Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:please note. 2010s lost to 2009s and 2011s lost to 2010s. I don't care about how it fits into the argument, but present all the facts.
If this is true, this argument about wins/ losses is stupid.
WRONG. The truly elite talent in our area was, in many instances, already playing up before they came to DCU. The top talent in our area should be completely fine playing a year up against local clubs. The fact that you're saying otherwise shows you know nothing about our area or the talent in our area. Just stick to cutting up the oranges after the game...better use of your time.
The paradox is that those DCU kids are probably the most physical mature for their age which may be why they are playing up.
Regardless, with "professional" training, I would expect my child in any professional academy to develop at 125%-150% of a P2P player in MLS Next. If that is not happening, I am assessing my players work ethic. If they are putting in the work, then I am assessing the training environment.
Correct. And if you're at DCU and putting in the work and you're still struggling, guess who is the problem...DCU
Yep. No chance at all that your kid just isn’t good enough. Blame it on the rain!
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:please note. 2010s lost to 2009s and 2011s lost to 2010s. I don't care about how it fits into the argument, but present all the facts.
If this is true, this argument about wins/ losses is stupid.
WRONG. The truly elite talent in our area was, in many instances, already playing up before they came to DCU. The top talent in our area should be completely fine playing a year up against local clubs. The fact that you're saying otherwise shows you know nothing about our area or the talent in our area. Just stick to cutting up the oranges after the game...better use of your time.
The paradox is that those DCU kids are probably the most physical mature for their age which may be why they are playing up.
Regardless, with "professional" training, I would expect my child in any professional academy to develop at 125%-150% of a P2P player in MLS Next. If that is not happening, I am assessing my players work ethic. If they are putting in the work, then I am assessing the training environment.
Correct. And if you're at DCU and putting in the work and you're still struggling, guess who is the problem...DCU
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:please note. 2010s lost to 2009s and 2011s lost to 2010s. I don't care about how it fits into the argument, but present all the facts.
If this is true, this argument about wins/ losses is stupid.
WRONG. The truly elite talent in our area was, in many instances, already playing up before they came to DCU. The top talent in our area should be completely fine playing a year up against local clubs. The fact that you're saying otherwise shows you know nothing about our area or the talent in our area. Just stick to cutting up the oranges after the game...better use of your time.
I'm not a genius at the soccer thing, but I'm 100% sure based on physicality, there are major differences between playing up U10 vs U11 and U14 vs U15 etc when the puberty scale is considered
Also, the dcua can only have a limited amount of players, that means there are several dcu quality players on regular MLS next teams. Plain numbers issue.
So you have dcu vs similar talent of superior size, age and speed
Same if Achilles U15 played Bethesda U16
The scoreboard is irrelevant if you understand soccer, it's the individual elements broken down for each player in their area under that pressure that matters
But such an intellectual approach argument regarding youth development here is wasted
+1
"My son played up at u12 and dominated so they should play up at u16 and dominate" 😂
Oh. You two are so cute!
I’d “intellectually” argue the opposite. I have seen two types of kids playing up early: 1) physical advantage; 2) head start by training earlier
Both are neutralized by around U15/U16 when kids with better technical practice habits and consistency through U15 overtake both categories. By U15/U16 most boys should be playing pickup with men, a critical mistake high level players in the US avoid. When you combine the nutrition, fitness and tactical expertise of a professional academy with players and coaches who have played/coached professionally versus P2P kids eating ham sandwiches and being coached by former D3 players who earned their A/B license, an academy player should have a significant advantage on a P2P player in order to play up a year by U15/U16 even if they were level earlier at U12.
The purpose of home schooling is “supposed” to enable a player to accumulate more hours than a traditional P2P player thereby accelerating their curve even more.
Get you rocks off from being contrary to be contrary
How about taking the next 10 pages on your own without interruption to repeat yourself at nauseum to get it out your system
With your long and indepth resume, portfolio, first hand personal knowledge and experience at top International clubs and academies
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:please note. 2010s lost to 2009s and 2011s lost to 2010s. I don't care about how it fits into the argument, but present all the facts.
If this is true, this argument about wins/ losses is stupid.
WRONG. The truly elite talent in our area was, in many instances, already playing up before they came to DCU. The top talent in our area should be completely fine playing a year up against local clubs. The fact that you're saying otherwise shows you know nothing about our area or the talent in our area. Just stick to cutting up the oranges after the game...better use of your time.
I'm not a genius at the soccer thing, but I'm 100% sure based on physicality, there are major differences between playing up U10 vs U11 and U14 vs U15 etc when the puberty scale is considered
Also, the dcua can only have a limited amount of players, that means there are several dcu quality players on regular MLS next teams. Plain numbers issue.
So you have dcu vs similar talent of superior size, age and speed
Same if Achilles U15 played Bethesda U16
The scoreboard is irrelevant if you understand soccer, it's the individual elements broken down for each player in their area under that pressure that matters
But such an intellectual approach argument regarding youth development here is wasted
+1
"My son played up at u12 and dominated so they should play up at u16 and dominate" 😂
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:please note. 2010s lost to 2009s and 2011s lost to 2010s. I don't care about how it fits into the argument, but present all the facts.
If this is true, this argument about wins/ losses is stupid.
WRONG. The truly elite talent in our area was, in many instances, already playing up before they came to DCU. The top talent in our area should be completely fine playing a year up against local clubs. The fact that you're saying otherwise shows you know nothing about our area or the talent in our area. Just stick to cutting up the oranges after the game...better use of your time.
I'm not a genius at the soccer thing, but I'm 100% sure based on physicality, there are major differences between playing up U10 vs U11 and U14 vs U15 etc when the puberty scale is considered
Also, the dcua can only have a limited amount of players, that means there are several dcu quality players on regular MLS next teams. Plain numbers issue.
So you have dcu vs similar talent of superior size, age and speed
Same if Achilles U15 played Bethesda U16
The scoreboard is irrelevant if you understand soccer, it's the individual elements broken down for each player in their area under that pressure that matters
But such an intellectual approach argument regarding youth development here is wasted
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:please note. 2010s lost to 2009s and 2011s lost to 2010s. I don't care about how it fits into the argument, but present all the facts.
If this is true, this argument about wins/ losses is stupid.
WRONG. The truly elite talent in our area was, in many instances, already playing up before they came to DCU. The top talent in our area should be completely fine playing a year up against local clubs. The fact that you're saying otherwise shows you know nothing about our area or the talent in our area. Just stick to cutting up the oranges after the game...better use of your time.
The paradox is that those DCU kids are probably the most physical mature for their age which may be why they are playing up.
Regardless, with "professional" training, I would expect my child in any professional academy to develop at 125%-150% of a P2P player in MLS Next. If that is not happening, I am assessing my players work ethic. If they are putting in the work, then I am assessing the training environment.
Keep seeing people parroting what they've heard about the massive sizes of dcu academy players, yet neither in real life nor in photos does this match the urban legend
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:please note. 2010s lost to 2009s and 2011s lost to 2010s. I don't care about how it fits into the argument, but present all the facts.
If this is true, this argument about wins/ losses is stupid.
WRONG. The truly elite talent in our area was, in many instances, already playing up before they came to DCU. The top talent in our area should be completely fine playing a year up against local clubs. The fact that you're saying otherwise shows you know nothing about our area or the talent in our area. Just stick to cutting up the oranges after the game...better use of your time.
The paradox is that those DCU kids are probably the most physical mature for their age which may be why they are playing up.
Regardless, with "professional" training, I would expect my child in any professional academy to develop at 125%-150% of a P2P player in MLS Next. If that is not happening, I am assessing my players work ethic. If they are putting in the work, then I am assessing the training environment.
Big (early bloomer) is NOT better but DCU doesn't see it that way. They are blinded in their scouting and recruitment and then ruthless cut the players when they can't play soccer.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:please note. 2010s lost to 2009s and 2011s lost to 2010s. I don't care about how it fits into the argument, but present all the facts.
If this is true, this argument about wins/ losses is stupid.
WRONG. The truly elite talent in our area was, in many instances, already playing up before they came to DCU. The top talent in our area should be completely fine playing a year up against local clubs. The fact that you're saying otherwise shows you know nothing about our area or the talent in our area. Just stick to cutting up the oranges after the game...better use of your time.
The paradox is that those DCU kids are probably the most physical mature for their age which may be why they are playing up.
Regardless, with "professional" training, I would expect my child in any professional academy to develop at 125%-150% of a P2P player in MLS Next. If that is not happening, I am assessing my players work ethic. If they are putting in the work, then I am assessing the training environment.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:please note. 2010s lost to 2009s and 2011s lost to 2010s. I don't care about how it fits into the argument, but present all the facts.
If this is true, this argument about wins/ losses is stupid.
WRONG. The truly elite talent in our area was, in many instances, already playing up before they came to DCU. The top talent in our area should be completely fine playing a year up against local clubs. The fact that you're saying otherwise shows you know nothing about our area or the talent in our area. Just stick to cutting up the oranges after the game...better use of your time.
I'm not a genius at the soccer thing, but I'm 100% sure based on physicality, there are major differences between playing up U10 vs U11 and U14 vs U15 etc when the puberty scale is considered
Also, the dcua can only have a limited amount of players, that means there are several dcu quality players on regular MLS next teams. Plain numbers issue.
So you have dcu vs similar talent of superior size, age and speed
Same if Achilles U15 played Bethesda U16
The scoreboard is irrelevant if you understand soccer, it's the individual elements broken down for each player in their area under that pressure that matters
But such an intellectual approach argument regarding youth development here is wasted
+1
"My son played up at u12 and dominated so they should play up at u16 and dominate" 😂
Oh. You two are so cute!
I’d “intellectually” argue the opposite. I have seen two types of kids playing up early: 1) physical advantage; 2) head start by training earlier
Both are neutralized by around U15/U16 when kids with better technical practice habits and consistency through U15 overtake both categories. By U15/U16 most boys should be playing pickup with men, a critical mistake high level players in the US avoid. When you combine the nutrition, fitness and tactical expertise of a professional academy with players and coaches who have played/coached professionally versus P2P kids eating ham sandwiches and being coached by former D3 players who earned their A/B license, an academy player should have a significant advantage on a P2P player in order to play up a year by U15/U16 even if they were level earlier at U12.
The purpose of home schooling is “supposed” to enable a player to accumulate more hours than a traditional P2P player thereby accelerating their curve even more.
Get you rocks off from being contrary to be contrary
How about taking the next 10 pages on your own without interruption to repeat yourself at nauseum to get it out your system
With your long and indepth resume, portfolio, first hand personal knowledge and experience at top International clubs and academies
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:please note. 2010s lost to 2009s and 2011s lost to 2010s. I don't care about how it fits into the argument, but present all the facts.
If this is true, this argument about wins/ losses is stupid.
WRONG. The truly elite talent in our area was, in many instances, already playing up before they came to DCU. The top talent in our area should be completely fine playing a year up against local clubs. The fact that you're saying otherwise shows you know nothing about our area or the talent in our area. Just stick to cutting up the oranges after the game...better use of your time.
I'm not a genius at the soccer thing, but I'm 100% sure based on physicality, there are major differences between playing up U10 vs U11 and U14 vs U15 etc when the puberty scale is considered
Also, the dcua can only have a limited amount of players, that means there are several dcu quality players on regular MLS next teams. Plain numbers issue.
So you have dcu vs similar talent of superior size, age and speed
Same if Achilles U15 played Bethesda U16
The scoreboard is irrelevant if you understand soccer, it's the individual elements broken down for each player in their area under that pressure that matters
But such an intellectual approach argument regarding youth development here is wasted
+1
"My son played up at u12 and dominated so they should play up at u16 and dominate" 😂
Oh. You two are so cute!
I’d “intellectually” argue the opposite. I have seen two types of kids playing up early: 1) physical advantage; 2) head start by training earlier
Both are neutralized by around U15/U16 when kids with better technical practice habits and consistency through U15 overtake both categories. By U15/U16 most boys should be playing pickup with men, a critical mistake high level players in the US avoid. When you combine the nutrition, fitness and tactical expertise of a professional academy with players and coaches who have played/coached professionally versus P2P kids eating ham sandwiches and being coached by former D3 players who earned their A/B license, an academy player should have a significant advantage on a P2P player in order to play up a year by U15/U16 even if they were level earlier at U12.
The purpose of home schooling is “supposed” to enable a player to accumulate more hours than a traditional P2P player thereby accelerating their curve even more.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:please note. 2010s lost to 2009s and 2011s lost to 2010s. I don't care about how it fits into the argument, but present all the facts.
If this is true, this argument about wins/ losses is stupid.
WRONG. The truly elite talent in our area was, in many instances, already playing up before they came to DCU. The top talent in our area should be completely fine playing a year up against local clubs. The fact that you're saying otherwise shows you know nothing about our area or the talent in our area. Just stick to cutting up the oranges after the game...better use of your time.
I'm not a genius at the soccer thing, but I'm 100% sure based on physicality, there are major differences between playing up U10 vs U11 and U14 vs U15 etc when the puberty scale is considered
Also, the dcua can only have a limited amount of players, that means there are several dcu quality players on regular MLS next teams. Plain numbers issue.
So you have dcu vs similar talent of superior size, age and speed
Same if Achilles U15 played Bethesda U16
The scoreboard is irrelevant if you understand soccer, it's the individual elements broken down for each player in their area under that pressure that matters
But such an intellectual approach argument regarding youth development here is wasted
+1
"My son played up at u12 and dominated so they should play up at u16 and dominate" 😂
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:please note. 2010s lost to 2009s and 2011s lost to 2010s. I don't care about how it fits into the argument, but present all the facts.
If this is true, this argument about wins/ losses is stupid.
WRONG. The truly elite talent in our area was, in many instances, already playing up before they came to DCU. The top talent in our area should be completely fine playing a year up against local clubs. The fact that you're saying otherwise shows you know nothing about our area or the talent in our area. Just stick to cutting up the oranges after the game...better use of your time.
I'm not a genius at the soccer thing, but I'm 100% sure based on physicality, there are major differences between playing up U10 vs U11 and U14 vs U15 etc when the puberty scale is considered
Also, the dcua can only have a limited amount of players, that means there are several dcu quality players on regular MLS next teams. Plain numbers issue.
So you have dcu vs similar talent of superior size, age and speed
Same if Achilles U15 played Bethesda U16
The scoreboard is irrelevant if you understand soccer, it's the individual elements broken down for each player in their area under that pressure that matters
But such an intellectual approach argument regarding youth development here is wasted
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:please note. 2010s lost to 2009s and 2011s lost to 2010s. I don't care about how it fits into the argument, but present all the facts.
If this is true, this argument about wins/ losses is stupid.
WRONG. The truly elite talent in our area was, in many instances, already playing up before they came to DCU. The top talent in our area should be completely fine playing a year up against local clubs. The fact that you're saying otherwise shows you know nothing about our area or the talent in our area. Just stick to cutting up the oranges after the game...better use of your time.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:please note. 2010s lost to 2009s and 2011s lost to 2010s. I don't care about how it fits into the argument, but present all the facts.
If this is true, this argument about wins/ losses is stupid.
WRONG. The truly elite talent in our area was, in many instances, already playing up before they came to DCU. The top talent in our area should be completely fine playing a year up against local clubs. The fact that you're saying otherwise shows you know nothing about our area or the talent in our area. Just stick to cutting up the oranges after the game...better use of your time.
The paradox is that those DCU kids are probably the most physical mature for their age which may be why they are playing up.
Regardless, with "professional" training, I would expect my child in any professional academy to develop at 125%-150% of a P2P player in MLS Next. If that is not happening, I am assessing my players work ethic. If they are putting in the work, then I am assessing the training environment.
DCU is not the only club recruiting early bloomers. SYC is guilty too if you look at certain age groups. Let's not deny clubs aren't favoring early developers. They think they can quickly train soccer skills to these players.
Keep seeing people parroting what they've heard about the massive sizes of dcu academy players, yet neither in real life nor in photos does this match the urban legend
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:please note. 2010s lost to 2009s and 2011s lost to 2010s. I don't care about how it fits into the argument, but present all the facts.
If this is true, this argument about wins/ losses is stupid.
WRONG. The truly elite talent in our area was, in many instances, already playing up before they came to DCU. The top talent in our area should be completely fine playing a year up against local clubs. The fact that you're saying otherwise shows you know nothing about our area or the talent in our area. Just stick to cutting up the oranges after the game...better use of your time.
The paradox is that those DCU kids are probably the most physical mature for their age which may be why they are playing up.
Regardless, with "professional" training, I would expect my child in any professional academy to develop at 125%-150% of a P2P player in MLS Next. If that is not happening, I am assessing my players work ethic. If they are putting in the work, then I am assessing the training environment.