Anonymous wrote:From wiki, "The term relative age effect (RAE), also known as birthdate effect or birth date effect, is used to describe a bias, evident in the upper echelons of youth sport and academia, where participation is higher amongst those born earlier in the relevant selection period (and lower for those born later in the selection period) than would be expected from the distribution of births."Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Stated another way, SY solves RAE for certain players and creates negative RAE for certain players compared to BY.Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Age cutoffs completely change RAE impacts for each kid. If this wasn't true, nobody would care about the change.Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Sucks to Suck summer families. My kid was born in November has been doing just fine. Get a private trainer and tell them to work hard and it will workout. That's what you told us in 2016.
Life's not fair figure it out.
My September kid was told he wasn’t “rangy” enough…. Fast forward to the new age cutoff 10 months later now he’s 5 inches taller and looks plenty “rangy”.
It’s all about the RAE.
Yeah and that’s why all the BY people are freaking out…
🫢 who is going to tell PP that age cutoffs don’t change RAE?
The BIG question that we're about to see play out is how this all affects kids who have played years in BY. Chances are the older you are, the less of an impact, especially if you're already playing 11v11. But it's undeniable that strong SeptQ4 players will have opportunities this year and next as clubs look for an edge (and the opportunity MIGHT be playing up). RAE, with speed, size and coach attention, will have a greater impact the younger you go.
BY doesn’t change or solve RAE. It just shifts to affect a different group of players. BY does reduce the number of trapped players which is why it’s being done. RAE has nothing to do with it.
Sorry meant to put SY
SY doesn’t change or solve RAE. It just shifts to affect a different group of players. SY does reduce the number of trapped players which is why it’s being done. RAE has nothing to do with it.
There is potential for a change beyond just sliding the window. If Sep-Dec are currently quitting, not entering, or otherwise disadvantaged in selection in the sport at a higher rate under BY than May-Aug would under SY, the birthdate distribution will be more imbalanced under BY than it would be under SY. The theory is that this is currently happening because of trapped player issues and the social mismatch across grade levels. As pointed out many, many times in this thread, playing with friends from school is likely to be a bigger motivation to play for players identified as worse (who are more likely to be Q4) than for players identified as better (who are more likely to be Q1). RAE would continue to exist to the extent it depends on the physical/emotional development advantages, which are of course heavily correlated with true age, because it's still just a 12-month window. But there is likely a component causing RAE in the current system that is *not* strictly physical development. It may be hard to pin down an exact definition of "relative age effect," but it's most commonly used as a label for the statistical bias in the group toward the birthdays sooner after the cutoff, i.e., an outcome distribution. Physical development is just one component to explain that bias, albeit the most common one, but there could very well be social or structural explanations as well.
This doesn't mean RAE is the reason for the change, and the change doesn't wholly "solve" it, but it may cause a change in RAE which many would consider "lessening" RAE.
You’re overthinking things. Participation and RAE are not connected. This is evidenced by participation drops in all sports regardless of age cutoff. Some sports like tennis, which have rolling age cutoffs with two year age bands mirror the same participation drop offs as all other sports, at the same ages.
Nice thought experiment, but the data all says otherwise.
Not sure why people have such a hard time grasping what RAE is and instead think of it as some sort of negative pressure or externality, which it isn’t, instead of an observed phenomenon.
Anonymous wrote:And the bias affects the probability of participation based on a kid's birthdate which will change with the age cutoff change.Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:From wiki, "The term relative age effect (RAE), also known as birthdate effect or birth date effect, is used to describe a bias, evident in the upper echelons of youth sport and academia, where participation is higher amongst those born earlier in the relevant selection period (and lower for those born later in the selection period) than would be expected from the distribution of births."Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Stated another way, SY solves RAE for certain players and creates negative RAE for certain players compared to BY.Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Age cutoffs completely change RAE impacts for each kid. If this wasn't true, nobody would care about the change.Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Sucks to Suck summer families. My kid was born in November has been doing just fine. Get a private trainer and tell them to work hard and it will workout. That's what you told us in 2016.
Life's not fair figure it out.
My September kid was told he wasn’t “rangy” enough…. Fast forward to the new age cutoff 10 months later now he’s 5 inches taller and looks plenty “rangy”.
It’s all about the RAE.
Yeah and that’s why all the BY people are freaking out…
🫢 who is going to tell PP that age cutoffs don’t change RAE?
The BIG question that we're about to see play out is how this all affects kids who have played years in BY. Chances are the older you are, the less of an impact, especially if you're already playing 11v11. But it's undeniable that strong SeptQ4 players will have opportunities this year and next as clubs look for an edge (and the opportunity MIGHT be playing up). RAE, with speed, size and coach attention, will have a greater impact the younger you go.
BY doesn’t change or solve RAE. It just shifts to affect a different group of players. BY does reduce the number of trapped players which is why it’s being done. RAE has nothing to do with it.
Sorry meant to put SY
SY doesn’t change or solve RAE. It just shifts to affect a different group of players. SY does reduce the number of trapped players which is why it’s being done. RAE has nothing to do with it.
There is potential for a change beyond just sliding the window. If Sep-Dec are currently quitting, not entering, or otherwise disadvantaged in selection in the sport at a higher rate under BY than May-Aug would under SY, the birthdate distribution will be more imbalanced under BY than it would be under SY. The theory is that this is currently happening because of trapped player issues and the social mismatch across grade levels. As pointed out many, many times in this thread, playing with friends from school is likely to be a bigger motivation to play for players identified as worse (who are more likely to be Q4) than for players identified as better (who are more likely to be Q1). RAE would continue to exist to the extent it depends on the physical/emotional development advantages, which are of course heavily correlated with true age, because it's still just a 12-month window. But there is likely a component causing RAE in the current system that is *not* strictly physical development. It may be hard to pin down an exact definition of "relative age effect," but it's most commonly used as a label for the statistical bias in the group toward the birthdays sooner after the cutoff, i.e., an outcome distribution. Physical development is just one component to explain that bias, albeit the most common one, but there could very well be social or structural explanations as well.
This doesn't mean RAE is the reason for the change, and the change doesn't wholly "solve" it, but it may cause a change in RAE which many would consider "lessening" RAE.
You’re overthinking things. Participation and RAE are not connected. This is evidenced by participation drops in all sports regardless of age cutoff. Some sports like tennis, which have rolling age cutoffs with two year age bands mirror the same participation drop offs as all other sports, at the same ages.
Nice thought experiment, but the data all says otherwise.
Not sure why people have such a hard time grasping what RAE is and instead think of it as some sort of negative pressure or externality, which it isn’t, instead of an observed phenomenon.
The bias for those born earlier will still happen. It’ll just happen for the Sep-Dec kids instead of Jan-Mar. It’s not hard to understand.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:From wiki, "The term relative age effect (RAE), also known as birthdate effect or birth date effect, is used to describe a bias, evident in the upper echelons of youth sport and academia, where participation is higher amongst those born earlier in the relevant selection period (and lower for those born later in the selection period) than would be expected from the distribution of births."Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Stated another way, SY solves RAE for certain players and creates negative RAE for certain players compared to BY.Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Age cutoffs completely change RAE impacts for each kid. If this wasn't true, nobody would care about the change.Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Sucks to Suck summer families. My kid was born in November has been doing just fine. Get a private trainer and tell them to work hard and it will workout. That's what you told us in 2016.
Life's not fair figure it out.
My September kid was told he wasn’t “rangy” enough…. Fast forward to the new age cutoff 10 months later now he’s 5 inches taller and looks plenty “rangy”.
It’s all about the RAE.
Yeah and that’s why all the BY people are freaking out…
🫢 who is going to tell PP that age cutoffs don’t change RAE?
The BIG question that we're about to see play out is how this all affects kids who have played years in BY. Chances are the older you are, the less of an impact, especially if you're already playing 11v11. But it's undeniable that strong SeptQ4 players will have opportunities this year and next as clubs look for an edge (and the opportunity MIGHT be playing up). RAE, with speed, size and coach attention, will have a greater impact the younger you go.
BY doesn’t change or solve RAE. It just shifts to affect a different group of players. BY does reduce the number of trapped players which is why it’s being done. RAE has nothing to do with it.
Sorry meant to put SY
SY doesn’t change or solve RAE. It just shifts to affect a different group of players. SY does reduce the number of trapped players which is why it’s being done. RAE has nothing to do with it.
There is potential for a change beyond just sliding the window. If Sep-Dec are currently quitting, not entering, or otherwise disadvantaged in selection in the sport at a higher rate under BY than May-Aug would under SY, the birthdate distribution will be more imbalanced under BY than it would be under SY. The theory is that this is currently happening because of trapped player issues and the social mismatch across grade levels. As pointed out many, many times in this thread, playing with friends from school is likely to be a bigger motivation to play for players identified as worse (who are more likely to be Q4) than for players identified as better (who are more likely to be Q1). RAE would continue to exist to the extent it depends on the physical/emotional development advantages, which are of course heavily correlated with true age, because it's still just a 12-month window. But there is likely a component causing RAE in the current system that is *not* strictly physical development. It may be hard to pin down an exact definition of "relative age effect," but it's most commonly used as a label for the statistical bias in the group toward the birthdays sooner after the cutoff, i.e., an outcome distribution. Physical development is just one component to explain that bias, albeit the most common one, but there could very well be social or structural explanations as well.
This doesn't mean RAE is the reason for the change, and the change doesn't wholly "solve" it, but it may cause a change in RAE which many would consider "lessening" RAE.
You’re overthinking things. Participation and RAE are not connected. This is evidenced by participation drops in all sports regardless of age cutoff. Some sports like tennis, which have rolling age cutoffs with two year age bands mirror the same participation drop offs as all other sports, at the same ages.
Nice thought experiment, but the data all says otherwise.
Not sure why people have such a hard time grasping what RAE is and instead think of it as some sort of negative pressure or externality, which it isn’t, instead of an observed phenomenon.
The bias for those born earlier will still happen. It’ll just happen for the Sep-Dec kids instead of Jan-Mar. It’s not hard to understand.
And the bias affects the probability of participation based on a kid's birthdate which will change with the age cutoff change.Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:From wiki, "The term relative age effect (RAE), also known as birthdate effect or birth date effect, is used to describe a bias, evident in the upper echelons of youth sport and academia, where participation is higher amongst those born earlier in the relevant selection period (and lower for those born later in the selection period) than would be expected from the distribution of births."Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Stated another way, SY solves RAE for certain players and creates negative RAE for certain players compared to BY.Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Age cutoffs completely change RAE impacts for each kid. If this wasn't true, nobody would care about the change.Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Sucks to Suck summer families. My kid was born in November has been doing just fine. Get a private trainer and tell them to work hard and it will workout. That's what you told us in 2016.
Life's not fair figure it out.
My September kid was told he wasn’t “rangy” enough…. Fast forward to the new age cutoff 10 months later now he’s 5 inches taller and looks plenty “rangy”.
It’s all about the RAE.
Yeah and that’s why all the BY people are freaking out…
🫢 who is going to tell PP that age cutoffs don’t change RAE?
The BIG question that we're about to see play out is how this all affects kids who have played years in BY. Chances are the older you are, the less of an impact, especially if you're already playing 11v11. But it's undeniable that strong SeptQ4 players will have opportunities this year and next as clubs look for an edge (and the opportunity MIGHT be playing up). RAE, with speed, size and coach attention, will have a greater impact the younger you go.
BY doesn’t change or solve RAE. It just shifts to affect a different group of players. BY does reduce the number of trapped players which is why it’s being done. RAE has nothing to do with it.
Sorry meant to put SY
SY doesn’t change or solve RAE. It just shifts to affect a different group of players. SY does reduce the number of trapped players which is why it’s being done. RAE has nothing to do with it.
There is potential for a change beyond just sliding the window. If Sep-Dec are currently quitting, not entering, or otherwise disadvantaged in selection in the sport at a higher rate under BY than May-Aug would under SY, the birthdate distribution will be more imbalanced under BY than it would be under SY. The theory is that this is currently happening because of trapped player issues and the social mismatch across grade levels. As pointed out many, many times in this thread, playing with friends from school is likely to be a bigger motivation to play for players identified as worse (who are more likely to be Q4) than for players identified as better (who are more likely to be Q1). RAE would continue to exist to the extent it depends on the physical/emotional development advantages, which are of course heavily correlated with true age, because it's still just a 12-month window. But there is likely a component causing RAE in the current system that is *not* strictly physical development. It may be hard to pin down an exact definition of "relative age effect," but it's most commonly used as a label for the statistical bias in the group toward the birthdays sooner after the cutoff, i.e., an outcome distribution. Physical development is just one component to explain that bias, albeit the most common one, but there could very well be social or structural explanations as well.
This doesn't mean RAE is the reason for the change, and the change doesn't wholly "solve" it, but it may cause a change in RAE which many would consider "lessening" RAE.
You’re overthinking things. Participation and RAE are not connected. This is evidenced by participation drops in all sports regardless of age cutoff. Some sports like tennis, which have rolling age cutoffs with two year age bands mirror the same participation drop offs as all other sports, at the same ages.
Nice thought experiment, but the data all says otherwise.
Not sure why people have such a hard time grasping what RAE is and instead think of it as some sort of negative pressure or externality, which it isn’t, instead of an observed phenomenon.
The bias for those born earlier will still happen. It’ll just happen for the Sep-Dec kids instead of Jan-Mar. It’s not hard to understand.
Anonymous wrote:From wiki, "The term relative age effect (RAE), also known as birthdate effect or birth date effect, is used to describe a bias, evident in the upper echelons of youth sport and academia, where participation is higher amongst those born earlier in the relevant selection period (and lower for those born later in the selection period) than would be expected from the distribution of births."Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Stated another way, SY solves RAE for certain players and creates negative RAE for certain players compared to BY.Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Age cutoffs completely change RAE impacts for each kid. If this wasn't true, nobody would care about the change.Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Sucks to Suck summer families. My kid was born in November has been doing just fine. Get a private trainer and tell them to work hard and it will workout. That's what you told us in 2016.
Life's not fair figure it out.
My September kid was told he wasn’t “rangy” enough…. Fast forward to the new age cutoff 10 months later now he’s 5 inches taller and looks plenty “rangy”.
It’s all about the RAE.
Yeah and that’s why all the BY people are freaking out…
🫢 who is going to tell PP that age cutoffs don’t change RAE?
The BIG question that we're about to see play out is how this all affects kids who have played years in BY. Chances are the older you are, the less of an impact, especially if you're already playing 11v11. But it's undeniable that strong SeptQ4 players will have opportunities this year and next as clubs look for an edge (and the opportunity MIGHT be playing up). RAE, with speed, size and coach attention, will have a greater impact the younger you go.
BY doesn’t change or solve RAE. It just shifts to affect a different group of players. BY does reduce the number of trapped players which is why it’s being done. RAE has nothing to do with it.
Sorry meant to put SY
SY doesn’t change or solve RAE. It just shifts to affect a different group of players. SY does reduce the number of trapped players which is why it’s being done. RAE has nothing to do with it.
There is potential for a change beyond just sliding the window. If Sep-Dec are currently quitting, not entering, or otherwise disadvantaged in selection in the sport at a higher rate under BY than May-Aug would under SY, the birthdate distribution will be more imbalanced under BY than it would be under SY. The theory is that this is currently happening because of trapped player issues and the social mismatch across grade levels. As pointed out many, many times in this thread, playing with friends from school is likely to be a bigger motivation to play for players identified as worse (who are more likely to be Q4) than for players identified as better (who are more likely to be Q1). RAE would continue to exist to the extent it depends on the physical/emotional development advantages, which are of course heavily correlated with true age, because it's still just a 12-month window. But there is likely a component causing RAE in the current system that is *not* strictly physical development. It may be hard to pin down an exact definition of "relative age effect," but it's most commonly used as a label for the statistical bias in the group toward the birthdays sooner after the cutoff, i.e., an outcome distribution. Physical development is just one component to explain that bias, albeit the most common one, but there could very well be social or structural explanations as well.
This doesn't mean RAE is the reason for the change, and the change doesn't wholly "solve" it, but it may cause a change in RAE which many would consider "lessening" RAE.
You’re overthinking things. Participation and RAE are not connected. This is evidenced by participation drops in all sports regardless of age cutoff. Some sports like tennis, which have rolling age cutoffs with two year age bands mirror the same participation drop offs as all other sports, at the same ages.
Nice thought experiment, but the data all says otherwise.
Not sure why people have such a hard time grasping what RAE is and instead think of it as some sort of negative pressure or externality, which it isn’t, instead of an observed phenomenon.
From wiki, "The term relative age effect (RAE), also known as birthdate effect or birth date effect, is used to describe a bias, evident in the upper echelons of youth sport and academia, where participation is higher amongst those born earlier in the relevant selection period (and lower for those born later in the selection period) than would be expected from the distribution of births."Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Stated another way, SY solves RAE for certain players and creates negative RAE for certain players compared to BY.Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Age cutoffs completely change RAE impacts for each kid. If this wasn't true, nobody would care about the change.Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Sucks to Suck summer families. My kid was born in November has been doing just fine. Get a private trainer and tell them to work hard and it will workout. That's what you told us in 2016.
Life's not fair figure it out.
My September kid was told he wasn’t “rangy” enough…. Fast forward to the new age cutoff 10 months later now he’s 5 inches taller and looks plenty “rangy”.
It’s all about the RAE.
Yeah and that’s why all the BY people are freaking out…
🫢 who is going to tell PP that age cutoffs don’t change RAE?
The BIG question that we're about to see play out is how this all affects kids who have played years in BY. Chances are the older you are, the less of an impact, especially if you're already playing 11v11. But it's undeniable that strong SeptQ4 players will have opportunities this year and next as clubs look for an edge (and the opportunity MIGHT be playing up). RAE, with speed, size and coach attention, will have a greater impact the younger you go.
BY doesn’t change or solve RAE. It just shifts to affect a different group of players. BY does reduce the number of trapped players which is why it’s being done. RAE has nothing to do with it.
Sorry meant to put SY
SY doesn’t change or solve RAE. It just shifts to affect a different group of players. SY does reduce the number of trapped players which is why it’s being done. RAE has nothing to do with it.
There is potential for a change beyond just sliding the window. If Sep-Dec are currently quitting, not entering, or otherwise disadvantaged in selection in the sport at a higher rate under BY than May-Aug would under SY, the birthdate distribution will be more imbalanced under BY than it would be under SY. The theory is that this is currently happening because of trapped player issues and the social mismatch across grade levels. As pointed out many, many times in this thread, playing with friends from school is likely to be a bigger motivation to play for players identified as worse (who are more likely to be Q4) than for players identified as better (who are more likely to be Q1). RAE would continue to exist to the extent it depends on the physical/emotional development advantages, which are of course heavily correlated with true age, because it's still just a 12-month window. But there is likely a component causing RAE in the current system that is *not* strictly physical development. It may be hard to pin down an exact definition of "relative age effect," but it's most commonly used as a label for the statistical bias in the group toward the birthdays sooner after the cutoff, i.e., an outcome distribution. Physical development is just one component to explain that bias, albeit the most common one, but there could very well be social or structural explanations as well.
This doesn't mean RAE is the reason for the change, and the change doesn't wholly "solve" it, but it may cause a change in RAE which many would consider "lessening" RAE.
You’re overthinking things. Participation and RAE are not connected. This is evidenced by participation drops in all sports regardless of age cutoff. Some sports like tennis, which have rolling age cutoffs with two year age bands mirror the same participation drop offs as all other sports, at the same ages.
Nice thought experiment, but the data all says otherwise.
Not sure why people have such a hard time grasping what RAE is and instead think of it as some sort of negative pressure or externality, which it isn’t, instead of an observed phenomenon.
Confidently incorrect.Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Again, moving from BY to SY solves RAE for some and creates it for others. Merely focusing on the aggregate ignores the dynamics of maximizing of utility for cohorts of individual players.Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Stated another way, SY solves RAE for certain players and creates negative RAE for certain players compared to BY.Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Age cutoffs completely change RAE impacts for each kid. If this wasn't true, nobody would care about the change.Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Sucks to Suck summer families. My kid was born in November has been doing just fine. Get a private trainer and tell them to work hard and it will workout. That's what you told us in 2016.
Life's not fair figure it out.
My September kid was told he wasn’t “rangy” enough…. Fast forward to the new age cutoff 10 months later now he’s 5 inches taller and looks plenty “rangy”.
It’s all about the RAE.
Yeah and that’s why all the BY people are freaking out…
🫢 who is going to tell PP that age cutoffs don’t change RAE?
The BIG question that we're about to see play out is how this all affects kids who have played years in BY. Chances are the older you are, the less of an impact, especially if you're already playing 11v11. But it's undeniable that strong SeptQ4 players will have opportunities this year and next as clubs look for an edge (and the opportunity MIGHT be playing up). RAE, with speed, size and coach attention, will have a greater impact the younger you go.
BY doesn’t change or solve RAE. It just shifts to affect a different group of players. BY does reduce the number of trapped players which is why it’s being done. RAE has nothing to do with it.
Sorry meant to put SY
SY doesn’t change or solve RAE. It just shifts to affect a different group of players. SY does reduce the number of trapped players which is why it’s being done. RAE has nothing to do with it.
You don’t solve RAE…
The age cutoff is not and has not been changed to solve RAE.
Hopefully SY and BY will exist in such a steady state that RAE is reduced in the future. Like a world with no war, only peace.
It would be nice if US Soccer attempted to address RAE. And they have been pretty negligent by doing nothing.
Again…you don’t “solve” RAE. Just stop.
I get what you mean, but you’re saying something different than what you mean.
You don’t “solve” RAE.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Stated another way, SY solves RAE for certain players and creates negative RAE for certain players compared to BY.Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Age cutoffs completely change RAE impacts for each kid. If this wasn't true, nobody would care about the change.Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Sucks to Suck summer families. My kid was born in November has been doing just fine. Get a private trainer and tell them to work hard and it will workout. That's what you told us in 2016.
Life's not fair figure it out.
My September kid was told he wasn’t “rangy” enough…. Fast forward to the new age cutoff 10 months later now he’s 5 inches taller and looks plenty “rangy”.
It’s all about the RAE.
Yeah and that’s why all the BY people are freaking out…
🫢 who is going to tell PP that age cutoffs don’t change RAE?
The BIG question that we're about to see play out is how this all affects kids who have played years in BY. Chances are the older you are, the less of an impact, especially if you're already playing 11v11. But it's undeniable that strong SeptQ4 players will have opportunities this year and next as clubs look for an edge (and the opportunity MIGHT be playing up). RAE, with speed, size and coach attention, will have a greater impact the younger you go.
BY doesn’t change or solve RAE. It just shifts to affect a different group of players. BY does reduce the number of trapped players which is why it’s being done. RAE has nothing to do with it.
Sorry meant to put SY
SY doesn’t change or solve RAE. It just shifts to affect a different group of players. SY does reduce the number of trapped players which is why it’s being done. RAE has nothing to do with it.
There is potential for a change beyond just sliding the window. If Sep-Dec are currently quitting, not entering, or otherwise disadvantaged in selection in the sport at a higher rate under BY than May-Aug would under SY, the birthdate distribution will be more imbalanced under BY than it would be under SY. The theory is that this is currently happening because of trapped player issues and the social mismatch across grade levels. As pointed out many, many times in this thread, playing with friends from school is likely to be a bigger motivation to play for players identified as worse (who are more likely to be Q4) than for players identified as better (who are more likely to be Q1). RAE would continue to exist to the extent it depends on the physical/emotional development advantages, which are of course heavily correlated with true age, because it's still just a 12-month window. But there is likely a component causing RAE in the current system that is *not* strictly physical development. It may be hard to pin down an exact definition of "relative age effect," but it's most commonly used as a label for the statistical bias in the group toward the birthdays sooner after the cutoff, i.e., an outcome distribution. Physical development is just one component to explain that bias, albeit the most common one, but there could very well be social or structural explanations as well.
This doesn't mean RAE is the reason for the change, and the change doesn't wholly "solve" it, but it may cause a change in RAE which many would consider "lessening" RAE.
You’re overthinking things. Participation and RAE are not connected. This is evidenced by participation drops in all sports regardless of age cutoff. Some sports like tennis, which have rolling age cutoffs with two year age bands mirror the same participation drop offs as all other sports, at the same ages.
Nice thought experiment, but the data all says otherwise.
Not sure why people have such a hard time grasping what RAE is and instead think of it as some sort of negative pressure or externality, which it isn’t, instead of an observed phenomenon.
Anonymous wrote:Again, moving from BY to SY solves RAE for some and creates it for others. Merely focusing on the aggregate ignores the dynamics of maximizing of utility for cohorts of individual players.Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Stated another way, SY solves RAE for certain players and creates negative RAE for certain players compared to BY.Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Age cutoffs completely change RAE impacts for each kid. If this wasn't true, nobody would care about the change.Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Sucks to Suck summer families. My kid was born in November has been doing just fine. Get a private trainer and tell them to work hard and it will workout. That's what you told us in 2016.
Life's not fair figure it out.
My September kid was told he wasn’t “rangy” enough…. Fast forward to the new age cutoff 10 months later now he’s 5 inches taller and looks plenty “rangy”.
It’s all about the RAE.
Yeah and that’s why all the BY people are freaking out…
🫢 who is going to tell PP that age cutoffs don’t change RAE?
The BIG question that we're about to see play out is how this all affects kids who have played years in BY. Chances are the older you are, the less of an impact, especially if you're already playing 11v11. But it's undeniable that strong SeptQ4 players will have opportunities this year and next as clubs look for an edge (and the opportunity MIGHT be playing up). RAE, with speed, size and coach attention, will have a greater impact the younger you go.
BY doesn’t change or solve RAE. It just shifts to affect a different group of players. BY does reduce the number of trapped players which is why it’s being done. RAE has nothing to do with it.
Sorry meant to put SY
SY doesn’t change or solve RAE. It just shifts to affect a different group of players. SY does reduce the number of trapped players which is why it’s being done. RAE has nothing to do with it.
You don’t solve RAE…
The age cutoff is not and has not been changed to solve RAE.
Hopefully SY and BY will exist in such a steady state that RAE is reduced in the future. Like a world with no war, only peace.
It would be nice if US Soccer attempted to address RAE. And they have been pretty negligent by doing nothing.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Stated another way, SY solves RAE for certain players and creates negative RAE for certain players compared to BY.Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Age cutoffs completely change RAE impacts for each kid. If this wasn't true, nobody would care about the change.Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Sucks to Suck summer families. My kid was born in November has been doing just fine. Get a private trainer and tell them to work hard and it will workout. That's what you told us in 2016.
Life's not fair figure it out.
My September kid was told he wasn’t “rangy” enough…. Fast forward to the new age cutoff 10 months later now he’s 5 inches taller and looks plenty “rangy”.
It’s all about the RAE.
Yeah and that’s why all the BY people are freaking out…
🫢 who is going to tell PP that age cutoffs don’t change RAE?
The BIG question that we're about to see play out is how this all affects kids who have played years in BY. Chances are the older you are, the less of an impact, especially if you're already playing 11v11. But it's undeniable that strong SeptQ4 players will have opportunities this year and next as clubs look for an edge (and the opportunity MIGHT be playing up). RAE, with speed, size and coach attention, will have a greater impact the younger you go.
BY doesn’t change or solve RAE. It just shifts to affect a different group of players. BY does reduce the number of trapped players which is why it’s being done. RAE has nothing to do with it.
Sorry meant to put SY
SY doesn’t change or solve RAE. It just shifts to affect a different group of players. SY does reduce the number of trapped players which is why it’s being done. RAE has nothing to do with it.
There is potential for a change beyond just sliding the window. If Sep-Dec are currently quitting, not entering, or otherwise disadvantaged in selection in the sport at a higher rate under BY than May-Aug would under SY, the birthdate distribution will be more imbalanced under BY than it would be under SY. The theory is that this is currently happening because of trapped player issues and the social mismatch across grade levels. As pointed out many, many times in this thread, playing with friends from school is likely to be a bigger motivation to play for players identified as worse (who are more likely to be Q4) than for players identified as better (who are more likely to be Q1). RAE would continue to exist to the extent it depends on the physical/emotional development advantages, which are of course heavily correlated with true age, because it's still just a 12-month window. But there is likely a component causing RAE in the current system that is *not* strictly physical development. It may be hard to pin down an exact definition of "relative age effect," but it's most commonly used as a label for the statistical bias in the group toward the birthdays sooner after the cutoff, i.e., an outcome distribution. Physical development is just one component to explain that bias, albeit the most common one, but there could very well be social or structural explanations as well.
This doesn't mean RAE is the reason for the change, and the change doesn't wholly "solve" it, but it may cause a change in RAE which many would consider "lessening" RAE.
Again, moving from BY to SY solves RAE for some and creates it for others. Merely focusing on the aggregate ignores the dynamics of maximizing of utility for cohorts of individual players.Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Stated another way, SY solves RAE for certain players and creates negative RAE for certain players compared to BY.Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Age cutoffs completely change RAE impacts for each kid. If this wasn't true, nobody would care about the change.Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Sucks to Suck summer families. My kid was born in November has been doing just fine. Get a private trainer and tell them to work hard and it will workout. That's what you told us in 2016.
Life's not fair figure it out.
My September kid was told he wasn’t “rangy” enough…. Fast forward to the new age cutoff 10 months later now he’s 5 inches taller and looks plenty “rangy”.
It’s all about the RAE.
Yeah and that’s why all the BY people are freaking out…
🫢 who is going to tell PP that age cutoffs don’t change RAE?
The BIG question that we're about to see play out is how this all affects kids who have played years in BY. Chances are the older you are, the less of an impact, especially if you're already playing 11v11. But it's undeniable that strong SeptQ4 players will have opportunities this year and next as clubs look for an edge (and the opportunity MIGHT be playing up). RAE, with speed, size and coach attention, will have a greater impact the younger you go.
BY doesn’t change or solve RAE. It just shifts to affect a different group of players. BY does reduce the number of trapped players which is why it’s being done. RAE has nothing to do with it.
Sorry meant to put SY
SY doesn’t change or solve RAE. It just shifts to affect a different group of players. SY does reduce the number of trapped players which is why it’s being done. RAE has nothing to do with it.
You don’t solve RAE…
Anonymous wrote:Stated another way, SY solves RAE for certain players and creates negative RAE for certain players compared to BY.Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Age cutoffs completely change RAE impacts for each kid. If this wasn't true, nobody would care about the change.Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Sucks to Suck summer families. My kid was born in November has been doing just fine. Get a private trainer and tell them to work hard and it will workout. That's what you told us in 2016.
Life's not fair figure it out.
My September kid was told he wasn’t “rangy” enough…. Fast forward to the new age cutoff 10 months later now he’s 5 inches taller and looks plenty “rangy”.
It’s all about the RAE.
Yeah and that’s why all the BY people are freaking out…
🫢 who is going to tell PP that age cutoffs don’t change RAE?
The BIG question that we're about to see play out is how this all affects kids who have played years in BY. Chances are the older you are, the less of an impact, especially if you're already playing 11v11. But it's undeniable that strong SeptQ4 players will have opportunities this year and next as clubs look for an edge (and the opportunity MIGHT be playing up). RAE, with speed, size and coach attention, will have a greater impact the younger you go.
BY doesn’t change or solve RAE. It just shifts to affect a different group of players. BY does reduce the number of trapped players which is why it’s being done. RAE has nothing to do with it.
Sorry meant to put SY
SY doesn’t change or solve RAE. It just shifts to affect a different group of players. SY does reduce the number of trapped players which is why it’s being done. RAE has nothing to do with it.
Anonymous wrote:Stated another way, SY solves RAE for certain players and creates negative RAE for certain players compared to BY.Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Age cutoffs completely change RAE impacts for each kid. If this wasn't true, nobody would care about the change.Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Sucks to Suck summer families. My kid was born in November has been doing just fine. Get a private trainer and tell them to work hard and it will workout. That's what you told us in 2016.
Life's not fair figure it out.
My September kid was told he wasn’t “rangy” enough…. Fast forward to the new age cutoff 10 months later now he’s 5 inches taller and looks plenty “rangy”.
It’s all about the RAE.
Yeah and that’s why all the BY people are freaking out…
🫢 who is going to tell PP that age cutoffs don’t change RAE?
The BIG question that we're about to see play out is how this all affects kids who have played years in BY. Chances are the older you are, the less of an impact, especially if you're already playing 11v11. But it's undeniable that strong SeptQ4 players will have opportunities this year and next as clubs look for an edge (and the opportunity MIGHT be playing up). RAE, with speed, size and coach attention, will have a greater impact the younger you go.
BY doesn’t change or solve RAE. It just shifts to affect a different group of players. BY does reduce the number of trapped players which is why it’s being done. RAE has nothing to do with it.
Sorry meant to put SY
SY doesn’t change or solve RAE. It just shifts to affect a different group of players. SY does reduce the number of trapped players which is why it’s being done. RAE has nothing to do with it.
Stated another way, SY solves RAE for certain players and creates negative RAE for certain players compared to BY.Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Age cutoffs completely change RAE impacts for each kid. If this wasn't true, nobody would care about the change.Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Sucks to Suck summer families. My kid was born in November has been doing just fine. Get a private trainer and tell them to work hard and it will workout. That's what you told us in 2016.
Life's not fair figure it out.
My September kid was told he wasn’t “rangy” enough…. Fast forward to the new age cutoff 10 months later now he’s 5 inches taller and looks plenty “rangy”.
It’s all about the RAE.
Yeah and that’s why all the BY people are freaking out…
🫢 who is going to tell PP that age cutoffs don’t change RAE?
The BIG question that we're about to see play out is how this all affects kids who have played years in BY. Chances are the older you are, the less of an impact, especially if you're already playing 11v11. But it's undeniable that strong SeptQ4 players will have opportunities this year and next as clubs look for an edge (and the opportunity MIGHT be playing up). RAE, with speed, size and coach attention, will have a greater impact the younger you go.
BY doesn’t change or solve RAE. It just shifts to affect a different group of players. BY does reduce the number of trapped players which is why it’s being done. RAE has nothing to do with it.
Sorry meant to put SY
SY doesn’t change or solve RAE. It just shifts to affect a different group of players. SY does reduce the number of trapped players which is why it’s being done. RAE has nothing to do with it.