Anonymous wrote:Agree with the poster about DCU’s limited development window. A more serious approach would cast a much wider net from younger ages, instead of basically just trying to form a regional all star team at U14. This approach also leads them to heavily focus on early developers, as they will tend to be the standout performers when they start scouting to form their U14 team.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Agree with the poster about DCU’s limited development window. A more serious approach would cast a much wider net from younger ages, instead of basically just trying to form a regional all star team at U14. This approach also leads them to heavily focus on early developers, as they will tend to be the standout performers when they start scouting to form their U14 team.
You may be right, but, can you explain in detail how, why an academy starting at U14 focuses on early developers but academies starting at U13 and U12 does not?
Because most 11 yr olds haven't gone through puberty.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:What's with all the fake homegrown players wiki links?
Doesn't take a genius to figure out that for some reason, wiki breaks the link. You can click the "Did you mean: Homegrown Player Rule (MLS)?" with the big light bulb next to it.
Exactly. Just click the hyperlink on the page that says did you mean... Wikipedia breaks links all the time and that is what happened here.
Inter Miami founded their academy in 2020 (during covid so imagine how difficult that was) and between 2020 and 2024 they produced more than double the amount of homegrown players than DCU did in that same period. DCU has been running an academy for two decades. Inter Miami academy didn't even EXIST four years ago.
I'm not knowledgeable on this stuff.
What does homegrown player mean?
What happens to you if you're a homegrown player?
It just means they came up through their teams academy development program.
Who designates a player as homegrown?
If you come up through the clubs academy and sign a pro contract with them, you are a homegrown player. There's not an "entity" per se, that designates a player as homegrown.
I think anyone from the area can be designated homegrown even if they didn’t spend any or much time in the academy. For example, k fletcher
The rules say as little as one year with an academy and they can call you homegrown if they so choose.
So you can spend 8 years at FC Delco, one year at Philly Union and get designated Homegrown by Philly.
Everyone says 'a Philly developed product'
This is what bugs me. One year at DCU and they get a say where you go next if it doesn’t work out. I mean u don’t even have to be in the academy for them to put you on their protected list. That is, they can require other academies to pay a fee to allow your player to move to an academy in a different region.
I understand the rationale for this when the club has invested in their players for years but that is not how DCU “develops” at all.
Right, it's wild they can claim a player that's not even rostered. Players in the academy sure, I can understand. But putting kids on a protected list that never played for them seems wrong.
Strange MLS allows this
How is DCU the only club allowed to do this protected list thing?
It’s an MLS thing, all MLS clubs can do this. And similar complaints are made abt other clubs that don’t develop well either. Like minessota.
But i believe Sporting ks (I think) blocked a move by requesting transfer fees for a player that never played for them when they tried to move to a different club. I believe the player rejected an offer from sporting.
What are folks using as criteria to determine and make conclusions on how these clubs are developing players?
How do so many people (especially in this forum) have insider information on what's happening with each player every day at every academy?
Or we all just throwing around the word "development" because it sounds soccer knowledgeable?
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:What's with all the fake homegrown players wiki links?
Doesn't take a genius to figure out that for some reason, wiki breaks the link. You can click the "Did you mean: Homegrown Player Rule (MLS)?" with the big light bulb next to it.
Exactly. Just click the hyperlink on the page that says did you mean... Wikipedia breaks links all the time and that is what happened here.
Inter Miami founded their academy in 2020 (during covid so imagine how difficult that was) and between 2020 and 2024 they produced more than double the amount of homegrown players than DCU did in that same period. DCU has been running an academy for two decades. Inter Miami academy didn't even EXIST four years ago.
I'm not knowledgeable on this stuff.
What does homegrown player mean?
What happens to you if you're a homegrown player?
It just means they came up through their teams academy development program.
Who designates a player as homegrown?
If you come up through the clubs academy and sign a pro contract with them, you are a homegrown player. There's not an "entity" per se, that designates a player as homegrown.
I think anyone from the area can be designated homegrown even if they didn’t spend any or much time in the academy. For example, k fletcher
The rules say as little as one year with an academy and they can call you homegrown if they so choose.
So you can spend 8 years at FC Delco, one year at Philly Union and get designated Homegrown by Philly.
Everyone says 'a Philly developed product'
This is what bugs me. One year at DCU and they get a say where you go next if it doesn’t work out. I mean u don’t even have to be in the academy for them to put you on their protected list. That is, they can require other academies to pay a fee to allow your player to move to an academy in a different region.
I understand the rationale for this when the club has invested in their players for years but that is not how DCU “develops” at all.
Right, it's wild they can claim a player that's not even rostered. Players in the academy sure, I can understand. But putting kids on a protected list that never played for them seems wrong.
Strange MLS allows this
How is DCU the only club allowed to do this protected list thing?
It’s an MLS thing, all MLS clubs can do this. And similar complaints are made abt other clubs that don’t develop well either. Like minessota.
But i believe Sporting ks (I think) blocked a move by requesting transfer fees for a player that never played for them when they tried to move to a different club. I believe the player rejected an offer from sporting.
What are folks using as criteria to determine and make conclusions on how these clubs are developing players?
How do so many people (especially in this forum) have insider information on what's happening with each player every day at every academy?
Or we all just throwing around the word "development" because it sounds soccer knowledgeable?
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:What's with all the fake homegrown players wiki links?
Doesn't take a genius to figure out that for some reason, wiki breaks the link. You can click the "Did you mean: Homegrown Player Rule (MLS)?" with the big light bulb next to it.
Exactly. Just click the hyperlink on the page that says did you mean... Wikipedia breaks links all the time and that is what happened here.
Inter Miami founded their academy in 2020 (during covid so imagine how difficult that was) and between 2020 and 2024 they produced more than double the amount of homegrown players than DCU did in that same period. DCU has been running an academy for two decades. Inter Miami academy didn't even EXIST four years ago.
I'm not knowledgeable on this stuff.
What does homegrown player mean?
What happens to you if you're a homegrown player?
It just means they came up through their teams academy development program.
Who designates a player as homegrown?
If you come up through the clubs academy and sign a pro contract with them, you are a homegrown player. There's not an "entity" per se, that designates a player as homegrown.
I think anyone from the area can be designated homegrown even if they didn’t spend any or much time in the academy. For example, k fletcher
The rules say as little as one year with an academy and they can call you homegrown if they so choose.
So you can spend 8 years at FC Delco, one year at Philly Union and get designated Homegrown by Philly.
Everyone says 'a Philly developed product'
This is what bugs me. One year at DCU and they get a say where you go next if it doesn’t work out. I mean u don’t even have to be in the academy for them to put you on their protected list. That is, they can require other academies to pay a fee to allow your player to move to an academy in a different region.
I understand the rationale for this when the club has invested in their players for years but that is not how DCU “develops” at all.
What's the difference between DCU and every academy in the country?
If you get to Inter Miami at U16 and leave at U18, you were developed there for 2 years, no?
The biggest difference between DCU and many of the better academies is that they have less teams and start their pathway later in a players career. Starting at u14 is too late in my opinion. Why many academies in Europe start with u9. Player development takes time and years to get right. With no grassroots system and defined player pipeline, DCU takes the best local kids that have been developed elsewhere and tries to mold them in a very short period of time. It's the reason why they aren't successful. DCU only has 4 teams. That's only four years to work with a player, who is already pretty far a long in their development when they arrive in the system. Couple that with a weak academy development system and a players chances of developing are slimmer. Of course if you go to inter Miami for two years they can claim they developed you for those years. And they should be able to. The issue is that MLS teams can claim rights to your player even if they have never spent one second in the academy system. That is just wrong.
Someone pointed out that Union, Red Bulls and FC Dallas have never won MLS
Why are they then successful and dc is not, based on your opinion?
Dcu hasn’t been successful since they last won in 2004, 20 years ago. When youth development wasn’t a thing yet and players weren’t paid much. Is that the standard we’re aspiring to these days?
Have those other clubs missed the plays offs 5 years in a row?
You sure have craptastic standards/expectations from your local club. The bare minimum it seems
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:What's with all the fake homegrown players wiki links?
Doesn't take a genius to figure out that for some reason, wiki breaks the link. You can click the "Did you mean: Homegrown Player Rule (MLS)?" with the big light bulb next to it.
Exactly. Just click the hyperlink on the page that says did you mean... Wikipedia breaks links all the time and that is what happened here.
Inter Miami founded their academy in 2020 (during covid so imagine how difficult that was) and between 2020 and 2024 they produced more than double the amount of homegrown players than DCU did in that same period. DCU has been running an academy for two decades. Inter Miami academy didn't even EXIST four years ago.
I'm not knowledgeable on this stuff.
What does homegrown player mean?
What happens to you if you're a homegrown player?
It just means they came up through their teams academy development program.
Who designates a player as homegrown?
If you come up through the clubs academy and sign a pro contract with them, you are a homegrown player. There's not an "entity" per se, that designates a player as homegrown.
I think anyone from the area can be designated homegrown even if they didn’t spend any or much time in the academy. For example, k fletcher
The rules say as little as one year with an academy and they can call you homegrown if they so choose.
So you can spend 8 years at FC Delco, one year at Philly Union and get designated Homegrown by Philly.
Everyone says 'a Philly developed product'
This is what bugs me. One year at DCU and they get a say where you go next if it doesn’t work out. I mean u don’t even have to be in the academy for them to put you on their protected list. That is, they can require other academies to pay a fee to allow your player to move to an academy in a different region.
I understand the rationale for this when the club has invested in their players for years but that is not how DCU “develops” at all.
Right, it's wild they can claim a player that's not even rostered. Players in the academy sure, I can understand. But putting kids on a protected list that never played for them seems wrong.
Strange MLS allows this
How is DCU the only club allowed to do this protected list thing?
It’s an MLS thing, all MLS clubs can do this. And similar complaints are made abt other clubs that don’t develop well either. Like minessota.
But i believe Sporting ks (I think) blocked a move by requesting transfer fees for a player that never played for them when they tried to move to a different club. I believe the player rejected an offer from sporting.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Agree with the poster about DCU’s limited development window. A more serious approach would cast a much wider net from younger ages, instead of basically just trying to form a regional all star team at U14. This approach also leads them to heavily focus on early developers, as they will tend to be the standout performers when they start scouting to form their U14 team.
You may be right, but, can you explain in detail how, why an academy starting at U14 focuses on early developers but academies starting at U13 and U12 does not?
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:What's with all the fake homegrown players wiki links?
Doesn't take a genius to figure out that for some reason, wiki breaks the link. You can click the "Did you mean: Homegrown Player Rule (MLS)?" with the big light bulb next to it.
Exactly. Just click the hyperlink on the page that says did you mean... Wikipedia breaks links all the time and that is what happened here.
Inter Miami founded their academy in 2020 (during covid so imagine how difficult that was) and between 2020 and 2024 they produced more than double the amount of homegrown players than DCU did in that same period. DCU has been running an academy for two decades. Inter Miami academy didn't even EXIST four years ago.
I'm not knowledgeable on this stuff.
What does homegrown player mean?
What happens to you if you're a homegrown player?
It just means they came up through their teams academy development program.
Who designates a player as homegrown?
If you come up through the clubs academy and sign a pro contract with them, you are a homegrown player. There's not an "entity" per se, that designates a player as homegrown.
I think anyone from the area can be designated homegrown even if they didn’t spend any or much time in the academy. For example, k fletcher
The rules say as little as one year with an academy and they can call you homegrown if they so choose.
So you can spend 8 years at FC Delco, one year at Philly Union and get designated Homegrown by Philly.
Everyone says 'a Philly developed product'
This is what bugs me. One year at DCU and they get a say where you go next if it doesn’t work out. I mean u don’t even have to be in the academy for them to put you on their protected list. That is, they can require other academies to pay a fee to allow your player to move to an academy in a different region.
I understand the rationale for this when the club has invested in their players for years but that is not how DCU “develops” at all.
What's the difference between DCU and every academy in the country?
If you get to Inter Miami at U16 and leave at U18, you were developed there for 2 years, no?
The biggest difference between DCU and many of the better academies is that they have less teams and start their pathway later in a players career. Starting at u14 is too late in my opinion. Why many academies in Europe start with u9. Player development takes time and years to get right. With no grassroots system and defined player pipeline, DCU takes the best local kids that have been developed elsewhere and tries to mold them in a very short period of time. It's the reason why they aren't successful. DCU only has 4 teams. That's only four years to work with a player, who is already pretty far a long in their development when they arrive in the system. Couple that with a weak academy development system and a players chances of developing are slimmer. Of course if you go to inter Miami for two years they can claim they developed you for those years. And they should be able to. The issue is that MLS teams can claim rights to your player even if they have never spent one second in the academy system. That is just wrong.
Someone pointed out that Union, Red Bulls and FC Dallas have never won MLS
Why are they then successful and dc is not, based on your opinion?
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:What's with all the fake homegrown players wiki links?
Doesn't take a genius to figure out that for some reason, wiki breaks the link. You can click the "Did you mean: Homegrown Player Rule (MLS)?" with the big light bulb next to it.
Exactly. Just click the hyperlink on the page that says did you mean... Wikipedia breaks links all the time and that is what happened here.
Inter Miami founded their academy in 2020 (during covid so imagine how difficult that was) and between 2020 and 2024 they produced more than double the amount of homegrown players than DCU did in that same period. DCU has been running an academy for two decades. Inter Miami academy didn't even EXIST four years ago.
I'm not knowledgeable on this stuff.
What does homegrown player mean?
What happens to you if you're a homegrown player?
It just means they came up through their teams academy development program.
Who designates a player as homegrown?
If you come up through the clubs academy and sign a pro contract with them, you are a homegrown player. There's not an "entity" per se, that designates a player as homegrown.
I think anyone from the area can be designated homegrown even if they didn’t spend any or much time in the academy. For example, k fletcher
The rules say as little as one year with an academy and they can call you homegrown if they so choose.
So you can spend 8 years at FC Delco, one year at Philly Union and get designated Homegrown by Philly.
Everyone says 'a Philly developed product'
This is what bugs me. One year at DCU and they get a say where you go next if it doesn’t work out. I mean u don’t even have to be in the academy for them to put you on their protected list. That is, they can require other academies to pay a fee to allow your player to move to an academy in a different region.
I understand the rationale for this when the club has invested in their players for years but that is not how DCU “develops” at all.
Right, it's wild they can claim a player that's not even rostered. Players in the academy sure, I can understand. But putting kids on a protected list that never played for them seems wrong.
Strange MLS allows this
How is DCU the only club allowed to do this protected list thing?
Anonymous wrote:Agree with the poster about DCU’s limited development window. A more serious approach would cast a much wider net from younger ages, instead of basically just trying to form a regional all star team at U14. This approach also leads them to heavily focus on early developers, as they will tend to be the standout performers when they start scouting to form their U14 team.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:What's with all the fake homegrown players wiki links?
Doesn't take a genius to figure out that for some reason, wiki breaks the link. You can click the "Did you mean: Homegrown Player Rule (MLS)?" with the big light bulb next to it.
Exactly. Just click the hyperlink on the page that says did you mean... Wikipedia breaks links all the time and that is what happened here.
Inter Miami founded their academy in 2020 (during covid so imagine how difficult that was) and between 2020 and 2024 they produced more than double the amount of homegrown players than DCU did in that same period. DCU has been running an academy for two decades. Inter Miami academy didn't even EXIST four years ago.
I'm not knowledgeable on this stuff.
What does homegrown player mean?
What happens to you if you're a homegrown player?
It just means they came up through their teams academy development program.
Who designates a player as homegrown?
If you come up through the clubs academy and sign a pro contract with them, you are a homegrown player. There's not an "entity" per se, that designates a player as homegrown.
I think anyone from the area can be designated homegrown even if they didn’t spend any or much time in the academy. For example, k fletcher
The rules say as little as one year with an academy and they can call you homegrown if they so choose.
So you can spend 8 years at FC Delco, one year at Philly Union and get designated Homegrown by Philly.
Everyone says 'a Philly developed product'
This is what bugs me. One year at DCU and they get a say where you go next if it doesn’t work out. I mean u don’t even have to be in the academy for them to put you on their protected list. That is, they can require other academies to pay a fee to allow your player to move to an academy in a different region.
I understand the rationale for this when the club has invested in their players for years but that is not how DCU “develops” at all.
Right, it's wild they can claim a player that's not even rostered. Players in the academy sure, I can understand. But putting kids on a protected list that never played for them seems wrong.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:What's with all the fake homegrown players wiki links?
Doesn't take a genius to figure out that for some reason, wiki breaks the link. You can click the "Did you mean: Homegrown Player Rule (MLS)?" with the big light bulb next to it.
Exactly. Just click the hyperlink on the page that says did you mean... Wikipedia breaks links all the time and that is what happened here.
Inter Miami founded their academy in 2020 (during covid so imagine how difficult that was) and between 2020 and 2024 they produced more than double the amount of homegrown players than DCU did in that same period. DCU has been running an academy for two decades. Inter Miami academy didn't even EXIST four years ago.
I'm not knowledgeable on this stuff.
What does homegrown player mean?
What happens to you if you're a homegrown player?
It just means they came up through their teams academy development program.
Who designates a player as homegrown?
If you come up through the clubs academy and sign a pro contract with them, you are a homegrown player. There's not an "entity" per se, that designates a player as homegrown.
I think anyone from the area can be designated homegrown even if they didn’t spend any or much time in the academy. For example, k fletcher
The rules say as little as one year with an academy and they can call you homegrown if they so choose.
So you can spend 8 years at FC Delco, one year at Philly Union and get designated Homegrown by Philly.
Everyone says 'a Philly developed product'
This is what bugs me. One year at DCU and they get a say where you go next if it doesn’t work out. I mean u don’t even have to be in the academy for them to put you on their protected list. That is, they can require other academies to pay a fee to allow your player to move to an academy in a different region.
I understand the rationale for this when the club has invested in their players for years but that is not how DCU “develops” at all.
What's the difference between DCU and every academy in the country?
If you get to Inter Miami at U16 and leave at U18, you were developed there for 2 years, no?
The biggest difference between DCU and many of the better academies is that they have less teams and start their pathway later in a players career. Starting at u14 is too late in my opinion. Why many academies in Europe start with u9. Player development takes time and years to get right. With no grassroots system and defined player pipeline, DCU takes the best local kids that have been developed elsewhere and tries to mold them in a very short period of time. It's the reason why they aren't successful. DCU only has 4 teams. That's only four years to work with a player, who is already pretty far a long in their development when they arrive in the system. Couple that with a weak academy development system and a players chances of developing are slimmer. Of course if you go to inter Miami for two years they can claim they developed you for those years. And they should be able to. The issue is that MLS teams can claim rights to your player even if they have never spent one second in the academy system. That is just wrong.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:What's with all the fake homegrown players wiki links?
Doesn't take a genius to figure out that for some reason, wiki breaks the link. You can click the "Did you mean: Homegrown Player Rule (MLS)?" with the big light bulb next to it.
Exactly. Just click the hyperlink on the page that says did you mean... Wikipedia breaks links all the time and that is what happened here.
Inter Miami founded their academy in 2020 (during covid so imagine how difficult that was) and between 2020 and 2024 they produced more than double the amount of homegrown players than DCU did in that same period. DCU has been running an academy for two decades. Inter Miami academy didn't even EXIST four years ago.
I'm not knowledgeable on this stuff.
What does homegrown player mean?
What happens to you if you're a homegrown player?
It just means they came up through their teams academy development program.
Who designates a player as homegrown?
If you come up through the clubs academy and sign a pro contract with them, you are a homegrown player. There's not an "entity" per se, that designates a player as homegrown.
I think anyone from the area can be designated homegrown even if they didn’t spend any or much time in the academy. For example, k fletcher
The rules say as little as one year with an academy and they can call you homegrown if they so choose.
So you can spend 8 years at FC Delco, one year at Philly Union and get designated Homegrown by Philly.
Everyone says 'a Philly developed product'
This is what bugs me. One year at DCU and they get a say where you go next if it doesn’t work out. I mean u don’t even have to be in the academy for them to put you on their protected list. That is, they can require other academies to pay a fee to allow your player to move to an academy in a different region.
I understand the rationale for this when the club has invested in their players for years but that is not how DCU “develops” at all.
What's the difference between DCU and every academy in the country?
If you get to Inter Miami at U16 and leave at U18, you were developed there for 2 years, no?
Comparing DCU to InterMiami. 😂
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:What's with all the fake homegrown players wiki links?
Doesn't take a genius to figure out that for some reason, wiki breaks the link. You can click the "Did you mean: Homegrown Player Rule (MLS)?" with the big light bulb next to it.
Exactly. Just click the hyperlink on the page that says did you mean... Wikipedia breaks links all the time and that is what happened here.
Inter Miami founded their academy in 2020 (during covid so imagine how difficult that was) and between 2020 and 2024 they produced more than double the amount of homegrown players than DCU did in that same period. DCU has been running an academy for two decades. Inter Miami academy didn't even EXIST four years ago.
I'm not knowledgeable on this stuff.
What does homegrown player mean?
What happens to you if you're a homegrown player?
It just means they came up through their teams academy development program.
Who designates a player as homegrown?
If you come up through the clubs academy and sign a pro contract with them, you are a homegrown player. There's not an "entity" per se, that designates a player as homegrown.
I think anyone from the area can be designated homegrown even if they didn’t spend any or much time in the academy. For example, k fletcher
The rules say as little as one year with an academy and they can call you homegrown if they so choose.
So you can spend 8 years at FC Delco, one year at Philly Union and get designated Homegrown by Philly.
Everyone says 'a Philly developed product'
This is what bugs me. One year at DCU and they get a say where you go next if it doesn’t work out. I mean u don’t even have to be in the academy for them to put you on their protected list. That is, they can require other academies to pay a fee to allow your player to move to an academy in a different region.
I understand the rationale for this when the club has invested in their players for years but that is not how DCU “develops” at all.
What's the difference between DCU and every academy in the country?
If you get to Inter Miami at U16 and leave at U18, you were developed there for 2 years, no?
Comparing DCU to InterMiami. 😂
And inter Miami winning that comparison is even more laughable.