FPYCparent wrote:My apologies as I didn't want to "overly" imply that any true tiering was going on prior to the U13 year. I not trying to claim to be all-knowing when it comes to NCSL or anything else. For Fall 2018, I only noticed that NCSL seems to have A/B teams from multiple clubs grouped in one GU11 division, while C/D teams from those same clubs are grouped in another GU11 division. It just appears that the divisions with A/B teams **may** offer a higher level of play than the divisions with C and lower teams from those same clubs. Again, I fully realize that this is not full-blown, all-out NCSL tiering.
I'll offer the following from http://ncsl-soccer.com/division-structure:
GU11 Div C (10 teams) has Arlington Blue, Great Falls-Reston United, McLean Green, MSI Academy White, SYC Orange
GU11 Div G (10) has Great Fall-Reston Arsenal, Loudoun White, McLean Gold, MSI Academy Green, Vienna Black
GU11 Div P (8) has Arlington Black, SYC White
GU11 Div Y (8) has Great Falls Spirit Pre-Academy, Loudoun Silver, Vienna White
Is it safe to say that Arlington Blue > Black; GFR United > Arsenal > Spirit Pre-Academy, McLean Green > Gold, MSI Academy White > Green, SYC Orange > White … and so on? (Yes, I realize that some of the clubs have their true top teams some place other than NCSL.)
Anonymous wrote:My understanding is that NCSL does not do seeding and have tiered divisions for younger age teams.
FPYCparent wrote:Let me see if I can rephrase my comment regarding 2008s bearing the brunt of the age grouping change.
I believe 2008 squads at "small" clubs (like FPYC) are bearing the brunt of the rule change more than others. Kids born in the first half of 2008 had the option of starting travel soccer at U9 with kids born in the second half of 2007. Once the rule went into effect, those kids likely stayed with their team (now labeled 2007s). We can call that playing up now for the 2008s playing with the 2007s, but these kids were just staying with their current team. So, when the time came for the 2008s to start travel at U9 (after the rule change), the pool of potential players at a small club was probably limited to kids born in the second half of 2008. At bigger clubs, there were probably a ton of kids born in the first half of 2008 that started U9 travel with 2007s. Aside from A-team players staying with a 2007 group, a big club could probably field full 2008 squads with players who already had a year's worth of travel experience. To my untrained eye, having a team full players with an extra year of travel (at U9 through U11) can make you pretty dominant, particularly against teams from smaller clubs that simply don't have as large a pool of potential players. For tournaments, big clubs can stack some of their teams with players that qualify by age. This is something smaller clubs simply cannot do. We can only play with the ones we've got!
Of the 15 rostered players on this FPYC 2008 team, I believe there is one with May birthday who started with the team at U9. For the U10 year, I think we've added a January birthday from another other club. Two other players with first-half-of-2008 birthdays just joined this team for Fall 2018 when their 2007 FPYC team abruptly disbanded after the spring. The remaining 11 all have birthdays after July 1st. FPYC didn't garner enough interest to field a 2009 team. There is a 2010 team that's just completed its first month of games.
…
As far as NCSL division alignment at U11, when one division has A teams from two or more clubs and another division has the B/C teams from those same clubs, I think it's natural to assume that the division with multiple A teams is higher/better. For this particular FPYC 2008 team, we're currently grouped with the B/C teams from those larger clubs. At this point, we can only hope that the girls continue to develop and maybe win a good share of tournament games. EDP can wait.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:RantingSoccerDad wrote:Anonymous wrote:Also with FPYC. EDP is pretty much the only higher league you’d be able to get into, and if I’m not mistaken you have to have won your division.
That doesn't sound right. I've seen tons of teams go from NCSL Division 1 to EDP in one year.
It's funny in a way. All these teams decide they've outgrown NCSL, so they go to EDP -- to play each other anyway.
Sorry, I should’ve specified. This team was in Division 2, not 1.
You don't need to have won any division to enter EDP. NCSL and EDP are not in any hierarchy together.
FPYCparent wrote:Let me see if I can rephrase my comment regarding 2008s bearing the brunt of the age grouping change.
I believe 2008 squads at "small" clubs (like FPYC) are bearing the brunt of the rule change more than others. Kids born in the first half of 2008 had the option of starting travel soccer at U9 with kids born in the second half of 2007. Once the rule went into effect, those kids likely stayed with their team (now labeled 2007s). We can call that playing up now for the 2008s playing with the 2007s, but these kids were just staying with their current team. So, when the time came for the 2008s to start travel at U9 (after the rule change), the pool of potential players at a small club was probably limited to kids born in the second half of 2008. At bigger clubs, there were probably a ton of kids born in the first half of 2008 that started U9 travel with 2007s. Aside from A-team players staying with a 2007 group, a big club could probably field full 2008 squads with players who already had a year's worth of travel experience. To my untrained eye, having a team full players with an extra year of travel (at U9 through U11) can make you pretty dominant, particularly against teams from smaller clubs that simply don't have as large a pool of potential players. For tournaments, big clubs can stack some of their teams with players that qualify by age. This is something smaller clubs simply cannot do. We can only play with the ones we've got!
Of the 15 rostered players on this FPYC 2008 team, I believe there is one with May birthday who started with the team at U9. For the U10 year, I think we've added a January birthday from another other club. Two other players with first-half-of-2008 birthdays just joined this team for Fall 2018 when their 2007 FPYC team abruptly disbanded after the spring. The remaining 11 all have birthdays after July 1st. FPYC didn't garner enough interest to field a 2009 team. There is a 2010 team that's just completed its first month of games.
…
As far as NCSL division alignment at U11, when one division has A teams from two or more clubs and another division has the B/C teams from those same clubs, I think it's natural to assume that the division with multiple A teams is higher/better. For this particular FPYC 2008 team, we're currently grouped with the B/C teams from those larger clubs. At this point, we can only hope that the girls continue to develop and maybe win a good share of tournament games. EDP can wait.
FPYCparent wrote:Let me see if I can rephrase my comment regarding 2008s bearing the brunt of the age grouping change.
I believe 2008 squads at "small" clubs (like FPYC) are bearing the brunt of the rule change more than others. Kids born in the first half of 2008 had the option of starting travel soccer at U9 with kids born in the second half of 2007. Once the rule went into effect, those kids likely stayed with their team (now labeled 2007s). We can call that playing up now for the 2008s playing with the 2007s, but these kids were just staying with their current team. So, when the time came for the 2008s to start travel at U9 (after the rule change), the pool of potential players at a small club was probably limited to kids born in the second half of 2008. At bigger clubs, there were probably a ton of kids born in the first half of 2008 that started U9 travel with 2007s. Aside from A-team players staying with a 2007 group, a big club could probably field full 2008 squads with players who already had a year's worth of travel experience. To my untrained eye, having a team full players with an extra year of travel (at U9 through U11) can make you pretty dominant, particularly against teams from smaller clubs that simply don't have as large a pool of potential players. For tournaments, big clubs can stack some of their teams with players that qualify by age. This is something smaller clubs simply cannot do. We can only play with the ones we've got!
Of the 15 rostered players on this FPYC 2008 team, I believe there is one with May birthday who started with the team at U9. For the U10 year, I think we've added a January birthday from another other club. Two other players with first-half-of-2008 birthdays just joined this team for Fall 2018 when their 2007 FPYC team abruptly disbanded after the spring. The remaining 11 all have birthdays after July 1st. FPYC didn't garner enough interest to field a 2009 team. There is a 2010 team that's just completed its first month of games.
…
As far as NCSL division alignment at U11, when one division has A teams from two or more clubs and another division has the B/C teams from those same clubs, I think it's natural to assume that the division with multiple A teams is higher/better. For this particular FPYC 2008 team, we're currently grouped with the B/C teams from those larger clubs. At this point, we can only hope that the girls continue to develop and maybe win a good share of tournament games. EDP can wait.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Thinking of NCSL blowouts...NCSL needs to look at teams from clubs with DA when they become U12. For example, let's say Arlington...at U11 Arlington Red and White CCL, Blue team in NCSL and they do well. Now, the DA teams start at U12 and most of the Red and White kids go DA and that Blue team basically becomes the Red team, the Black team basically becomes the White team, and the Gold team basically becomes the Blue team but NCSL still puts the Blue team in Division 1 based on the name of the team and not the quality of the team. Maybe these DA clubs should communicate this to NCSL prior to the division structure being released. Maybe NCSL should realized it without being told. I don't know. This happened with PWSI last year and I think it's happening to Arlington Blue and Loudoun White this year. I just hate to see teams get blown out.
Shouldn’t the DA cast a wider net than a single team ? If DA was consolidating talent then you might see a couple players from Arlington red make DA, not the whole team. That’s a joke.
No it is not: Arlington, as all DAs, has two teams at the U12 level, which explains why many kids from the U11 Red team make it there.