Anonymous wrote:I’m laughing that an unexpected outcome will be my kid becoming a better basketball player by the end of this because we have a hoop and there’s not much else to do.
Anonymous wrote:The first Friday in late March since 2013 that one of us didn’t have to drive or pick up from a travel soccer practice.
Party!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!! WoohooOpen the 2nd bottle ...
Open the 2nd bottle ...Anonymous wrote:Be realistic, we are likely entering into an economic depression. Children may not quit, parents will have to quit travel soccer. HS and public schools will take over the program if they can afford it. Children will play unstructured soccer. The pretty side of this sport is that all kids need is a (sphere shape) ball to play.
Anonymous wrote:NP here. I don't think the OP is sending 2 hours of footage. It probably took 2 hours to get 30 or so minutes of footage. And I don't see anything weird about it. My kids coach put out a challenge to the team; the best training videos receive a prize. He's offering 1st, 2nd, and 3rd place prizes.Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:it depends on your kid. If I was to bring this up to my kid, he would freak out.
I spent 2 hours on the field today filming him to send to his coach. We have a curriculum for the next few weeks.
sorry but this is cray cray
I am an adult, so you need to translate (and then tell us all the sane things you are doing). And please, no emojis.
Being realistic.
You sound like a nut job. Doubtful coach will watch that amazing footage.
And you sound like my children. I agree on the footage but grow up please.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:You are right. There will be a whole large portion of the population that will not be able to afford soccer next year. Just talked to my dad who owns a small business. Everyone is worried about making payroll this week and next. A lot of businesses are putting people on unemployment. There will not be the resources next year for a lot to play.
Luxury purchases are going to suffer greatly and expensive youth sports are a luxury. I would think more current high end club players will be playing school sports next year and at the younger ages they will be playing in less expensive, locally focused leagues.
Anonymous wrote:You are right. There will be a whole large portion of the population that will not be able to afford soccer next year. Just talked to my dad who owns a small business. Everyone is worried about making payroll this week and next. A lot of businesses are putting people on unemployment. There will not be the resources next year for a lot to play.