Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Bethesda has produced more pro players from its system than DCU has. DCU is just not an acceptable professional outfit. You can think it is all you want but you're just living a lie. Just don't expect anyone else to live this lie with you. Just use DCU to boost your little Jonny's college resume so he can go to college. That is what it is about anyway.
Because the soccer scene in the DMV is dominated by rich, privileged families, the talent pool is flooded with mostly soft players that don't have the mentality to really compete at the highest levels of the game. DMV parents don't have perspective on what football is like in the rest of the world. It is a harsh, gritty and very demanding sport that isn't for the faint of heart. Who is going to win a ball, the kid from Landon who lives a lush lifestyle day in and day out or the kid from a third world country who sees football as his family's way out of poverty. 10 out of 10.times the latter.
DCU is not a player in the sport of football in this country. No one sees it as a player and no one with any credibility respects what is happening there. .in a region that prioritizes wealth over talent, DCU has a massive uphill battle just in getting the right players alone.
And if you're buying the narrative that the DMV is the best talent pool in the nation you're lying to yourself. It USED to be years ago because the rest of the country didn't care about the sport as much as the DMV region did. DMV also had a lot of good coaches. Currently, the there are many other metro areas that are just better than the DMV in terms of talent ..
overall, not a great state of affairs in the DMV v for football..crap MLS academy, rich parents manipulating the game from behind the scenes taking away opportunities from talented kids from less privileged communities, and just pure ignorance dominating the market. Not a great time to be in DMV football.
This man knows his stuff. I am in the rich privileged families category and his post is right on .Harsh, gritty and very demanding is right. 6-8 hours every day six days a week of practice at the professional level. Most rich privileged families have ruined soccer development in the DMV. They associate development with little Johnny accumulating cheap trophies and medals before age 15. And so they go on chasing the clubs and coaches who feed the hunger in exchange for money. The market will provide what the consumer wants. Demand and supply. Think of all the processed food McDonalds sells to poor consumers who get fat. It may not be good for you, but the demand is there baby.
Correct. Also why when the talent pool at DCU actually goes up against real competition in the MLS pathway to pro league (meaning only other MLS academies), they can't compete. Most of those kids have been chasing trophies and wins before they got to DCU and measuring their development as players was less emphasized. So when they get to DCU their footballing IQ and fundamentals are super low and then they get into a system that doesn't know how to teaching them IQ or how to play (DCU). The first year in DCU they do ok because they are physically bigger but in the next year the dominance fades and in the last two years DCU is getting smashed by everyone. This is just what it is. We deserve better as families but at the same time we have to actually demand better.
This is not allowed as we are just parents of rejects if we have any demands.
🤣 I hear you. But the real problem is that parents are too willing to accept the status quo because 95 percent of parents in the DMV soccer landscape are conformists. Why soccer in the DMV has fallen off so drastically.
Fallen off? Tell us when DMV was at its peak?
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Bethesda has produced more pro players from its system than DCU has. DCU is just not an acceptable professional outfit. You can think it is all you want but you're just living a lie. Just don't expect anyone else to live this lie with you. Just use DCU to boost your little Jonny's college resume so he can go to college. That is what it is about anyway.
Because the soccer scene in the DMV is dominated by rich, privileged families, the talent pool is flooded with mostly soft players that don't have the mentality to really compete at the highest levels of the game. DMV parents don't have perspective on what football is like in the rest of the world. It is a harsh, gritty and very demanding sport that isn't for the faint of heart. Who is going to win a ball, the kid from Landon who lives a lush lifestyle day in and day out or the kid from a third world country who sees football as his family's way out of poverty. 10 out of 10.times the latter.
DCU is not a player in the sport of football in this country. No one sees it as a player and no one with any credibility respects what is happening there. .in a region that prioritizes wealth over talent, DCU has a massive uphill battle just in getting the right players alone.
And if you're buying the narrative that the DMV is the best talent pool in the nation you're lying to yourself. It USED to be years ago because the rest of the country didn't care about the sport as much as the DMV region did. DMV also had a lot of good coaches. Currently, the there are many other metro areas that are just better than the DMV in terms of talent ..
overall, not a great state of affairs in the DMV v for football..crap MLS academy, rich parents manipulating the game from behind the scenes taking away opportunities from talented kids from less privileged communities, and just pure ignorance dominating the market. Not a great time to be in DMV football.
This man knows his stuff. I am in the rich privileged families category and his post is right on .Harsh, gritty and very demanding is right. 6-8 hours every day six days a week of practice at the professional level. Most rich privileged families have ruined soccer development in the DMV. They associate development with little Johnny accumulating cheap trophies and medals before age 15. And so they go on chasing the clubs and coaches who feed the hunger in exchange for money. The market will provide what the consumer wants. Demand and supply. Think of all the processed food McDonalds sells to poor consumers who get fat. It may not be good for you, but the demand is there baby.
Correct. Also why when the talent pool at DCU actually goes up against real competition in the MLS pathway to pro league (meaning only other MLS academies), they can't compete. Most of those kids have been chasing trophies and wins before they got to DCU and measuring their development as players was less emphasized. So when they get to DCU their footballing IQ and fundamentals are super low and then they get into a system that doesn't know how to teaching them IQ or how to play (DCU). The first year in DCU they do ok because they are physically bigger but in the next year the dominance fades and in the last two years DCU is getting smashed by everyone. This is just what it is. We deserve better as families but at the same time we have to actually demand better.
This is not allowed as we are just parents of rejects if we have any demands.
🤣 I hear you. But the real problem is that parents are too willing to accept the status quo because 95 percent of parents in the DMV soccer landscape are conformists. Why soccer in the DMV has fallen off so drastically.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Bethesda has produced more pro players from its system than DCU has. DCU is just not an acceptable professional outfit. You can think it is all you want but you're just living a lie. Just don't expect anyone else to live this lie with you. Just use DCU to boost your little Jonny's college resume so he can go to college. That is what it is about anyway.
Because the soccer scene in the DMV is dominated by rich, privileged families, the talent pool is flooded with mostly soft players that don't have the mentality to really compete at the highest levels of the game. DMV parents don't have perspective on what football is like in the rest of the world. It is a harsh, gritty and very demanding sport that isn't for the faint of heart. Who is going to win a ball, the kid from Landon who lives a lush lifestyle day in and day out or the kid from a third world country who sees football as his family's way out of poverty. 10 out of 10.times the latter.
DCU is not a player in the sport of football in this country. No one sees it as a player and no one with any credibility respects what is happening there. .in a region that prioritizes wealth over talent, DCU has a massive uphill battle just in getting the right players alone.
And if you're buying the narrative that the DMV is the best talent pool in the nation you're lying to yourself. It USED to be years ago because the rest of the country didn't care about the sport as much as the DMV region did. DMV also had a lot of good coaches. Currently, the there are many other metro areas that are just better than the DMV in terms of talent ..
overall, not a great state of affairs in the DMV v for football..crap MLS academy, rich parents manipulating the game from behind the scenes taking away opportunities from talented kids from less privileged communities, and just pure ignorance dominating the market. Not a great time to be in DMV football.
This man knows his stuff. I am in the rich privileged families category and his post is right on .Harsh, gritty and very demanding is right. 6-8 hours every day six days a week of practice at the professional level. Most rich privileged families have ruined soccer development in the DMV. They associate development with little Johnny accumulating cheap trophies and medals before age 15. And so they go on chasing the clubs and coaches who feed the hunger in exchange for money. The market will provide what the consumer wants. Demand and supply. Think of all the processed food McDonalds sells to poor consumers who get fat. It may not be good for you, but the demand is there baby.
Correct. Also why when the talent pool at DCU actually goes up against real competition in the MLS pathway to pro league (meaning only other MLS academies), they can't compete. Most of those kids have been chasing trophies and wins before they got to DCU and measuring their development as players was less emphasized. So when they get to DCU their footballing IQ and fundamentals are super low and then they get into a system that doesn't know how to teaching them IQ or how to play (DCU). The first year in DCU they do ok because they are physically bigger but in the next year the dominance fades and in the last two years DCU is getting smashed by everyone. This is just what it is. We deserve better as families but at the same time we have to actually demand better.
This is not allowed as we are just parents of rejects if we have any demands.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Bethesda has produced more pro players from its system than DCU has. DCU is just not an acceptable professional outfit. You can think it is all you want but you're just living a lie. Just don't expect anyone else to live this lie with you. Just use DCU to boost your little Jonny's college resume so he can go to college. That is what it is about anyway.
Because the soccer scene in the DMV is dominated by rich, privileged families, the talent pool is flooded with mostly soft players that don't have the mentality to really compete at the highest levels of the game. DMV parents don't have perspective on what football is like in the rest of the world. It is a harsh, gritty and very demanding sport that isn't for the faint of heart. Who is going to win a ball, the kid from Landon who lives a lush lifestyle day in and day out or the kid from a third world country who sees football as his family's way out of poverty. 10 out of 10.times the latter.
DCU is not a player in the sport of football in this country. No one sees it as a player and no one with any credibility respects what is happening there. .in a region that prioritizes wealth over talent, DCU has a massive uphill battle just in getting the right players alone.
And if you're buying the narrative that the DMV is the best talent pool in the nation you're lying to yourself. It USED to be years ago because the rest of the country didn't care about the sport as much as the DMV region did. DMV also had a lot of good coaches. Currently, the there are many other metro areas that are just better than the DMV in terms of talent ..
overall, not a great state of affairs in the DMV v for football..crap MLS academy, rich parents manipulating the game from behind the scenes taking away opportunities from talented kids from less privileged communities, and just pure ignorance dominating the market. Not a great time to be in DMV football.
This man knows his stuff. I am in the rich privileged families category and his post is right on .Harsh, gritty and very demanding is right. 6-8 hours every day six days a week of practice at the professional level. Most rich privileged families have ruined soccer development in the DMV. They associate development with little Johnny accumulating cheap trophies and medals before age 15. And so they go on chasing the clubs and coaches who feed the hunger in exchange for money. The market will provide what the consumer wants. Demand and supply. Think of all the processed food McDonalds sells to poor consumers who get fat. It may not be good for you, but the demand is there baby.
Correct. Also why when the talent pool at DCU actually goes up against real competition in the MLS pathway to pro league (meaning only other MLS academies), they can't compete. Most of those kids have been chasing trophies and wins before they got to DCU and measuring their development as players was less emphasized. So when they get to DCU their footballing IQ and fundamentals are super low and then they get into a system that doesn't know how to teaching them IQ or how to play (DCU). The first year in DCU they do ok because they are physically bigger but in the next year the dominance fades and in the last two years DCU is getting smashed by everyone. This is just what it is. We deserve better as families but at the same time we have to actually demand better.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Bethesda has produced more pro players from its system than DCU has. DCU is just not an acceptable professional outfit. You can think it is all you want but you're just living a lie. Just don't expect anyone else to live this lie with you. Just use DCU to boost your little Jonny's college resume so he can go to college. That is what it is about anyway.
Because the soccer scene in the DMV is dominated by rich, privileged families, the talent pool is flooded with mostly soft players that don't have the mentality to really compete at the highest levels of the game. DMV parents don't have perspective on what football is like in the rest of the world. It is a harsh, gritty and very demanding sport that isn't for the faint of heart. Who is going to win a ball, the kid from Landon who lives a lush lifestyle day in and day out or the kid from a third world country who sees football as his family's way out of poverty. 10 out of 10.times the latter.
DCU is not a player in the sport of football in this country. No one sees it as a player and no one with any credibility respects what is happening there. .in a region that prioritizes wealth over talent, DCU has a massive uphill battle just in getting the right players alone.
And if you're buying the narrative that the DMV is the best talent pool in the nation you're lying to yourself. It USED to be years ago because the rest of the country didn't care about the sport as much as the DMV region did. DMV also had a lot of good coaches. Currently, the there are many other metro areas that are just better than the DMV in terms of talent ..
overall, not a great state of affairs in the DMV v for football..crap MLS academy, rich parents manipulating the game from behind the scenes taking away opportunities from talented kids from less privileged communities, and just pure ignorance dominating the market. Not a great time to be in DMV football.
This man knows his stuff. I am in the rich privileged families category and his post is right on .Harsh, gritty and very demanding is right. 6-8 hours every day six days a week of practice at the professional level. Most rich privileged families have ruined soccer development in the DMV. They associate development with little Johnny accumulating cheap trophies and medals before age 15. And so they go on chasing the clubs and coaches who feed the hunger in exchange for money. The market will provide what the consumer wants. Demand and supply. Think of all the processed food McDonalds sells to poor consumers who get fat. It may not be good for you, but the demand is there baby.
Anonymous wrote:And if you're an attacking player, CAM, winger, forwards, which this recent signing is in this category, you need to be especially skeptical of homegrown deals because at those positions, there is the most pressure to produce goals and clubs don't gamble that much on that in the MLS and these are the vanity positions where clubs are signing bigger names from.overseas. prime example from DCU...Kristian Fletcher singed a homegrown deal around the same time DCU signed Christian Benteke. How did that work out? Fletcher got practically no first team minutes because Benteke was in his position and as a result sought loans (that ultimately failed because he had minimal pro experience). A lot of variables need to be weighed on homegrown deals. Especially for a young player just starting his path. For all the reasons above, a homegrown deal at DCU is just a really bad option for a youth player.
Anonymous wrote:Bethesda has produced more pro players from its system than DCU has. DCU is just not an acceptable professional outfit. You can think it is all you want but you're just living a lie. Just don't expect anyone else to live this lie with you. Just use DCU to boost your little Jonny's college resume so he can go to college. That is what it is about anyway.
Because the soccer scene in the DMV is dominated by rich, privileged families, the talent pool is flooded with mostly soft players that don't have the mentality to really compete at the highest levels of the game. DMV parents don't have perspective on what football is like in the rest of the world. It is a harsh, gritty and very demanding sport that isn't for the faint of heart. Who is going to win a ball, the kid from Landon who lives a lush lifestyle day in and day out or the kid from a third world country who sees football as his family's way out of poverty. 10 out of 10.times the latter.
DCU is not a player in the sport of football in this country. No one sees it as a player and no one with any credibility respects what is happening there. .in a region that prioritizes wealth over talent, DCU has a massive uphill battle just in getting the right players alone.
And if you're buying the narrative that the DMV is the best talent pool in the nation you're lying to yourself. It USED to be years ago because the rest of the country didn't care about the sport as much as the DMV region did. DMV also had a lot of good coaches. Currently, the there are many other metro areas that are just better than the DMV in terms of talent ..
overall, not a great state of affairs in the DMV v for football..crap MLS academy, rich parents manipulating the game from behind the scenes taking away opportunities from talented kids from less privileged communities, and just pure ignorance dominating the market. Not a great time to be in DMV football.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Congratulations to the kid and his family.
This must be a great positive day in their household
Only a few will know what its like.
Unfortunately, the envious, jealous and toxic people will appear from the swamps to flap their gums
This post is why the DMV will struggle to progress with DCU. In pure footballing terms, this isn't a great day for him. And the perception that it is, is what allows DCU to operate with no accountability or standards. A homegrown deal in isolation is not good for the player. It is just a way for the club to lock his rights. A homegrown deal with other contractual terms securing his future financially or other deals loaning him to other, better clubs for development, those are different scenarios. This isn't that. A homegrown deal with no plan for the player is not a great situation. And that is what this is.
Anonymous wrote:Congratulations to the kid and his family.
This must be a great positive day in their household
Only a few will know what its like.
Unfortunately, the envious, jealous and toxic people will appear from the swamps to flap their gums
Anonymous wrote:Wish I could pick his parents brain about their decision to sign with DCU, given the state that they are in. Signing with them means they own their kid for the next 4+ years. On every academy besides DCU, you sign and play on their second team. Where do signed DCU kids go? Might as well have tried out for USL teams and sign with them for the 2 years, then set eyes towards Europe with no one owning your rights.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Congratulations to the kid and his family.
This must be a great positive day in their household
Only a few will know what its like.
Unfortunately, the envious, jealous and toxic people will appear from the swamps to flap their gums
This thread went silent when the old man called ya’ll out for being rich MF’s which stung like hell and made you go silent for a week.
Don’t go acting like ya’ll are really ready to ball and open up the market to ALL competition. As currently structured, the rich kids get private training which advances them through U14 and DCU does nothing but cater to that as they are “Ashburn-ites” themselves. We just saw how DCU and MLS operate with the “open” ID weekend and P2P invitations. Their process is in direct opposition to San Diego.
His family probably does not know what they are doing. I STILL HOPE HE IS TALENTED TO RISE ABOVE THE BS. Please note he is from VA Beach which is not affluent.
Great deal for DC United. They “control” a super talented player for 4 years. I hope the family is strong enough to navigate it.
- Sincerely, 2013 dad educated on my options for my child and able to afford training and not looking for free handouts.
Sad, toxic, despicable, pitiful, sad, angry and consistently envious
I wonder why you make an assumption this particular family is incapable of making intelligent decisions?
Sounds like you know something we all don't. DC owns him now for the next crucial 4 years. Tell us how DC will further develop this kid without a second team?
Anonymous wrote:DCU must be trolling this feed to shut down the critics. Another homegrown pro player named: Oscar Avilez (15 yr old)
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Congratulations to the kid and his family.
This must be a great positive day in their household
Only a few will know what its like.
Unfortunately, the envious, jealous and toxic people will appear from the swamps to flap their gums
This thread went silent when the old man called ya’ll out for being rich MF’s which stung like hell and made you go silent for a week.
Don’t go acting like ya’ll are really ready to ball and open up the market to ALL competition. As currently structured, the rich kids get private training which advances them through U14 and DCU does nothing but cater to that as they are “Ashburn-ites” themselves. We just saw how DCU and MLS operate with the “open” ID weekend and P2P invitations. Their process is in direct opposition to San Diego.
His family probably does not know what they are doing. I STILL HOPE HE IS TALENTED TO RISE ABOVE THE BS. Please note he is from VA Beach which is not affluent.
Great deal for DC United. They “control” a super talented player for 4 years. I hope the family is strong enough to navigate it.
- Sincerely, 2013 dad educated on my options for my child and able to afford training and not looking for free handouts.
Sad, toxic, despicable, pitiful, sad, angry and consistently envious
I wonder why you make an assumption this particular family is incapable of making intelligent decisions?