we want to produce higher caliber players. All of these IG drills you see can help to an extent but too many kids just do that and think it's going to get them somewhere on its own. This is the social media effect. My prediction is that in 5 years we will have a wealth of players that can do fancy moves and move their feet quickly but they have low tactical understanding of the game and one dimensional skill sets. It's interesting because as a player progresses to higher levels the marker of quality is how few touches can a player take to get results. Not how many touches can a player take which is what IG is conditioning our players to do. I would much rather see kids getting stuffed making one move and then figuring out how to be successful with that one move than conditioning themselves to take a million touches on the ball no matter what the situation. Sometimes a lot of touches may be needed, but watch any pro league ANYWHERE, and see how many touches pro players are taking when in possession. Not many. There just isn't enough time. But we don't have enough people in our country to educate our youth about the realities of higher levels of the game. But that is a totally different subject.

All these club agnostic trainers videos are hilarious. Sure lots of touches but you don't have to be flashy to be efficient, but your head definitely needs to be up. That's off the topic of parents pimping out their kids though.


All of them claiming to be the most excellent of high level training experiences with only the top players participating! It really isn't off topic because all parents and training groups do is repost each other's post over and over. I get it the content drives new eyes and new participants but it's just absurd.