Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Not at bryc but at another club and I can assure you that the top team coaches could care less about the 3rd or 4th team players. They have their own coaches that take care of them.
The problem is the B and C team are isolated like they aren't even part of the same club. Why should elite teams get the same uniform as the ecnl but the bridge teams get something totally different like we are in another club? We both play in NCSL, but you wouldnt guess it as we look different in uniform and we dont have the benefit of training with the a and b teams ever.
My daughter has played both elite and bridge and the uniforms are exactly the same except bridge doesn’t have the light blue one. I don’t expect to train with elite after moving to Bridge. That is what Elite pays waaaay more for!
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Not at bryc but at another club and I can assure you that the top team coaches could care less about the 3rd or 4th team players. They have their own coaches that take care of them.
The problem is the B and C team are isolated like they aren't even part of the same club. Why should elite teams get the same uniform as the ecnl but the bridge teams get something totally different like we are in another club? We both play in NCSL, but you wouldnt guess it as we look different in uniform and we dont have the benefit of training with the a and b teams ever.
Anonymous wrote:I know at least ten Bridge coaches and have no idea who this K is.
Anonymous wrote:ex-wife of?
Anonymous wrote:What nonsense? Not all bridge coaches know each other or go by dumb nicknames like that of the VLF (vicious little ferret) at Duke.
Anonymous wrote:What nonsense? Not all bridge coaches know each other or go by dumb nicknames like that of the VLF (vicious little ferret) at Duke.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:I have coached a Bridge team for years. My kid is happy on this team, he is a multi sport athlete and the time commitment (2x/week training, for starters) works out much better with his other sports. I have always had a relationship with the Elite coach in my age group and have often sent kids to them for a look when I think they would do well at that level. I have also had several kids come to my group from the higher team. I know there are other coaches who also have that relationship. Some don't, everyone runs their teams a little differently. That said, we definitely do our own thing and don't interact with that team at all. Training space is fine, though yes it is separate from the Elite groups.
Because we're volunteer coaches, it's a wide variety of personalities and experience, but there are some good teams and coaches out there. Have your kid participate in a practice session and get a feel for the team. When I get kids who sleep, eat and breathe soccer, they usually need a higher team, if nothing else because they just want more soccer than I can give them, but for most kids it's a great opportunity to play travel soccer and be a part of a team that stays together for the most part but doesn't have quite the price tag/time commitment as some of the higher teams. And the price is pretty insanely cheap for a travel team. I think it's very much worth checking out, and trying to find a coach that works for your kid. That fit with the right coach would matter more to me than what club they were playing for if they weren't an elite, top of the pile sort of player. My older son bounced through three different clubs before he finished out his soccer days playing for a good coach and with great kids on a Bridge team.
Thanks Coach K...
Not sure who Coach K is but... it's not me