Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:DCU has the same problem as most of US soccer. They are selecting a bunch of man children at 13 and 14 and can't figure out how to develop them. Players that are athletic freaks may make great outside or wing backs but they are not successful at other positions. Identifying the correct kids that will develop is hard and ultimately something that can't be done in a multi-day tryout. It would help if we had bigger youth clubs with a A,B,C,D,E,F,G team for each age group, but the US parent and club director egos would never be for this.
My DS plays for a MLS Next team since U13 and we've seen at least 3 years of DCU and all other MLS Next U14s and U15s play against our club.
Whatever views I may have, the one thing I can honestly say is that this urban legend about dcu having giant players is pure myth. Several teams like SYC and Bethesda has bigger players on average from my estimate
I think Bethesda has 4 bio banded 2009s on their U16 team, which is nuts. Bio banding really is for middle schoolers.
isn't three the limit?
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:DCU has the same problem as most of US soccer. They are selecting a bunch of man children at 13 and 14 and can't figure out how to develop them. Players that are athletic freaks may make great outside or wing backs but they are not successful at other positions. Identifying the correct kids that will develop is hard and ultimately something that can't be done in a multi-day tryout. It would help if we had bigger youth clubs with a A,B,C,D,E,F,G team for each age group, but the US parent and club director egos would never be for this.
My DS plays for a MLS Next team since U13 and we've seen at least 3 years of DCU and all other MLS Next U14s and U15s play against our club.
Whatever views I may have, the one thing I can honestly say is that this urban legend about dcu having giant players is pure myth. Several teams like SYC and Bethesda has bigger players on average from my estimate
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:DCU has the same problem as most of US soccer. They are selecting a bunch of man children at 13 and 14 and can't figure out how to develop them. Players that are athletic freaks may make great outside or wing backs but they are not successful at other positions. Identifying the correct kids that will develop is hard and ultimately something that can't be done in a multi-day tryout. It would help if we had bigger youth clubs with a A,B,C,D,E,F,G team for each age group, but the US parent and club director egos would never be for this.
My DS plays for a MLS Next team since U13 and we've seen at least 3 years of DCU and all other MLS Next U14s and U15s play against our club.
Whatever views I may have, the one thing I can honestly say is that this urban legend about dcu having giant players is pure myth. Several teams like SYC and Bethesda has bigger players on average from my estimate
I think Bethesda has 4 bio banded 2009s on their U16 team, which is nuts. Bio banding really is for middle schoolers.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:DCU has the same problem as most of US soccer. They are selecting a bunch of man children at 13 and 14 and can't figure out how to develop them. Players that are athletic freaks may make great outside or wing backs but they are not successful at other positions. Identifying the correct kids that will develop is hard and ultimately something that can't be done in a multi-day tryout. It would help if we had bigger youth clubs with a A,B,C,D,E,F,G team for each age group, but the US parent and club director egos would never be for this.
My DS plays for a MLS Next team since U13 and we've seen at least 3 years of DCU and all other MLS Next U14s and U15s play against our club.
Whatever views I may have, the one thing I can honestly say is that this urban legend about dcu having giant players is pure myth. Several teams like SYC and Bethesda has bigger players on average from my estimate
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:DCU has the same problem as most of US soccer. They are selecting a bunch of man children at 13 and 14 and can't figure out how to develop them. Players that are athletic freaks may make great outside or wing backs but they are not successful at other positions. Identifying the correct kids that will develop is hard and ultimately something that can't be done in a multi-day tryout. It would help if we had bigger youth clubs with a A,B,C,D,E,F,G team for each age group, but the US parent and club director egos would never be for this.
My DS plays for a MLS Next team since U13 and we've seen at least 3 years of DCU and all other MLS Next U14s and U15s play against our club.
Whatever views I may have, the one thing I can honestly say is that this urban legend about dcu having giant players is pure myth. Several teams like SYC and Bethesda has bigger players on average from my estimate
Agree - whatever problems DCUA may or may not have, only picking "athletic freaks" and "man children" players doesn't seem totally accurate, at least not what I have seen with my own eyes the few times my sons' teams have played them over the years. Do they have some big fast athletic players, usually defenders and maybe strikers? Of course; who doesn't? But is their whole team a bunch of massive fast kids without talent? 100% no. If people want to focus on what is wrong over there, and if it is truly as bad as people claim, the facts should speak for themselves without adding to them.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:DCU has the same problem as most of US soccer. They are selecting a bunch of man children at 13 and 14 and can't figure out how to develop them. Players that are athletic freaks may make great outside or wing backs but they are not successful at other positions. Identifying the correct kids that will develop is hard and ultimately something that can't be done in a multi-day tryout. It would help if we had bigger youth clubs with a A,B,C,D,E,F,G team for each age group, but the US parent and club director egos would never be for this.
My DS plays for a MLS Next team since U13 and we've seen at least 3 years of DCU and all other MLS Next U14s and U15s play against our club.
Whatever views I may have, the one thing I can honestly say is that this urban legend about dcu having giant players is pure myth. Several teams like SYC and Bethesda has bigger players on average from my estimate
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:DCU has the same problem as most of US soccer. They are selecting a bunch of man children at 13 and 14 and can't figure out how to develop them. Players that are athletic freaks may make great outside or wing backs but they are not successful at other positions. Identifying the correct kids that will develop is hard and ultimately something that can't be done in a multi-day tryout. It would help if we had bigger youth clubs with a A,B,C,D,E,F,G team for each age group, but the US parent and club director egos would never be for this.
My DS plays for a MLS Next team since U13 and we've seen at least 3 years of DCU and all other MLS Next U14s and U15s play against our club.
Whatever views I may have, the one thing I can honestly say is that this urban legend about dcu having giant players is pure myth. Several teams like SYC and Bethesda has bigger players on average from my estimate
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Why is this young kid being brought into someone's gripe with dcu and even being identified by name?
While not the original poster who mentioned his name, it is plastered all over IG with Pipeline and Philly promoting it among others. My kid's name is on the internet but I specifically ask people to keep it off of IG and the request is usually granted. I think it is something parents should pay attention to. Unfortunately, I think many parents like the attention.
This is not the kid's team or parents or the kid posting an announcement on IG
It's a grown adult stalker obsessed with DCU and apparently also Philly Union who is throwing out the kid's name in their unhealthy crusade
DCU keeping information private which leads to parents not having much information to make informed decisions on their child's future = healthy
Philly publicizes information so parents can gather information to make informed decisions on their child's future = unhealthy
I am not the brightest bulb in the pack so want to make sure I follow your logic.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Why is this young kid being brought into someone's gripe with dcu and even being identified by name?
While not the original poster who mentioned his name, it is plastered all over IG with Pipeline and Philly promoting it among others. My kid's name is on the internet but I specifically ask people to keep it off of IG and the request is usually granted. I think it is something parents should pay attention to. Unfortunately, I think many parents like the attention.
This is not the kid's team or parents or the kid posting an announcement on IG
It's a grown adult stalker obsessed with DCU and apparently also Philly Union who is throwing out the kid's name in their unhealthy crusade
Anonymous wrote:DCU has the same problem as most of US soccer. They are selecting a bunch of man children at 13 and 14 and can't figure out how to develop them. Players that are athletic freaks may make great outside or wing backs but they are not successful at other positions. Identifying the correct kids that will develop is hard and ultimately something that can't be done in a multi-day tryout. It would help if we had bigger youth clubs with a A,B,C,D,E,F,G team for each age group, but the US parent and club director egos would never be for this.
Anonymous wrote:This is exactly what VPSL/NCSL are putting together along with USSoccer/USYSAnonymous wrote: It would help if we had bigger youth clubs with a A,B,C,D,E,F,G team for each age group, but the US parent and club director egos would never be for this.
Anonymous wrote:This is exactly what VPSL/NCSL are putting together along with USSoccer/USYSAnonymous wrote: It would help if we had bigger youth clubs with a A,B,C,D,E,F,G team for each age group, but the US parent and club director egos would never be for this.
This is exactly what VPSL/NCSL are putting together along with USSoccer/USYSAnonymous wrote: It would help if we had bigger youth clubs with a A,B,C,D,E,F,G team for each age group, but the US parent and club director egos would never be for this.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Pipeline’s Jacob Mays (USYNT 2011 national team) gets off DCUA’s protected list and immediately signs with Philadelphia Union’s Academy.
To be clear, because everyone misquotes this. The team is a 'futures' camp. The futures camp per the website is " for players from ages 14 to 16 years old, with the goal of identifying, supporting and developing high-potential players who physically mature later than their peers."
Futures is different from the regular camp. Still an accomplishment.
Also to note, 3 players from dcua are on the 2010 actual national team roster.
What is a 'futures' camp? How does it differ from an actual academy? Are you saying he joined Philly Union 'futures' versus their academy?
It's similar to the national team. But it's camp only for late physical developers. I'm guessing may look at them in coming years for the national team.
But everyone on ig that has any relationship with the kids keeps saying national team when it's 100% incorrect.
It has nothing to do with Philly union.
And yes, Philly is much closer to those players than dcu. Some of them have declined due to travel to dcu.
https://www.ussoccer.com/stories/2026/02/ynt/us-soccer-names-rosters-for-new-us-u-15-and-u-16-boys-national-team-futures-camp-february-fayetteville-georgia?utm_source=ig&utm_medium=social&utm_content=link_in_bio&fbclid=PAZXh0bgNhZW0CMTEAc3J0YwZhcHBfaWQPNTY3MDY3MzQzMzUyNDI3AAGnf4t7KMnKHHQY2SLc6H0eGTSHxLnSR4LnDAuXFy-JFVTcAFPiNXmasOs8VC0_aem_unt8QOCTFuPFnISpbBS5zg