Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Coach I had a question to get your input on. I have boy currently playing U9 travel with BRYC. With their move to ECNL they will no longer be in a league at the younger ages (u13 and below) and plan on replacing the weekend games with scrimmages which I assume can only be with their teammates since the other clubs will be in a league. I understand the games aren't training, however, we left rec for more competitive play and I am concerned he might get bored. Do we stick out with the same club or look for alternatives? Not really considering options long term since he could change sports or no longer be interested in the future.
I have a kid playing at BRYC and have coached travel in another club. I would not leave BRYC for the reason you are considering so long as you and your son like the coach, and the training your son is receiving is good.
First, I am sure that most scrimmages at BRYC will NOT be with their own teammates. The club will set up friendlies with CCL teams when those other teams do not have games. Ditto with NCSL teams. In addition, some of the intra-club scrimmages will be against older and younger age groups within BRYC.
In short, I think you will find that tournaments and friendlies will provide enough competitive play to complement the excellent training your son receives at BRYC. Plus you will have more of a life on weekends not having to travel as much.
I'm really trying to figure out if I know you! Mimics the conversations I've had with other parents at BRYC. We left officially today by accepting an offer with SYA, I don't understand why (even though they have told me) why the heck I would stay just for the training. There will be no friendlies, because the previous person got it right..everyone else is in league play. Bad decision by BRYC, they should just join NCSL or at least ODSL. I moved both my boys to SYA, coaches appear to be good and the facilities are nice.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Coach I had a question to get your input on. I have boy currently playing U9 travel with BRYC. With their move to ECNL they will no longer be in a league at the younger ages (u13 and below) and plan on replacing the weekend games with scrimmages which I assume can only be with their teammates since the other clubs will be in a league. I understand the games aren't training, however, we left rec for more competitive play and I am concerned he might get bored. Do we stick out with the same club or look for alternatives? Not really considering options long term since he could change sports or no longer be interested in the future.
I have a kid playing at BRYC and have coached travel in another club. I would not leave BRYC for the reason you are considering so long as you and your son like the coach, and the training your son is receiving is good.
First, I am sure that most scrimmages at BRYC will NOT be with their own teammates. The club will set up friendlies with CCL teams when those other teams do not have games. Ditto with NCSL teams. In addition, some of the intra-club scrimmages will be against older and younger age groups within BRYC.
In short, I think you will find that tournaments and friendlies will provide enough competitive play to complement the excellent training your son receives at BRYC. Plus you will have more of a life on weekends not having to travel as much.
Anonymous wrote:U9 DS currently plays on a a talented competitive team but only gets to play about 15 minutes per game on avg while a few play almost the entire game. Just tried out for a super small club, super close to home, and was offered a roster spot right after the first day. The coach and training on his current team is great but I feel his confidence has dipped over this last spring due to some of discouraging teammates and his dwindling playing time. Trying to figure out if switching is the right choice for my kid. I feel the training situation is great and competitive but is it worth it at the expense of his confidence?
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:U9 DS currently plays on a a talented competitive team but only gets to play about 15 minutes per game on avg while a few play almost the entire game. Just tried out for a super small club, super close to home, and was offered a roster spot right after the first day. The coach and training on his current team is great but I feel his confidence has dipped over this last spring due to some of discouraging teammates and his dwindling playing time. Trying to figure out if switching is the right choice for my kid. I feel the training situation is great and competitive but is it worth it at the expense of his confidence?
It's best if you take your son's well being over training. If you think logically about it, how much is he really learning if he can't display it in the game, his coach is not supporting him(playing time), and you mention something about discouraging teammates... (if there is bullying involved not sure why you haven't taken action yet).
I guess the answer is so clear I'm wondering if this is a 'real' post. There is the 'dealing with adverse and difficult people' lessons involved, but it seems as if the adults(you and the coach) aren't really being neutral in this scenario. If you have the budget for it, do the club nearby and buy extra training on the side.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:CCL or EDP for u12?
it depends on the coach and team and what you are willing to do with travel. CCL has a more travel than CCL2 which is more local. I think EDP might fall somewhere in the middle of both. If you're in NOVA you are probably considering Bethesda South or Alexandria which I hear are very good teams. I guess you might consider Joga as well but that is not yet proven on the quality of teams that they'll put out. It depends on where you end up with CCL.
Anonymous wrote:U9 DS currently plays on a a talented competitive team but only gets to play about 15 minutes per game on avg while a few play almost the entire game. Just tried out for a super small club, super close to home, and was offered a roster spot right after the first day. The coach and training on his current team is great but I feel his confidence has dipped over this last spring due to some of discouraging teammates and his dwindling playing time. Trying to figure out if switching is the right choice for my kid. I feel the training situation is great and competitive but is it worth it at the expense of his confidence?
Anonymous wrote:I asked a very similar question on "the big thread" probably a year ago. The consensus was to stay with the better training and better team. Some points were that games are a very small part of development and training is the most important part, playing against better kids will make him better, etc. My opinion is...every kid is different and you know your son best. If his confidence is dropping because lack of playing time and kids on the team busting his ass/saying he sucks/etc. (well hopefully you talked to coach about it first) but my opinion is to get him out of there. Confidence, enjoying practices and games and wanting to play is everything. If a kid doesn't want to play anymore...the best training in the world is worthless.Anonymous wrote:U9 DS currently plays on a a talented competitive team but only gets to play about 15 minutes per game on avg while a few play almost the entire game. Just tried out for a super small club, super close to home, and was offered a roster spot right after the first day. The coach and training on his current team is great but I feel his confidence has dipped over this last spring due to some of discouraging teammates and his dwindling playing time. Trying to figure out if switching is the right choice for my kid. I feel the training situation is great and competitive but is it worth it at the expense of his confidence?
I asked a very similar question on "the big thread" probably a year ago. The consensus was to stay with the better training and better team. Some points were that games are a very small part of development and training is the most important part, playing against better kids will make him better, etc. My opinion is...every kid is different and you know your son best. If his confidence is dropping because lack of playing time and kids on the team busting his ass/saying he sucks/etc. (well hopefully you talked to coach about it first) but my opinion is to get him out of there. Confidence, enjoying practices and games and wanting to play is everything. If a kid doesn't want to play anymore...the best training in the world is worthless.Anonymous wrote:U9 DS currently plays on a a talented competitive team but only gets to play about 15 minutes per game on avg while a few play almost the entire game. Just tried out for a super small club, super close to home, and was offered a roster spot right after the first day. The coach and training on his current team is great but I feel his confidence has dipped over this last spring due to some of discouraging teammates and his dwindling playing time. Trying to figure out if switching is the right choice for my kid. I feel the training situation is great and competitive but is it worth it at the expense of his confidence?
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:do kids need to be taught to not kick the ball with their toes, if so at what age? or is this something they'll figure out naturally as they grow?
Yes, and do it now, no matter what age the kid is in.
It's a terrible habit, and it becomes harder to break as they get older.
what's the best way to encourage this other than yelling 'don't use your toes'? a few drills i've seen don't really change this tendency. and those who don't use toes appear to do that without much coaching/teaching.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:do kids need to be taught to not kick the ball with their toes, if so at what age? or is this something they'll figure out naturally as they grow?
Yes, and do it now, no matter what age the kid is in.
It's a terrible habit, and it becomes harder to break as they get older.
what's the best way to encourage this other than yelling 'don't use your toes'? a few drills i've seen don't really change this tendency. and those who don't use toes appear to do that without much coaching/teaching.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:do kids need to be taught to not kick the ball with their toes, if so at what age? or is this something they'll figure out naturally as they grow?
Yes, and do it now, no matter what age the kid is in.
It's a terrible habit, and it becomes harder to break as they get older.