Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Parents are delusional. Everybody thinks their kid is the next big thing—but at some point, you’ve got to be honest about the level they’re actually at.
Not every player is elite, and that’s okay. But pretending otherwise doesn’t help the kid—it just creates noise.
Programs like D.C. United’s academy aren’t perfect, but they exist for a reason: they identify and develop top-level talent. Most players there earned it.
And let’s be real—some of the loudest criticism comes from people who didn’t make it in and never got over it.
Support your kid. Believe in them. But keep one foot in reality.
DCU does not identify and develop top level talent. This is where your note is mistaken...they don't identify or develop talent with any level of consistency or success. Wish that wasn't the case but it is what it is.
The only mls club that consistently produces high level professionals hasn't been invented yet
Unless they are sneaking them out of the country under aliases every transfer window
Some MLS clubs are just way better equipped to produce pros than others. Their foundation and methodology is just stronger and the investments they have made are positioning for longer term success, modelling European academies. DCU is just not one of those clubs.
DCU is one of the worst academies you could attend in the MLS ecosystem. FACTS. Please don't try to advance the, if they all aren't producing high level pros, they are all the same argument. It's like saying the Netherlands and the US are the same at football because they have both never won world cups. Just doesn't work.
Where are the MLS club academies churning out high level professionals consistently?
Stupid analogy with the Netherlands, because they have some of the world's best academies that produce high level professionals consistently. The USA MLS academies do not.
Not a single one
How many pros has DCU signed to the first team from the academy in the last 3-4 years? How many players has DCU signed to pro deals for their second team? That answer is easy ZERO. They don't have a second team or MLS next pro team like pretty much ALL other MLS academies. All you need to know. Just focus on DCU. The other MLS academies are in a different league.
Philly Union knowingly keeping a racist on the payroll and in a leadership role sure is in a different league I'd say
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Parents are delusional. Everybody thinks their kid is the next big thing—but at some point, you’ve got to be honest about the level they’re actually at.
Not every player is elite, and that’s okay. But pretending otherwise doesn’t help the kid—it just creates noise.
Programs like D.C. United’s academy aren’t perfect, but they exist for a reason: they identify and develop top-level talent. Most players there earned it.
And let’s be real—some of the loudest criticism comes from people who didn’t make it in and never got over it.
Support your kid. Believe in them. But keep one foot in reality.
DCU does not identify and develop top level talent. This is where your note is mistaken...they don't identify or develop talent with any level of consistency or success. Wish that wasn't the case but it is what it is.
The only mls club that consistently produces high level professionals hasn't been invented yet
Unless they are sneaking them out of the country under aliases every transfer window
Some MLS clubs are just way better equipped to produce pros than others. Their foundation and methodology is just stronger and the investments they have made are positioning for longer term success, modelling European academies. DCU is just not one of those clubs.
DCU is one of the worst academies you could attend in the MLS ecosystem. FACTS. Please don't try to advance the, if they all aren't producing high level pros, they are all the same argument. It's like saying the Netherlands and the US are the same at football because they have both never won world cups. Just doesn't work.
Where are the MLS club academies churning out high level professionals consistently?
Stupid analogy with the Netherlands, because they have some of the world's best academies that produce high level professionals consistently. The USA MLS academies do not.
Not a single one
Shows you how far behind we are as a country. And if the best MLS academies in the US are that far behind, imagine where DCU is and what that means for your son.
Your interests in saving the lives of other people's kids from failure and a sad life of poverty is quite commendable
Fortunately for you, you and yours have made it to the top and with so much success, you're saving the world
Tell us again the route your kids took to top tier professional soccer successes
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Parents are delusional. Everybody thinks their kid is the next big thing—but at some point, you’ve got to be honest about the level they’re actually at.
Not every player is elite, and that’s okay. But pretending otherwise doesn’t help the kid—it just creates noise.
Programs like D.C. United’s academy aren’t perfect, but they exist for a reason: they identify and develop top-level talent. Most players there earned it.
And let’s be real—some of the loudest criticism comes from people who didn’t make it in and never got over it.
Support your kid. Believe in them. But keep one foot in reality.
DCU does not identify and develop top level talent. This is where your note is mistaken...they don't identify or develop talent with any level of consistency or success. Wish that wasn't the case but it is what it is.
The only mls club that consistently produces high level professionals hasn't been invented yet
Unless they are sneaking them out of the country under aliases every transfer window
Some MLS clubs are just way better equipped to produce pros than others. Their foundation and methodology is just stronger and the investments they have made are positioning for longer term success, modelling European academies. DCU is just not one of those clubs.
DCU is one of the worst academies you could attend in the MLS ecosystem. FACTS. Please don't try to advance the, if they all aren't producing high level pros, they are all the same argument. It's like saying the Netherlands and the US are the same at football because they have both never won world cups. Just doesn't work.
Where are the MLS club academies churning out high level professionals consistently?
Stupid analogy with the Netherlands, because they have some of the world's best academies that produce high level professionals consistently. The USA MLS academies do not.
Not a single one
How many pros has DCU signed to the first team from the academy in the last 3-4 years? How many players has DCU signed to pro deals for their second team? That answer is easy ZERO. They don't have a second team or MLS next pro team like pretty much ALL other MLS academies. All you need to know. Just focus on DCU. The other MLS academies are in a different league.
All the academies with MLS Next Pro teams aren't producing top tier professionals
You can name nice to haves and give opinions all day.
Bottom line, how many professional players of significance are the MLS academies putting out each year and how much are they making from the sales of these players?
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Parents are delusional. Everybody thinks their kid is the next big thing—but at some point, you’ve got to be honest about the level they’re actually at.
Not every player is elite, and that’s okay. But pretending otherwise doesn’t help the kid—it just creates noise.
Programs like D.C. United’s academy aren’t perfect, but they exist for a reason: they identify and develop top-level talent. Most players there earned it.
And let’s be real—some of the loudest criticism comes from people who didn’t make it in and never got over it.
Support your kid. Believe in them. But keep one foot in reality.
DCU does not identify and develop top level talent. This is where your note is mistaken...they don't identify or develop talent with any level of consistency or success. Wish that wasn't the case but it is what it is.
The only mls club that consistently produces high level professionals hasn't been invented yet
Unless they are sneaking them out of the country under aliases every transfer window
Some MLS clubs are just way better equipped to produce pros than others. Their foundation and methodology is just stronger and the investments they have made are positioning for longer term success, modelling European academies. DCU is just not one of those clubs.
DCU is one of the worst academies you could attend in the MLS ecosystem. FACTS. Please don't try to advance the, if they all aren't producing high level pros, they are all the same argument. It's like saying the Netherlands and the US are the same at football because they have both never won world cups. Just doesn't work.
Where are the MLS club academies churning out high level professionals consistently?
Stupid analogy with the Netherlands, because they have some of the world's best academies that produce high level professionals consistently. The USA MLS academies do not.
Not a single one
Shows you how far behind we are as a country. And if the best MLS academies in the US are that far behind, imagine where DCU is and what that means for your son.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Parents are delusional. Everybody thinks their kid is the next big thing—but at some point, you’ve got to be honest about the level they’re actually at.
Not every player is elite, and that’s okay. But pretending otherwise doesn’t help the kid—it just creates noise.
Programs like D.C. United’s academy aren’t perfect, but they exist for a reason: they identify and develop top-level talent. Most players there earned it.
And let’s be real—some of the loudest criticism comes from people who didn’t make it in and never got over it.
Support your kid. Believe in them. But keep one foot in reality.
DCU does not identify and develop top level talent. This is where your note is mistaken...they don't identify or develop talent with any level of consistency or success. Wish that wasn't the case but it is what it is.
The only mls club that consistently produces high level professionals hasn't been invented yet
Unless they are sneaking them out of the country under aliases every transfer window
Some MLS clubs are just way better equipped to produce pros than others. Their foundation and methodology is just stronger and the investments they have made are positioning for longer term success, modelling European academies. DCU is just not one of those clubs.
DCU is one of the worst academies you could attend in the MLS ecosystem. FACTS. Please don't try to advance the, if they all aren't producing high level pros, they are all the same argument. It's like saying the Netherlands and the US are the same at football because they have both never won world cups. Just doesn't work.
Where are the MLS club academies churning out high level professionals consistently?
Stupid analogy with the Netherlands, because they have some of the world's best academies that produce high level professionals consistently. The USA MLS academies do not.
Not a single one
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Parents are delusional. Everybody thinks their kid is the next big thing—but at some point, you’ve got to be honest about the level they’re actually at.
Not every player is elite, and that’s okay. But pretending otherwise doesn’t help the kid—it just creates noise.
Programs like D.C. United’s academy aren’t perfect, but they exist for a reason: they identify and develop top-level talent. Most players there earned it.
And let’s be real—some of the loudest criticism comes from people who didn’t make it in and never got over it.
Support your kid. Believe in them. But keep one foot in reality.
DCU does not identify and develop top level talent. This is where your note is mistaken...they don't identify or develop talent with any level of consistency or success. Wish that wasn't the case but it is what it is.
The only mls club that consistently produces high level professionals hasn't been invented yet
Unless they are sneaking them out of the country under aliases every transfer window
Some MLS clubs are just way better equipped to produce pros than others. Their foundation and methodology is just stronger and the investments they have made are positioning for longer term success, modelling European academies. DCU is just not one of those clubs.
DCU is one of the worst academies you could attend in the MLS ecosystem. FACTS. Please don't try to advance the, if they all aren't producing high level pros, they are all the same argument. It's like saying the Netherlands and the US are the same at football because they have both never won world cups. Just doesn't work.
Where are the MLS club academies churning out high level professionals consistently?
Stupid analogy with the Netherlands, because they have some of the world's best academies that produce high level professionals consistently. The USA MLS academies do not.
Not a single one
How many pros has DCU signed to the first team from the academy in the last 3-4 years? How many players has DCU signed to pro deals for their second team? That answer is easy ZERO. They don't have a second team or MLS next pro team like pretty much ALL other MLS academies. All you need to know. Just focus on DCU. The other MLS academies are in a different league.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Parents are delusional. Everybody thinks their kid is the next big thing—but at some point, you’ve got to be honest about the level they’re actually at.
Not every player is elite, and that’s okay. But pretending otherwise doesn’t help the kid—it just creates noise.
Programs like D.C. United’s academy aren’t perfect, but they exist for a reason: they identify and develop top-level talent. Most players there earned it.
And let’s be real—some of the loudest criticism comes from people who didn’t make it in and never got over it.
Support your kid. Believe in them. But keep one foot in reality.
DCU does not identify and develop top level talent. This is where your note is mistaken...they don't identify or develop talent with any level of consistency or success. Wish that wasn't the case but it is what it is.
The only mls club that consistently produces high level professionals hasn't been invented yet
Unless they are sneaking them out of the country under aliases every transfer window
Some MLS clubs are just way better equipped to produce pros than others. Their foundation and methodology is just stronger and the investments they have made are positioning for longer term success, modelling European academies. DCU is just not one of those clubs.
DCU is one of the worst academies you could attend in the MLS ecosystem. FACTS. Please don't try to advance the, if they all aren't producing high level pros, they are all the same argument. It's like saying the Netherlands and the US are the same at football because they have both never won world cups. Just doesn't work.
Where are the MLS club academies churning out high level professionals consistently?
Stupid analogy with the Netherlands, because they have some of the world's best academies that produce high level professionals consistently. The USA MLS academies do not.
Not a single one
How many pros has DCU signed to the first team from the academy in the last 3-4 years? How many players has DCU signed to pro deals for their second team? That answer is easy ZERO. They don't have a second team or MLS next pro team like pretty much ALL other MLS academies. All you need to know. Just focus on DCU. The other MLS academies are in a different league.
Anonymous wrote:I thought DCU recently signed Oscar Avilez (16 yr old) to the first team. And I thought i saw that he went to GA and played with the academy team. I could be wrong, but is it allowed for a pro player to play in academy games?
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Parents are delusional. Everybody thinks their kid is the next big thing—but at some point, you’ve got to be honest about the level they’re actually at.
Not every player is elite, and that’s okay. But pretending otherwise doesn’t help the kid—it just creates noise.
Programs like D.C. United’s academy aren’t perfect, but they exist for a reason: they identify and develop top-level talent. Most players there earned it.
And let’s be real—some of the loudest criticism comes from people who didn’t make it in and never got over it.
Support your kid. Believe in them. But keep one foot in reality.
DCU does not identify and develop top level talent. This is where your note is mistaken...they don't identify or develop talent with any level of consistency or success. Wish that wasn't the case but it is what it is.
The only mls club that consistently produces high level professionals hasn't been invented yet
Unless they are sneaking them out of the country under aliases every transfer window
Some MLS clubs are just way better equipped to produce pros than others. Their foundation and methodology is just stronger and the investments they have made are positioning for longer term success, modelling European academies. DCU is just not one of those clubs.
DCU is one of the worst academies you could attend in the MLS ecosystem. FACTS. Please don't try to advance the, if they all aren't producing high level pros, they are all the same argument. It's like saying the Netherlands and the US are the same at football because they have both never won world cups. Just doesn't work.
Where are the MLS club academies churning out high level professionals consistently?
Stupid analogy with the Netherlands, because they have some of the world's best academies that produce high level professionals consistently. The USA MLS academies do not.
Not a single one
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Parents are delusional. Everybody thinks their kid is the next big thing—but at some point, you’ve got to be honest about the level they’re actually at.
Not every player is elite, and that’s okay. But pretending otherwise doesn’t help the kid—it just creates noise.
Programs like D.C. United’s academy aren’t perfect, but they exist for a reason: they identify and develop top-level talent. Most players there earned it.
And let’s be real—some of the loudest criticism comes from people who didn’t make it in and never got over it.
Support your kid. Believe in them. But keep one foot in reality.
DCU does not identify and develop top level talent. This is where your note is mistaken...they don't identify or develop talent with any level of consistency or success. Wish that wasn't the case but it is what it is.
The only mls club that consistently produces high level professionals hasn't been invented yet
Unless they are sneaking them out of the country under aliases every transfer window
Some MLS clubs are just way better equipped to produce pros than others. Their foundation and methodology is just stronger and the investments they have made are positioning for longer term success, modelling European academies. DCU is just not one of those clubs.
DCU is one of the worst academies you could attend in the MLS ecosystem. FACTS. Please don't try to advance the, if they all aren't producing high level pros, they are all the same argument. It's like saying the Netherlands and the US are the same at football because they have both never won world cups. Just doesn't work.
Where are the MLS club academies churning out high level professionals consistently?
Stupid analogy with the Netherlands, because they have some of the world's best academies that produce high level professionals consistently. The USA MLS academies do not.
Not a single one
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Parents are delusional. Everybody thinks their kid is the next big thing—but at some point, you’ve got to be honest about the level they’re actually at.
Not every player is elite, and that’s okay. But pretending otherwise doesn’t help the kid—it just creates noise.
Programs like D.C. United’s academy aren’t perfect, but they exist for a reason: they identify and develop top-level talent. Most players there earned it.
And let’s be real—some of the loudest criticism comes from people who didn’t make it in and never got over it.
Support your kid. Believe in them. But keep one foot in reality.
DCU does not identify and develop top level talent. This is where your note is mistaken...they don't identify or develop talent with any level of consistency or success. Wish that wasn't the case but it is what it is.
The only mls club that consistently produces high level professionals hasn't been invented yet
Unless they are sneaking them out of the country under aliases every transfer window
Some MLS clubs are just way better equipped to produce pros than others. Their foundation and methodology is just stronger and the investments they have made are positioning for longer term success, modelling European academies. DCU is just not one of those clubs.
DCU is one of the worst academies you could attend in the MLS ecosystem. FACTS. Please don't try to advance the, if they all aren't producing high level pros, they are all the same argument. It's like saying the Netherlands and the US are the same at football because they have both never won world cups. Just doesn't work.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Parents are delusional. Everybody thinks their kid is the next big thing—but at some point, you’ve got to be honest about the level they’re actually at.
Not every player is elite, and that’s okay. But pretending otherwise doesn’t help the kid—it just creates noise.
Programs like D.C. United’s academy aren’t perfect, but they exist for a reason: they identify and develop top-level talent. Most players there earned it.
And let’s be real—some of the loudest criticism comes from people who didn’t make it in and never got over it.
Support your kid. Believe in them. But keep one foot in reality.
DCU does not identify and develop top level talent. This is where your note is mistaken...they don't identify or develop talent with any level of consistency or success. Wish that wasn't the case but it is what it is.
The only mls club that consistently produces high level professionals hasn't been invented yet
Unless they are sneaking them out of the country under aliases every transfer window
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Thank you for the standard deflection tweedle dee and tweedle dumb (DCU PR intern), now can the question at hand be addressed?
https://youtu.be/MauTNb-y...oApVDGnpWt
I found him truly engaging. What's the story of what worked well and what did not when he was with DCU?
What is the focus of the new director?
He's no longer at DCU and he answered your questions on the podcast.
You have no connection to DCU, you have no kid at DCU, you won't have a son at DCU
Take your unhealthy obsession elsewhere
Dude, those are questions. Why are you so emotional over questions?
Previous Post isn't emotional
You're disingenuous and have proven through your multiple posts that you have an agenda to denigrate and disparage the academy, the players and their parents
Your 'just a question' is your repeated modus operandi for an opening for you to reel off another slew of toxicity
If you care that much about information about the academy, contact the academy or go to games and speak to academy parents. That's what people with legitimate interests do.
Make sure you gather the fathers in a group and talk the crap you've been saying here directly to their faces for additional bonus points
So…I posted the link. Not sure you are aware that you are talking to many different people. I do check this forum two times a day but not sure how you can post 4 minutes after my question if you are not refreshing constantly. That seems like an obsession.
Although I have made no statement about the kids, parents or academy in asking a genuine question, you told me “ you have no kid at DCU, you won't have a son at DCU” without knowing anything about me. Is that not the definition of toxic when you have no idea who I am or how may times my kid has been invited to DCU, Nashville, CLT, Philly or Red Bulls?
He did clearly lay out the key to the DMV producing more professional footballers and I am genuinely curious on whether he just talks well on a podcast or whether it is an unfixable problem due to the culture under this ownership. Silence is golden so I think I have my answer.