Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:^100 percent.
Also: the best kids are picked by U12. If not on top team somewhere, will be nearly impossible to move up.
Don’t let her suffer with a mean or bad coach.
Don’t keep her on a team if she’s not playing most of the game at that age.
It’s all about confidence. Let her hog a ball a bit. Selflessness gets you nowhere in girls soccer.
Also, this is 100%
If I knew now at u11 what I wish I would have known at u8 (Yes, we started travel at u8 and played a year up early with our local club.); then I would have switched her to a feeder ECNL club or straight ECNL club earlier. We stayed a 1-2 years too long at our local club because my DD was not ready to switch. (Didn't understand why.) But now we did switch and the tops teams are slammed full of kids. All very good kids. Our local club did not have the development or intensity needed to level my player at all. Now, we have to hope that about 10 other kids who arrived here before us either move out of the area, switch clubs or start to suck somehow. Otherwise, even with loads of hard work, we are still behind a lot of kids who had better development and behind in terms of longevity at priority at the club.
Do what you have to do to not get stuck on a ECNL RL team or a GA-II team. None of those teams get a lot of college exposure. None of those teams or players get recommended for much anything. I'd hate to get stuck on that level of a team (often kids are there, because they are stuck there and there is no room to move up), I'd switch to a club that has the club you want for college recruiting now.
(The exception to that is parents who know their kid is super athletic, bigger, faster and stronger than their peers.... they won't have to worry about switching early...they usually get picked at try outs for which ever team they go to... this take is based that observation 3 times over.)
And yes, keep working on juggling... that is a skill that showcases and encapsulates a kid's dedication to the sport to the coaches.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Pick a club that practices close to your house and stick with them. The grass is not greener at whatever flavor of the month everyone is trying to play for. It just takes longer to get there.
Worst advice I've ever read in here. There are God awful clubs everywhere and not every club is best suited for every player. Find a club that is willing to invest in your kid not just take your money.
Anonymous wrote:You have a U11 kid who needs to jump 10 players in order to make your ECNL team, yet you’re trashing ECNL-RL.Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:^100 percent.
Also: the best kids are picked by U12. If not on top team somewhere, will be nearly impossible to move up.
Don’t let her suffer with a mean or bad coach.
Don’t keep her on a team if she’s not playing most of the game at that age.
It’s all about confidence. Let her hog a ball a bit. Selflessness gets you nowhere in girls soccer.
Also, this is 100%
If I knew now at u11 what I wish I would have known at u8 (Yes, we started travel at u8 and played a year up early with our local club.); then I would have switched her to a feeder ECNL club or straight ECNL club earlier. We stayed a 1-2 years too long at our local club because my DD was not ready to switch. (Didn't understand why.) But now we did switch and the tops teams are slammed full of kids. All very good kids. Our local club did not have the development or intensity needed to level my player at all. Now, we have to hope that about 10 other kids who arrived here before us either move out of the area, switch clubs or start to suck somehow. Otherwise, even with loads of hard work, we are still behind a lot of kids who had better development and behind in terms of longevity at priority at the club.
Do what you have to do to not get stuck on a ECNL RL team or a GA-II team. None of those teams get a lot of college exposure. None of those teams or players get recommended for much anything. I'd hate to get stuck on that level of a team (often kids are there, because they are stuck there and there is no room to move up), I'd switch to a club that has the club you want for college recruiting now.
(The exception to that is parents who know their kid is super athletic, bigger, faster and stronger than their peers.... they won't have to worry about switching early...they usually get picked at try outs for which ever team they go to... this take is based that observation 3 times over.)
And yes, keep working on juggling... that is a skill that showcases and encapsulates a kid's dedication to the sport to the coaches.
Who’s going to break the news to this guy?
You have a U11 kid who needs to jump 10 players in order to make your ECNL team, yet you’re trashing ECNL-RL.Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:^100 percent.
Also: the best kids are picked by U12. If not on top team somewhere, will be nearly impossible to move up.
Don’t let her suffer with a mean or bad coach.
Don’t keep her on a team if she’s not playing most of the game at that age.
It’s all about confidence. Let her hog a ball a bit. Selflessness gets you nowhere in girls soccer.
Also, this is 100%
If I knew now at u11 what I wish I would have known at u8 (Yes, we started travel at u8 and played a year up early with our local club.); then I would have switched her to a feeder ECNL club or straight ECNL club earlier. We stayed a 1-2 years too long at our local club because my DD was not ready to switch. (Didn't understand why.) But now we did switch and the tops teams are slammed full of kids. All very good kids. Our local club did not have the development or intensity needed to level my player at all. Now, we have to hope that about 10 other kids who arrived here before us either move out of the area, switch clubs or start to suck somehow. Otherwise, even with loads of hard work, we are still behind a lot of kids who had better development and behind in terms of longevity at priority at the club.
Do what you have to do to not get stuck on a ECNL RL team or a GA-II team. None of those teams get a lot of college exposure. None of those teams or players get recommended for much anything. I'd hate to get stuck on that level of a team (often kids are there, because they are stuck there and there is no room to move up), I'd switch to a club that has the club you want for college recruiting now.
(The exception to that is parents who know their kid is super athletic, bigger, faster and stronger than their peers.... they won't have to worry about switching early...they usually get picked at try outs for which ever team they go to... this take is based that observation 3 times over.)
And yes, keep working on juggling... that is a skill that showcases and encapsulates a kid's dedication to the sport to the coaches.
Anonymous wrote:^100 percent.
Also: the best kids are picked by U12. If not on top team somewhere, will be nearly impossible to move up.
Don’t let her suffer with a mean or bad coach.
Don’t keep her on a team if she’s not playing most of the game at that age.
It’s all about confidence. Let her hog a ball a bit. Selflessness gets you nowhere in girls soccer.
Anonymous wrote:Juggle juggle juggle
Ball and a wall
See if you can get an opportunity to play with or train with the boys once a week.
Stay in a small club that emphasize development until U11 or U12. Make a move at U13.
Play futsal. Real trained futsal, not futsal with her soccer team
Anonymous wrote:Pick a club that practices close to your house and stick with them. The grass is not greener at whatever flavor of the month everyone is trying to play for. It just takes longer to get there.