Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Not in 2020. We emailed our coaxhes and said none of our DC have time for Zoom meetings. Basically dared them to challenge our decision. And we are at a big DA club! All of them backed down. 2 of them admitted they were told to do it. Our players are top on their teams. Told them we would be ready to worry about soccer at the end of the year and that no one we knew gives a crap right now about sports. Health, jobs, savings. Not the coaches that coach little kid soccer. Ours are in tremendous shape and not worrying about juggling at home. Feel bad for all the new parents worried their player may be penalized. Told one coach the club was an ass for not sending communications that there was no realistic chance for group training anything in 2020. He agreed.
And I feel sorry for your kids if you think they are incapable of grasping both the fact of the crisis and the necessity of gearing up for life beyond it. But nice not-so-humble-brag! Guessing you are not raising them to be rocket scientists, but that’s fine. The world needs more youth star soccer players getting a full ride to mediocre schools!
Actually, I think he/she probably is raising them to be rocket scientists. Hence, the focus on online school/home learning and other things.
Soccer is a sport that 99% of American kids will not play past HS. I would say about 75% of soccer parents cannot grasp that fact and all of the next Alex Morgan or Messi in their home.
Anonymous wrote:Not in 2020. We emailed our coaxhes and said none of our DC have time for Zoom meetings. Basically dared them to challenge our decision. And we are at a big DA club! All of them backed down. 2 of them admitted they were told to do it. Our players are top on their teams. Told them we would be ready to worry about soccer at the end of the year and that no one we knew gives a crap right now about sports. Health, jobs, savings. Not the coaches that coach little kid soccer. Ours are in tremendous shape and not worrying about juggling at home. Feel bad for all the new parents worried their player may be penalized. Told one coach the club was an ass for not sending communications that there was no realistic chance for group training anything in 2020. He agreed.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Not in 2020. We emailed our coaxhes and said none of our DC have time for Zoom meetings. Basically dared them to challenge our decision. And we are at a big DA club! All of them backed down. 2 of them admitted they were told to do it. Our players are top on their teams. Told them we would be ready to worry about soccer at the end of the year and that no one we knew gives a crap right now about sports. Health, jobs, savings. Not the coaches that coach little kid soccer. Ours are in tremendous shape and not worrying about juggling at home. Feel bad for all the new parents worried their player may be penalized. Told one coach the club was an ass for not sending communications that there was no realistic chance for group training anything in 2020. He agreed.
And I feel sorry for your kids if you think they are incapable of grasping both the fact of the crisis and the necessity of gearing up for life beyond it. But nice not-so-humble-brag! Guessing you are not raising them to be rocket scientists, but that’s fine. The world needs more youth star soccer players getting a full ride to mediocre schools!
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Not in 2020. We emailed our coaxhes and said none of our DC have time for Zoom meetings. Basically dared them to challenge our decision. And we are at a big DA club! All of them backed down. 2 of them admitted they were told to do it. Our players are top on their teams. Told them we would be ready to worry about soccer at the end of the year and that no one we knew gives a crap right now about sports. Health, jobs, savings. Not the coaches that coach little kid soccer. Ours are in tremendous shape and not worrying about juggling at home. Feel bad for all the new parents worried their player may be penalized. Told one coach the club was an ass for not sending communications that there was no realistic chance for group training anything in 2020. He agreed.
And I feel sorry for your kids if you think they are incapable of grasping both the fact of the crisis and the necessity of gearing up for life beyond it. But nice not-so-humble-brag! Guessing you are not raising them to be rocket scientists, but that’s fine. The world needs more youth star soccer players getting a full ride to mediocre schools!
Anonymous wrote:Not in 2020. We emailed our coaxhes and said none of our DC have time for Zoom meetings. Basically dared them to challenge our decision. And we are at a big DA club! All of them backed down. 2 of them admitted they were told to do it. Our players are top on their teams. Told them we would be ready to worry about soccer at the end of the year and that no one we knew gives a crap right now about sports. Health, jobs, savings. Not the coaches that coach little kid soccer. Ours are in tremendous shape and not worrying about juggling at home. Feel bad for all the new parents worried their player may be penalized. Told one coach the club was an ass for not sending communications that there was no realistic chance for group training anything in 2020. He agreed.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:From Singapore via the LA Times:
“Without a vaccine or antiviral drug, we should expect to deal with this virus [for] the long haul.”
https://apple.news/Azt7ahth2SaiM48oQgrgOnA
Of course. I don't think that settles the question. The virus does not disappear while we are locked down. Flattening the curve does not eliminate the problem more generally. And the federal and state governments cannot simply pay Americans (or even 20% of the workforce) to stay home for a year. The markets (and Chinese) cannot finance it, and even if they could, we'd be in debt for the next 20 years. There will be staged exposure and returns to work when testing improves and then we will see how quickly we get to herd immunity. It will take some time but anybody who thinks we are locked in for a year has absolutely no idea how the world works. It is absolutely economically impossible. Whether it is appropriate to spend the next 20 years worth of federal expenditures to lower death from Coronvirus is a different question. It is impossible. But even if it were feasible, what else are we losing by spending all that money to do that, even if we had it? At some point, there are these tradeoffs that nobody wants to make or discuss. They are there whether we like them or not, and cures are not going to drop from the sky in the next 12 months. Pure fantasy.
+1. We'll have the virus around just like any other virus. We hope there's soon a vaccine, we hope maybe folks build up immunity, at least to this strain, but it's not going away. And flattening the curve isn't to keep everyone from getting the virus, it's to keep everyone from getting it at the same time. If you look at the models, there's none where it suddenly just goes away, it is just dragging out.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:From Singapore via the LA Times:
“Without a vaccine or antiviral drug, we should expect to deal with this virus [for] the long haul.”
https://apple.news/Azt7ahth2SaiM48oQgrgOnA
Of course. I don't think that settles the question. The virus does not disappear while we are locked down. Flattening the curve does not eliminate the problem more generally. And the federal and state governments cannot simply pay Americans (or even 20% of the workforce) to stay home for a year. The markets (and Chinese) cannot finance it, and even if they could, we'd be in debt for the next 20 years. There will be staged exposure and returns to work when testing improves and then we will see how quickly we get to herd immunity. It will take some time but anybody who thinks we are locked in for a year has absolutely no idea how the world works. It is absolutely economically impossible. Whether it is appropriate to spend the next 20 years worth of federal expenditures to lower death from Coronvirus is a different question. It is impossible. But even if it were feasible, what else are we losing by spending all that money to do that, even if we had it? At some point, there are these tradeoffs that nobody wants to make or discuss. They are there whether we like them or not, and cures are not going to drop from the sky in the next 12 months. Pure fantasy.
Anonymous wrote:Fall 2021
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Soccer and other youth sports will bramble to re-start until Spring 2021. Because of Spring 2020 was cancelled, clubs will not charge any fees to families that had already covered their fees for the full 19/20 program. My family paid full fees for the 19/20 program for 3 kids. If coaches are not being paid then clubs have the extra money they can keep for next Spring. If coaches are being paid, then clubs have the extra money to cover tournaments and league games for Spring 2021.
Why guess? Do you have something else your kids need to do that requires you to be certain it does not start until Spring 2021? Unless you are a coach or a club, it is pointless to try to guess when it happens. The variance on these estimates will be nuts.
Something else? Yes my kids need to be healthy. If it’s going a take one year for them to go back to do normal sports again then that’s what is going a take. A vaccine will be the only remedy to this crisis. Who knows, a vaccine may already exists and this is just hidden to all of us, as complications and prevention measures were. This is a war - affecting economy, killing population, harming the weakest ( health system). Who stand up? The one with the advanced epidemiological technology.
Who’ll stand up? I meant.

Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Soccer and other youth sports will bramble to re-start until Spring 2021. Because of Spring 2020 was cancelled, clubs will not charge any fees to families that had already covered their fees for the full 19/20 program. My family paid full fees for the 19/20 program for 3 kids. If coaches are not being paid then clubs have the extra money they can keep for next Spring. If coaches are being paid, then clubs have the extra money to cover tournaments and league games for Spring 2021.
Why guess? Do you have something else your kids need to do that requires you to be certain it does not start until Spring 2021? Unless you are a coach or a club, it is pointless to try to guess when it happens. The variance on these estimates will be nuts.
Something else? Yes my kids need to be healthy. If it’s going a take one year for them to go back to do normal sports again then that’s what is going a take. A vaccine will be the only remedy to this crisis. Who knows, a vaccine may already exists and this is just hidden to all of us, as complications and prevention measures were. This is a war - affecting economy, killing population, harming the weakest ( health system). Who stand up? The one with the advanced epidemiological technology.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Soccer and other youth sports will bramble to re-start until Spring 2021. Because of Spring 2020 was cancelled, clubs will not charge any fees to families that had already covered their fees for the full 19/20 program. My family paid full fees for the 19/20 program for 3 kids. If coaches are not being paid then clubs have the extra money they can keep for next Spring. If coaches are being paid, then clubs have the extra money to cover tournaments and league games for Spring 2021.
Why guess? Do you have something else your kids need to do that requires you to be certain it does not start until Spring 2021? Unless you are a coach or a club, it is pointless to try to guess when it happens. The variance on these estimates will be nuts.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:From Singapore via the LA Times:
“Without a vaccine or antiviral drug, we should expect to deal with this virus [for] the long haul.”
https://apple.news/Azt7ahth2SaiM48oQgrgOnA
Of course. I don't think that settles the question. The virus does not disappear while we are locked down. Flattening the curve does not eliminate the problem more generally. And the federal and state governments cannot simply pay Americans (or even 20% of the workforce) to stay home for a year. The markets (and Chinese) cannot finance it, and even if they could, we'd be in debt for the next 20 years. There will be staged exposure and returns to work when testing improves and then we will see how quickly we get to herd immunity. It will take some time but anybody who thinks we are locked in for a year has absolutely no idea how the world works. It is absolutely economically impossible. Whether it is appropriate to spend the next 20 years worth of federal expenditures to lower death from Coronvirus is a different question. It is impossible. But even if it were feasible, what else are we losing by spending all that money to do that, even if we had it? At some point, there are these tradeoffs that nobody wants to make or discuss. They are there whether we like them or not, and cures are not going to drop from the sky in the next 12 months. Pure fantasy.
Anonymous wrote:From Singapore via the LA Times:
“Without a vaccine or antiviral drug, we should expect to deal with this virus [for] the long haul.”
https://apple.news/Azt7ahth2SaiM48oQgrgOnA