Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Let's discuss how horrible their new "residency" program is...
Not much to discuss. It's an absolute joke. No housing options available which makes calling it a residency program very questionable at best, at worst it is massively misleading to the footballing community in this country, barebones infrastructure with no real facilities, they don't even consistently feed the kids because they are so cheap, it is honestly a complete embarrassment.
The ONLY benefit of the program is the increased training workload and frequency. But, given that you're at DCU, the training is subpar and the methodology is weak in terms of development. So that isn't even a plus. You have to be in either their online school or an online school that allows for the player to train in the mornings which is a big decision for families. Many opt not to do that and you've seen this trend over the last year. Mainly because the ROI on DCU is just not that high for what your Iin up. Inis the same situation for this lt homegrown player. The ROI for him just isn't strong enough for the deal DCU gave him and it was lopsided. Same with the residency. DCU gives you a really bad residency program.but you're giving them your player rights AND trusting them with your kids schooling???? No way.
The schooling is SIA which is run by many academies and programs on the east coast. They can't screw that up, right?
So, they don't have a homestay program? That is what we were offered at another academy but we are not ready for our kid to leave the next yet. It would seem like an easy solution to provide.
I believe they are trying to set one up, not positive however. If your son was offered a homestay, they must have offered your son guest a play spot at the bigger events since you turned it down. I would just do that and stick with club soccer.
DCU calling it a residency program is laughable. The only thing they did was move training to the mornings and forced kids to do online schooling (10k!!!). There is no extra training, just the 1.5hr session in the morning and then they are completely hands off. Meaning your kid can stay and do his schoolwork (no physical instructor present) or go home and do whatever they want. Provides lunch only twice out of the week and not enough food for everyone to eat. Shuttle? Sure, it only costs a couple hundred a month. If the coaching was spectacular, maybe the other stuff could be forgiven. But it isn't.
Even worse. One training a day. Most credible residency programs train two or more times a day because they have so much time with the kids. Morning training, school/independent study, evening training/individual session. This is how a normal program runs. Training only in the mornings for DCU is a ridiculously low standard and also because no one is demanding that they train their kids more like other academies do they get away with it. They just do whatever DCU throws them. Like scraps. DCU kids can't keep up with true residency programs just on touch rate and rigor of training regimen alone. It is honestly an embarrassment and the fact that parents put up with it is what I'm shocked by.
The one thing that parents need to remember when they have a truly talented player is that you are in control of the situation. Not the other way around. DCU wants you to believe it's your privilege to be with them and in their program but the reality is that it is THEIR privilege to have your son and the more you demand from them the better your experience will be. Because they KNOW what they are doing is garbage. Even the MLS knows its garbage.
Where can we find a link to the training schedules of all the MLS academies that details the multi-session training program daily?
Here is an article from NBC 13 years ago showing what Philly is doing with their academy players who are residents. This was 13 years ago. They are light years ahead now. But they have been training their kids at least two times a day for over a decade. And you wonder why they run circles around DCU. No one has this data on all academies in the MLS. Stop asking for dumb things. You're a troll. But I still gave you proof. Shows you how genuine I am.
https://www.google.com/amp/s/www.nbcsportsphiladelphia.com/soccer/philadelphia-union/an-inside-look-at-the-unions-ysc-academy/395305/%3famp=1
After you're done with the Philly adoration jock-sniffing session, answer the real question that was asked
Unless you're admitting you actually don't know the training regimen of all the other MLS academies but you're just here bashing dcu about theirs regardless
THIS IS A THREAD ABOUT DCU GENIUS
You constantly mention Philly Union, You say all the other academies have multiple training sessions daily
Then you're complaining about this being a dcu only thread when you can't backup your argument? 😂
I said most credible academies train their top kids multiple times a day. DCU isn't credible. And I gave you proof.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:There is no data showing kids from the DMV who had an opportunity to go to dcu but chose another MLS club and then had top tier success after U18 professionally or internationally.
Nice try, but no.
https://www.logicallyfallacious.com/logicalfallacies/Missing-Data-Fallacy
Aaron Heard
Stiven Jimenez
One at Leverkusen and the other on FC Cincinnati first team. There are others, I just don't have time to dig them all up. I know these two personally.
FC Cincinnati is MLS
I hope you have more than one-offs to prove a pattern
For starters, these are TWO examples so on it's face couldn't be one offs. Second, I hope you have some examples of how DCU is doing a good job. You LITERALLY have a one off homegrown signing which I've shown is compete bulls#t. Keep trying.
Actually those are two names and of the two only one is at a top league club
Add to that, where is the proof they were offered a place at dcu but chose elsewhere?
Also, with all the MLS academies, pre-mls next and after MLS next started are very different eras
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Let's discuss how horrible their new "residency" program is...
Not much to discuss. It's an absolute joke. No housing options available which makes calling it a residency program very questionable at best, at worst it is massively misleading to the footballing community in this country, barebones infrastructure with no real facilities, they don't even consistently feed the kids because they are so cheap, it is honestly a complete embarrassment.
The ONLY benefit of the program is the increased training workload and frequency. But, given that you're at DCU, the training is subpar and the methodology is weak in terms of development. So that isn't even a plus. You have to be in either their online school or an online school that allows for the player to train in the mornings which is a big decision for families. Many opt not to do that and you've seen this trend over the last year. Mainly because the ROI on DCU is just not that high for what your Iin up. Inis the same situation for this lt homegrown player. The ROI for him just isn't strong enough for the deal DCU gave him and it was lopsided. Same with the residency. DCU gives you a really bad residency program.but you're giving them your player rights AND trusting them with your kids schooling???? No way.
The schooling is SIA which is run by many academies and programs on the east coast. They can't screw that up, right?
So, they don't have a homestay program? That is what we were offered at another academy but we are not ready for our kid to leave the next yet. It would seem like an easy solution to provide.
I believe they are trying to set one up, not positive however. If your son was offered a homestay, they must have offered your son guest a play spot at the bigger events since you turned it down. I would just do that and stick with club soccer.
DCU calling it a residency program is laughable. The only thing they did was move training to the mornings and forced kids to do online schooling (10k!!!). There is no extra training, just the 1.5hr session in the morning and then they are completely hands off. Meaning your kid can stay and do his schoolwork (no physical instructor present) or go home and do whatever they want. Provides lunch only twice out of the week and not enough food for everyone to eat. Shuttle? Sure, it only costs a couple hundred a month. If the coaching was spectacular, maybe the other stuff could be forgiven. But it isn't.
Even worse. One training a day. Most credible residency programs train two or more times a day because they have so much time with the kids. Morning training, school/independent study, evening training/individual session. This is how a normal program runs. Training only in the mornings for DCU is a ridiculously low standard and also because no one is demanding that they train their kids more like other academies do they get away with it. They just do whatever DCU throws them. Like scraps. DCU kids can't keep up with true residency programs just on touch rate and rigor of training regimen alone. It is honestly an embarrassment and the fact that parents put up with it is what I'm shocked by.
The one thing that parents need to remember when they have a truly talented player is that you are in control of the situation. Not the other way around. DCU wants you to believe it's your privilege to be with them and in their program but the reality is that it is THEIR privilege to have your son and the more you demand from them the better your experience will be. Because they KNOW what they are doing is garbage. Even the MLS knows its garbage.
Where can we find a link to the training schedules of all the MLS academies that details the multi-session training program daily?
Here is an article from NBC 13 years ago showing what Philly is doing with their academy players who are residents. This was 13 years ago. They are light years ahead now. But they have been training their kids at least two times a day for over a decade. And you wonder why they run circles around DCU. No one has this data on all academies in the MLS. Stop asking for dumb things. You're a troll. But I still gave you proof. Shows you how genuine I am.
https://www.google.com/amp/s/www.nbcsportsphiladelphia.com/soccer/philadelphia-union/an-inside-look-at-the-unions-ysc-academy/395305/%3famp=1
After you're done with the Philly adoration jock-sniffing session, answer the real question that was asked
Unless you're admitting you actually don't know the training regimen of all the other MLS academies but you're just here bashing dcu about theirs regardless
Even if he didn't know what all other academies are doing what difference does that make??? He did in fact show one academy that does train the kids twice a day and this academy is less than two hours from DCU. Many other Academies follow this model. You can believe it or not.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Let's discuss how horrible their new "residency" program is...
Not much to discuss. It's an absolute joke. No housing options available which makes calling it a residency program very questionable at best, at worst it is massively misleading to the footballing community in this country, barebones infrastructure with no real facilities, they don't even consistently feed the kids because they are so cheap, it is honestly a complete embarrassment.
The ONLY benefit of the program is the increased training workload and frequency. But, given that you're at DCU, the training is subpar and the methodology is weak in terms of development. So that isn't even a plus. You have to be in either their online school or an online school that allows for the player to train in the mornings which is a big decision for families. Many opt not to do that and you've seen this trend over the last year. Mainly because the ROI on DCU is just not that high for what your Iin up. Inis the same situation for this lt homegrown player. The ROI for him just isn't strong enough for the deal DCU gave him and it was lopsided. Same with the residency. DCU gives you a really bad residency program.but you're giving them your player rights AND trusting them with your kids schooling???? No way.
The schooling is SIA which is run by many academies and programs on the east coast. They can't screw that up, right?
So, they don't have a homestay program? That is what we were offered at another academy but we are not ready for our kid to leave the next yet. It would seem like an easy solution to provide.
I believe they are trying to set one up, not positive however. If your son was offered a homestay, they must have offered your son guest a play spot at the bigger events since you turned it down. I would just do that and stick with club soccer.
DCU calling it a residency program is laughable. The only thing they did was move training to the mornings and forced kids to do online schooling (10k!!!). There is no extra training, just the 1.5hr session in the morning and then they are completely hands off. Meaning your kid can stay and do his schoolwork (no physical instructor present) or go home and do whatever they want. Provides lunch only twice out of the week and not enough food for everyone to eat. Shuttle? Sure, it only costs a couple hundred a month. If the coaching was spectacular, maybe the other stuff could be forgiven. But it isn't.
Even worse. One training a day. Most credible residency programs train two or more times a day because they have so much time with the kids. Morning training, school/independent study, evening training/individual session. This is how a normal program runs. Training only in the mornings for DCU is a ridiculously low standard and also because no one is demanding that they train their kids more like other academies do they get away with it. They just do whatever DCU throws them. Like scraps. DCU kids can't keep up with true residency programs just on touch rate and rigor of training regimen alone. It is honestly an embarrassment and the fact that parents put up with it is what I'm shocked by.
The one thing that parents need to remember when they have a truly talented player is that you are in control of the situation. Not the other way around. DCU wants you to believe it's your privilege to be with them and in their program but the reality is that it is THEIR privilege to have your son and the more you demand from them the better your experience will be. Because they KNOW what they are doing is garbage. Even the MLS knows its garbage.
Where can we find a link to the training schedules of all the MLS academies that details the multi-session training program daily?
Here is an article from NBC 13 years ago showing what Philly is doing with their academy players who are residents. This was 13 years ago. They are light years ahead now. But they have been training their kids at least two times a day for over a decade. And you wonder why they run circles around DCU. No one has this data on all academies in the MLS. Stop asking for dumb things. You're a troll. But I still gave you proof. Shows you how genuine I am.
https://www.google.com/amp/s/www.nbcsportsphiladelphia.com/soccer/philadelphia-union/an-inside-look-at-the-unions-ysc-academy/395305/%3famp=1
After you're done with the Philly adoration jock-sniffing session, answer the real question that was asked
Unless you're admitting you actually don't know the training regimen of all the other MLS academies but you're just here bashing dcu about theirs regardless
THIS IS A THREAD ABOUT DCU GENIUS
You constantly mention Philly Union, You say all the other academies have multiple training sessions daily
Then you're complaining about this being a dcu only thread when you can't backup your argument? 😂
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Let's discuss how horrible their new "residency" program is...
Not much to discuss. It's an absolute joke. No housing options available which makes calling it a residency program very questionable at best, at worst it is massively misleading to the footballing community in this country, barebones infrastructure with no real facilities, they don't even consistently feed the kids because they are so cheap, it is honestly a complete embarrassment.
The ONLY benefit of the program is the increased training workload and frequency. But, given that you're at DCU, the training is subpar and the methodology is weak in terms of development. So that isn't even a plus. You have to be in either their online school or an online school that allows for the player to train in the mornings which is a big decision for families. Many opt not to do that and you've seen this trend over the last year. Mainly because the ROI on DCU is just not that high for what your Iin up. Inis the same situation for this lt homegrown player. The ROI for him just isn't strong enough for the deal DCU gave him and it was lopsided. Same with the residency. DCU gives you a really bad residency program.but you're giving them your player rights AND trusting them with your kids schooling???? No way.
The schooling is SIA which is run by many academies and programs on the east coast. They can't screw that up, right?
So, they don't have a homestay program? That is what we were offered at another academy but we are not ready for our kid to leave the next yet. It would seem like an easy solution to provide.
I believe they are trying to set one up, not positive however. If your son was offered a homestay, they must have offered your son guest a play spot at the bigger events since you turned it down. I would just do that and stick with club soccer.
DCU calling it a residency program is laughable. The only thing they did was move training to the mornings and forced kids to do online schooling (10k!!!). There is no extra training, just the 1.5hr session in the morning and then they are completely hands off. Meaning your kid can stay and do his schoolwork (no physical instructor present) or go home and do whatever they want. Provides lunch only twice out of the week and not enough food for everyone to eat. Shuttle? Sure, it only costs a couple hundred a month. If the coaching was spectacular, maybe the other stuff could be forgiven. But it isn't.
Even worse. One training a day. Most credible residency programs train two or more times a day because they have so much time with the kids. Morning training, school/independent study, evening training/individual session. This is how a normal program runs. Training only in the mornings for DCU is a ridiculously low standard and also because no one is demanding that they train their kids more like other academies do they get away with it. They just do whatever DCU throws them. Like scraps. DCU kids can't keep up with true residency programs just on touch rate and rigor of training regimen alone. It is honestly an embarrassment and the fact that parents put up with it is what I'm shocked by.
The one thing that parents need to remember when they have a truly talented player is that you are in control of the situation. Not the other way around. DCU wants you to believe it's your privilege to be with them and in their program but the reality is that it is THEIR privilege to have your son and the more you demand from them the better your experience will be. Because they KNOW what they are doing is garbage. Even the MLS knows its garbage.
Where can we find a link to the training schedules of all the MLS academies that details the multi-session training program daily?
Not the PP, but normal academy teams won't make their whole academy pull out of public schools. They hold their practices in the evening so that everyone can attend after school. Their residency program is for the select group of kids that have a better chance of going pro. They spend their entire day at the facility, doing extra sessions, video analysis, strategy, etc, along with doing online school. DCU made their kids pull out of regular school for what? So that the staff can have more of the day to themselves? What is the reasoning? Holding just 1 session a day, 4x a week and sacrificing school... And let's be real, SAI is not giving these kids top notch education.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:There is no data showing kids from the DMV who had an opportunity to go to dcu but chose another MLS club and then had top tier success after U18 professionally or internationally.
Nice try, but no.
https://www.logicallyfallacious.com/logicalfallacies/Missing-Data-Fallacy
Aaron Heard
Stiven Jimenez
One at Leverkusen and the other on FC Cincinnati first team. There are others, I just don't have time to dig them all up. I know these two personally.
FC Cincinnati is MLS
I hope you have more than one-offs to prove a pattern
For starters, these are TWO examples so on it's face couldn't be one offs. Second, I hope you have some examples of how DCU is doing a good job. You LITERALLY have a one off homegrown signing which I've shown is compete bulls#t. Keep trying.
Actually those are two names and of the two only one is at a top league club
Add to that, where is the proof they were offered a place at dcu but chose elsewhere?
Also, with all the MLS academies, pre-mls next and after MLS next started are very different eras
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Let's discuss how horrible their new "residency" program is...
Not much to discuss. It's an absolute joke. No housing options available which makes calling it a residency program very questionable at best, at worst it is massively misleading to the footballing community in this country, barebones infrastructure with no real facilities, they don't even consistently feed the kids because they are so cheap, it is honestly a complete embarrassment.
The ONLY benefit of the program is the increased training workload and frequency. But, given that you're at DCU, the training is subpar and the methodology is weak in terms of development. So that isn't even a plus. You have to be in either their online school or an online school that allows for the player to train in the mornings which is a big decision for families. Many opt not to do that and you've seen this trend over the last year. Mainly because the ROI on DCU is just not that high for what your Iin up. Inis the same situation for this lt homegrown player. The ROI for him just isn't strong enough for the deal DCU gave him and it was lopsided. Same with the residency. DCU gives you a really bad residency program.but you're giving them your player rights AND trusting them with your kids schooling???? No way.
The schooling is SIA which is run by many academies and programs on the east coast. They can't screw that up, right?
So, they don't have a homestay program? That is what we were offered at another academy but we are not ready for our kid to leave the next yet. It would seem like an easy solution to provide.
I believe they are trying to set one up, not positive however. If your son was offered a homestay, they must have offered your son guest a play spot at the bigger events since you turned it down. I would just do that and stick with club soccer.
DCU calling it a residency program is laughable. The only thing they did was move training to the mornings and forced kids to do online schooling (10k!!!). There is no extra training, just the 1.5hr session in the morning and then they are completely hands off. Meaning your kid can stay and do his schoolwork (no physical instructor present) or go home and do whatever they want. Provides lunch only twice out of the week and not enough food for everyone to eat. Shuttle? Sure, it only costs a couple hundred a month. If the coaching was spectacular, maybe the other stuff could be forgiven. But it isn't.
Even worse. One training a day. Most credible residency programs train two or more times a day because they have so much time with the kids. Morning training, school/independent study, evening training/individual session. This is how a normal program runs. Training only in the mornings for DCU is a ridiculously low standard and also because no one is demanding that they train their kids more like other academies do they get away with it. They just do whatever DCU throws them. Like scraps. DCU kids can't keep up with true residency programs just on touch rate and rigor of training regimen alone. It is honestly an embarrassment and the fact that parents put up with it is what I'm shocked by.
The one thing that parents need to remember when they have a truly talented player is that you are in control of the situation. Not the other way around. DCU wants you to believe it's your privilege to be with them and in their program but the reality is that it is THEIR privilege to have your son and the more you demand from them the better your experience will be. Because they KNOW what they are doing is garbage. Even the MLS knows its garbage.
Where can we find a link to the training schedules of all the MLS academies that details the multi-session training program daily?
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Let's discuss how horrible their new "residency" program is...
Not much to discuss. It's an absolute joke. No housing options available which makes calling it a residency program very questionable at best, at worst it is massively misleading to the footballing community in this country, barebones infrastructure with no real facilities, they don't even consistently feed the kids because they are so cheap, it is honestly a complete embarrassment.
The ONLY benefit of the program is the increased training workload and frequency. But, given that you're at DCU, the training is subpar and the methodology is weak in terms of development. So that isn't even a plus. You have to be in either their online school or an online school that allows for the player to train in the mornings which is a big decision for families. Many opt not to do that and you've seen this trend over the last year. Mainly because the ROI on DCU is just not that high for what your Iin up. Inis the same situation for this lt homegrown player. The ROI for him just isn't strong enough for the deal DCU gave him and it was lopsided. Same with the residency. DCU gives you a really bad residency program.but you're giving them your player rights AND trusting them with your kids schooling???? No way.
The schooling is SIA which is run by many academies and programs on the east coast. They can't screw that up, right?
So, they don't have a homestay program? That is what we were offered at another academy but we are not ready for our kid to leave the next yet. It would seem like an easy solution to provide.
I believe they are trying to set one up, not positive however. If your son was offered a homestay, they must have offered your son guest a play spot at the bigger events since you turned it down. I would just do that and stick with club soccer.
DCU calling it a residency program is laughable. The only thing they did was move training to the mornings and forced kids to do online schooling (10k!!!). There is no extra training, just the 1.5hr session in the morning and then they are completely hands off. Meaning your kid can stay and do his schoolwork (no physical instructor present) or go home and do whatever they want. Provides lunch only twice out of the week and not enough food for everyone to eat. Shuttle? Sure, it only costs a couple hundred a month. If the coaching was spectacular, maybe the other stuff could be forgiven. But it isn't.
Even worse. One training a day. Most credible residency programs train two or more times a day because they have so much time with the kids. Morning training, school/independent study, evening training/individual session. This is how a normal program runs. Training only in the mornings for DCU is a ridiculously low standard and also because no one is demanding that they train their kids more like other academies do they get away with it. They just do whatever DCU throws them. Like scraps. DCU kids can't keep up with true residency programs just on touch rate and rigor of training regimen alone. It is honestly an embarrassment and the fact that parents put up with it is what I'm shocked by.
The one thing that parents need to remember when they have a truly talented player is that you are in control of the situation. Not the other way around. DCU wants you to believe it's your privilege to be with them and in their program but the reality is that it is THEIR privilege to have your son and the more you demand from them the better your experience will be. Because they KNOW what they are doing is garbage. Even the MLS knows its garbage.
Where can we find a link to the training schedules of all the MLS academies that details the multi-session training program daily?
Here is an article from NBC 13 years ago showing what Philly is doing with their academy players who are residents. This was 13 years ago. They are light years ahead now. But they have been training their kids at least two times a day for over a decade. And you wonder why they run circles around DCU. No one has this data on all academies in the MLS. Stop asking for dumb things. You're a troll. But I still gave you proof. Shows you how genuine I am.
https://www.google.com/amp/s/www.nbcsportsphiladelphia.com/soccer/philadelphia-union/an-inside-look-at-the-unions-ysc-academy/395305/%3famp=1
After you're done with the Philly adoration jock-sniffing session, answer the real question that was asked
Unless you're admitting you actually don't know the training regimen of all the other MLS academies but you're just here bashing dcu about theirs regardless
THIS IS A THREAD ABOUT DCU GENIUS
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Let's discuss how horrible their new "residency" program is...
Not much to discuss. It's an absolute joke. No housing options available which makes calling it a residency program very questionable at best, at worst it is massively misleading to the footballing community in this country, barebones infrastructure with no real facilities, they don't even consistently feed the kids because they are so cheap, it is honestly a complete embarrassment.
The ONLY benefit of the program is the increased training workload and frequency. But, given that you're at DCU, the training is subpar and the methodology is weak in terms of development. So that isn't even a plus. You have to be in either their online school or an online school that allows for the player to train in the mornings which is a big decision for families. Many opt not to do that and you've seen this trend over the last year. Mainly because the ROI on DCU is just not that high for what your Iin up. Inis the same situation for this lt homegrown player. The ROI for him just isn't strong enough for the deal DCU gave him and it was lopsided. Same with the residency. DCU gives you a really bad residency program.but you're giving them your player rights AND trusting them with your kids schooling???? No way.
The schooling is SIA which is run by many academies and programs on the east coast. They can't screw that up, right?
So, they don't have a homestay program? That is what we were offered at another academy but we are not ready for our kid to leave the next yet. It would seem like an easy solution to provide.
I believe they are trying to set one up, not positive however. If your son was offered a homestay, they must have offered your son guest a play spot at the bigger events since you turned it down. I would just do that and stick with club soccer.
DCU calling it a residency program is laughable. The only thing they did was move training to the mornings and forced kids to do online schooling (10k!!!). There is no extra training, just the 1.5hr session in the morning and then they are completely hands off. Meaning your kid can stay and do his schoolwork (no physical instructor present) or go home and do whatever they want. Provides lunch only twice out of the week and not enough food for everyone to eat. Shuttle? Sure, it only costs a couple hundred a month. If the coaching was spectacular, maybe the other stuff could be forgiven. But it isn't.
Even worse. One training a day. Most credible residency programs train two or more times a day because they have so much time with the kids. Morning training, school/independent study, evening training/individual session. This is how a normal program runs. Training only in the mornings for DCU is a ridiculously low standard and also because no one is demanding that they train their kids more like other academies do they get away with it. They just do whatever DCU throws them. Like scraps. DCU kids can't keep up with true residency programs just on touch rate and rigor of training regimen alone. It is honestly an embarrassment and the fact that parents put up with it is what I'm shocked by.
The one thing that parents need to remember when they have a truly talented player is that you are in control of the situation. Not the other way around. DCU wants you to believe it's your privilege to be with them and in their program but the reality is that it is THEIR privilege to have your son and the more you demand from them the better your experience will be. Because they KNOW what they are doing is garbage. Even the MLS knows its garbage.
Where can we find a link to the training schedules of all the MLS academies that details the multi-session training program daily?
Here is an article from NBC 13 years ago showing what Philly is doing with their academy players who are residents. This was 13 years ago. They are light years ahead now. But they have been training their kids at least two times a day for over a decade. And you wonder why they run circles around DCU. No one has this data on all academies in the MLS. Stop asking for dumb things. You're a troll. But I still gave you proof. Shows you how genuine I am.
https://www.google.com/amp/s/www.nbcsportsphiladelphia.com/soccer/philadelphia-union/an-inside-look-at-the-unions-ysc-academy/395305/%3famp=1
After you're done with the Philly adoration jock-sniffing session, answer the real question that was asked
Unless you're admitting you actually don't know the training regimen of all the other MLS academies but you're just here bashing dcu about theirs regardless
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:There is no data showing kids from the DMV who had an opportunity to go to dcu but chose another MLS club and then had top tier success after U18 professionally or internationally.
Nice try, but no.
https://www.logicallyfallacious.com/logicalfallacies/Missing-Data-Fallacy
Aaron Heard
Stiven Jimenez
One at Leverkusen and the other on FC Cincinnati first team. There are others, I just don't have time to dig them all up. I know these two personally.
FC Cincinnati is MLS
I hope you have more than one-offs to prove a pattern
For starters, these are TWO examples so on it's face couldn't be one offs. Second, I hope you have some examples of how DCU is doing a good job. You LITERALLY have a one off homegrown signing which I've shown is compete bulls#t. Keep trying.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Let's discuss how horrible their new "residency" program is...
Not much to discuss. It's an absolute joke. No housing options available which makes calling it a residency program very questionable at best, at worst it is massively misleading to the footballing community in this country, barebones infrastructure with no real facilities, they don't even consistently feed the kids because they are so cheap, it is honestly a complete embarrassment.
The ONLY benefit of the program is the increased training workload and frequency. But, given that you're at DCU, the training is subpar and the methodology is weak in terms of development. So that isn't even a plus. You have to be in either their online school or an online school that allows for the player to train in the mornings which is a big decision for families. Many opt not to do that and you've seen this trend over the last year. Mainly because the ROI on DCU is just not that high for what your Iin up. Inis the same situation for this lt homegrown player. The ROI for him just isn't strong enough for the deal DCU gave him and it was lopsided. Same with the residency. DCU gives you a really bad residency program.but you're giving them your player rights AND trusting them with your kids schooling???? No way.
The schooling is SIA which is run by many academies and programs on the east coast. They can't screw that up, right?
So, they don't have a homestay program? That is what we were offered at another academy but we are not ready for our kid to leave the next yet. It would seem like an easy solution to provide.
I believe they are trying to set one up, not positive however. If your son was offered a homestay, they must have offered your son guest a play spot at the bigger events since you turned it down. I would just do that and stick with club soccer.
DCU calling it a residency program is laughable. The only thing they did was move training to the mornings and forced kids to do online schooling (10k!!!). There is no extra training, just the 1.5hr session in the morning and then they are completely hands off. Meaning your kid can stay and do his schoolwork (no physical instructor present) or go home and do whatever they want. Provides lunch only twice out of the week and not enough food for everyone to eat. Shuttle? Sure, it only costs a couple hundred a month. If the coaching was spectacular, maybe the other stuff could be forgiven. But it isn't.
Even worse. One training a day. Most credible residency programs train two or more times a day because they have so much time with the kids. Morning training, school/independent study, evening training/individual session. This is how a normal program runs. Training only in the mornings for DCU is a ridiculously low standard and also because no one is demanding that they train their kids more like other academies do they get away with it. They just do whatever DCU throws them. Like scraps. DCU kids can't keep up with true residency programs just on touch rate and rigor of training regimen alone. It is honestly an embarrassment and the fact that parents put up with it is what I'm shocked by.
The one thing that parents need to remember when they have a truly talented player is that you are in control of the situation. Not the other way around. DCU wants you to believe it's your privilege to be with them and in their program but the reality is that it is THEIR privilege to have your son and the more you demand from them the better your experience will be. Because they KNOW what they are doing is garbage. Even the MLS knows its garbage.
Where can we find a link to the training schedules of all the MLS academies that details the multi-session training program daily?
Here is an article from NBC 13 years ago showing what Philly is doing with their academy players who are residents. This was 13 years ago. They are light years ahead now. But they have been training their kids at least two times a day for over a decade. And you wonder why they run circles around DCU. No one has this data on all academies in the MLS. Stop asking for dumb things. You're a troll. But I still gave you proof. Shows you how genuine I am.
https://www.google.com/amp/s/www.nbcsportsphiladelphia.com/soccer/philadelphia-union/an-inside-look-at-the-unions-ysc-academy/395305/%3famp=1
After you're done with the Philly adoration jock-sniffing session, answer the real question that was asked
Unless you're admitting you actually don't know the training regimen of all the other MLS academies but you're just here bashing dcu about theirs regardless
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:There is no data showing kids from the DMV who had an opportunity to go to dcu but chose another MLS club and then had top tier success after U18 professionally or internationally.
Nice try, but no.
https://www.logicallyfallacious.com/logicalfallacies/Missing-Data-Fallacy
Aaron Heard
Stiven Jimenez
One at Leverkusen and the other on FC Cincinnati first team. There are others, I just don't have time to dig them all up. I know these two personally.
FC Cincinnati is MLS
I hope you have more than one-offs to prove a pattern
For starters, these are TWO examples so on it's face couldn't be one offs. Second, I hope you have some examples of how DCU is doing a good job. You LITERALLY have a one off homegrown signing which I've shown is compete bulls#t. Keep trying.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Let's discuss how horrible their new "residency" program is...
Not much to discuss. It's an absolute joke. No housing options available which makes calling it a residency program very questionable at best, at worst it is massively misleading to the footballing community in this country, barebones infrastructure with no real facilities, they don't even consistently feed the kids because they are so cheap, it is honestly a complete embarrassment.
The ONLY benefit of the program is the increased training workload and frequency. But, given that you're at DCU, the training is subpar and the methodology is weak in terms of development. So that isn't even a plus. You have to be in either their online school or an online school that allows for the player to train in the mornings which is a big decision for families. Many opt not to do that and you've seen this trend over the last year. Mainly because the ROI on DCU is just not that high for what your Iin up. Inis the same situation for this lt homegrown player. The ROI for him just isn't strong enough for the deal DCU gave him and it was lopsided. Same with the residency. DCU gives you a really bad residency program.but you're giving them your player rights AND trusting them with your kids schooling???? No way.
The schooling is SIA which is run by many academies and programs on the east coast. They can't screw that up, right?
So, they don't have a homestay program? That is what we were offered at another academy but we are not ready for our kid to leave the next yet. It would seem like an easy solution to provide.
I believe they are trying to set one up, not positive however. If your son was offered a homestay, they must have offered your son guest a play spot at the bigger events since you turned it down. I would just do that and stick with club soccer.
DCU calling it a residency program is laughable. The only thing they did was move training to the mornings and forced kids to do online schooling (10k!!!). There is no extra training, just the 1.5hr session in the morning and then they are completely hands off. Meaning your kid can stay and do his schoolwork (no physical instructor present) or go home and do whatever they want. Provides lunch only twice out of the week and not enough food for everyone to eat. Shuttle? Sure, it only costs a couple hundred a month. If the coaching was spectacular, maybe the other stuff could be forgiven. But it isn't.
Even worse. One training a day. Most credible residency programs train two or more times a day because they have so much time with the kids. Morning training, school/independent study, evening training/individual session. This is how a normal program runs. Training only in the mornings for DCU is a ridiculously low standard and also because no one is demanding that they train their kids more like other academies do they get away with it. They just do whatever DCU throws them. Like scraps. DCU kids can't keep up with true residency programs just on touch rate and rigor of training regimen alone. It is honestly an embarrassment and the fact that parents put up with it is what I'm shocked by.
The one thing that parents need to remember when they have a truly talented player is that you are in control of the situation. Not the other way around. DCU wants you to believe it's your privilege to be with them and in their program but the reality is that it is THEIR privilege to have your son and the more you demand from them the better your experience will be. Because they KNOW what they are doing is garbage. Even the MLS knows its garbage.
Where can we find a link to the training schedules of all the MLS academies that details the multi-session training program daily?
Here is an article from NBC 13 years ago showing what Philly is doing with their academy players who are residents. This was 13 years ago. They are light years ahead now. But they have been training their kids at least two times a day for over a decade. And you wonder why they run circles around DCU. No one has this data on all academies in the MLS. Stop asking for dumb things. You're a troll. But I still gave you proof. Shows you how genuine I am.
https://www.google.com/amp/s/www.nbcsportsphiladelphia.com/soccer/philadelphia-union/an-inside-look-at-the-unions-ysc-academy/395305/%3famp=1
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:There is no data showing kids from the DMV who had an opportunity to go to dcu but chose another MLS club and then had top tier success after U18 professionally or internationally.
Nice try, but no.
https://www.logicallyfallacious.com/logicalfallacies/Missing-Data-Fallacy
Aaron Heard
Stiven Jimenez
One at Leverkusen and the other on FC Cincinnati first team. There are others, I just don't have time to dig them all up. I know these two personally.
FC Cincinnati is MLS
I hope you have more than one-offs to prove a pattern
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Let's discuss how horrible their new "residency" program is...
Not much to discuss. It's an absolute joke. No housing options available which makes calling it a residency program very questionable at best, at worst it is massively misleading to the footballing community in this country, barebones infrastructure with no real facilities, they don't even consistently feed the kids because they are so cheap, it is honestly a complete embarrassment.
The ONLY benefit of the program is the increased training workload and frequency. But, given that you're at DCU, the training is subpar and the methodology is weak in terms of development. So that isn't even a plus. You have to be in either their online school or an online school that allows for the player to train in the mornings which is a big decision for families. Many opt not to do that and you've seen this trend over the last year. Mainly because the ROI on DCU is just not that high for what your Iin up. Inis the same situation for this lt homegrown player. The ROI for him just isn't strong enough for the deal DCU gave him and it was lopsided. Same with the residency. DCU gives you a really bad residency program.but you're giving them your player rights AND trusting them with your kids schooling???? No way.
The schooling is SIA which is run by many academies and programs on the east coast. They can't screw that up, right?
So, they don't have a homestay program? That is what we were offered at another academy but we are not ready for our kid to leave the next yet. It would seem like an easy solution to provide.
I believe they are trying to set one up, not positive however. If your son was offered a homestay, they must have offered your son guest a play spot at the bigger events since you turned it down. I would just do that and stick with club soccer.
DCU calling it a residency program is laughable. The only thing they did was move training to the mornings and forced kids to do online schooling (10k!!!). There is no extra training, just the 1.5hr session in the morning and then they are completely hands off. Meaning your kid can stay and do his schoolwork (no physical instructor present) or go home and do whatever they want. Provides lunch only twice out of the week and not enough food for everyone to eat. Shuttle? Sure, it only costs a couple hundred a month. If the coaching was spectacular, maybe the other stuff could be forgiven. But it isn't.
Even worse. One training a day. Most credible residency programs train two or more times a day because they have so much time with the kids. Morning training, school/independent study, evening training/individual session. This is how a normal program runs. Training only in the mornings for DCU is a ridiculously low standard and also because no one is demanding that they train their kids more like other academies do they get away with it. They just do whatever DCU throws them. Like scraps. DCU kids can't keep up with true residency programs just on touch rate and rigor of training regimen alone. It is honestly an embarrassment and the fact that parents put up with it is what I'm shocked by.
The one thing that parents need to remember when they have a truly talented player is that you are in control of the situation. Not the other way around. DCU wants you to believe it's your privilege to be with them and in their program but the reality is that it is THEIR privilege to have your son and the more you demand from them the better your experience will be. Because they KNOW what they are doing is garbage. Even the MLS knows its garbage.
Where can we find a link to the training schedules of all the MLS academies that details the multi-session training program daily?