Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:I should add second part.. for girl parents who have a girl that can dominate in physical direct soccer, what club has developed and embraced that style (while of course working technical skills too) ?
Not a club- older brothers. The only way it can truly be taught, lol.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:I should add second part.. for girl parents who have a girl that can dominate in physical direct soccer, what club has developed and embraced that style (while of course working technical skills too) ?
Not a club- older brothers. The only way it can truly be taught, lol.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:I have a graduated boy who played travel from U9-U19 and a girl currently playing U15.
The boys in general play much more physically than the girls and another thing I have noticed is that refs call games much differently for boys than girls. They let a lot of the physicality play out in the boys games but in the girls games, one player puts another on the ground and they almost always call it.
Maybe your daughter's coaches see her as a liability with that style of play and they want her to be more of a smart tactical player than a physical player to save them from all of the fouls and penalty kicks.
No offense, but what level are we talking about? ECNL (G) is VERY physical and refs lot A LOT go.
LOL! Not physical at all compared to the boys side
Exactly - they might be physical compared to lower level girls teams but the physicality and foul-calling are completely different when comparing boys v girls.
We are watching different games. Do you actually have an ECNL level girl & MLS boy near the same age? Refs let a TON of shit go in ECNL (North Atlantic if it matters)
Both of mine are in ECNL/ECNL-R and I concur that girls and boys have a much different level of physicality and different tolerance for fouls. I've seen my son get flipped completely off his feet and laid out and the refs make the "play on" signal and my daughter so much as touches another player that goes down and it's an automatic free kick.
Anonymous wrote:I should add second part.. for girl parents who have a girl that can dominate in physical direct soccer, what club has developed and embraced that style (while of course working technical skills too) ?
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:I have a graduated boy who played travel from U9-U19 and a girl currently playing U15.
The boys in general play much more physically than the girls and another thing I have noticed is that refs call games much differently for boys than girls. They let a lot of the physicality play out in the boys games but in the girls games, one player puts another on the ground and they almost always call it.
Maybe your daughter's coaches see her as a liability with that style of play and they want her to be more of a smart tactical player than a physical player to save them from all of the fouls and penalty kicks.
No offense, but what level are we talking about? ECNL (G) is VERY physical and refs lot A LOT go.
LOL! Not physical at all compared to the boys side
Exactly - they might be physical compared to lower level girls teams but the physicality and foul-calling are completely different when comparing boys v girls.
We are watching different games. Do you actually have an ECNL level girl & MLS boy near the same age? Refs let a TON of shit go in ECNL (North Atlantic if it matters)
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:I have a graduated boy who played travel from U9-U19 and a girl currently playing U15.
The boys in general play much more physically than the girls and another thing I have noticed is that refs call games much differently for boys than girls. They let a lot of the physicality play out in the boys games but in the girls games, one player puts another on the ground and they almost always call it.
Maybe your daughter's coaches see her as a liability with that style of play and they want her to be more of a smart tactical player than a physical player to save them from all of the fouls and penalty kicks.
No offense, but what level are we talking about? ECNL (G) is VERY physical and refs lot A LOT go.
LOL! Not physical at all compared to the boys side
Exactly - they might be physical compared to lower level girls teams but the physicality and foul-calling are completely different when comparing boys v girls.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:I have a graduated boy who played travel from U9-U19 and a girl currently playing U15.
The boys in general play much more physically than the girls and another thing I have noticed is that refs call games much differently for boys than girls. They let a lot of the physicality play out in the boys games but in the girls games, one player puts another on the ground and they almost always call it.
Maybe your daughter's coaches see her as a liability with that style of play and they want her to be more of a smart tactical player than a physical player to save them from all of the fouls and penalty kicks.
No offense, but what level are we talking about? ECNL (G) is VERY physical and refs lot A LOT go.
LOL! Not physical at all compared to the boys side
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:I have a graduated boy who played travel from U9-U19 and a girl currently playing U15.
The boys in general play much more physically than the girls and another thing I have noticed is that refs call games much differently for boys than girls. They let a lot of the physicality play out in the boys games but in the girls games, one player puts another on the ground and they almost always call it.
Maybe your daughter's coaches see her as a liability with that style of play and they want her to be more of a smart tactical player than a physical player to save them from all of the fouls and penalty kicks.
No offense, but what level are we talking about? ECNL (G) is VERY physical and refs lot A LOT go.