RantingSoccerDad wrote:Anonymous wrote:This topic came up in the ASA ECNL/Red team movement thread. Thought it was worthy of its own discussion.
Especially for the younger levels, what does each club emphasize in player development?
I'll start: ASA seems to focus on individual ball handling skills and game IQ (player positioning, spreading the field), passing. They are not very physical and there is no emphasis on shooting/kicking (U9).
Are we talking about Arundel? Because that certainly doesn't sound like the Arlington I know.
Alexandria used to be so possession-oriented that they had a blog giving the passing stats for each U9 game. They were awesome.
But in general -- yeah, so many teams in one club, so if you're talking about the second team in an age group, let alone the fourth or fifth, whatever style the TD or DOC is trying to instill is less and less likely to be what you actually see. Tough to get everyone on the same page.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:RantingSoccerDad wrote:Anonymous wrote:This topic came up in the ASA ECNL/Red team movement thread. Thought it was worthy of its own discussion.
Especially for the younger levels, what does each club emphasize in player development?
I'll start: ASA seems to focus on individual ball handling skills and game IQ (player positioning, spreading the field), passing. They are not very physical and there is no emphasis on shooting/kicking (U9).
Are we talking about Arundel? Because that certainly doesn't sound like the Arlington I know.
Alexandria used to be so possession-oriented that they had a blog giving the passing stats for each U9 game. They were awesome.
But in general -- yeah, so many teams in one club, so if you're talking about the second team in an age group, let alone the fourth or fifth, whatever style the TD or DOC is trying to instill is less and less likely to be what you actually see. Tough to get everyone on the same page.
This is a good description of Arlington these days. I think they've made a big effort to change the philosophy on the last 3-4 years. It started with the academy teams and now the younger teams and red teams are starting to play the same way.
I have not seen a change in top young boys teams at Arlington. They need their academy coaches to run the whole show at the club. There clearly remains a big difference in selection and style between academy and U9-11 players. Could be totally different on the girls side. I have no idea.
Anonymous wrote:RantingSoccerDad wrote:Anonymous wrote:This topic came up in the ASA ECNL/Red team movement thread. Thought it was worthy of its own discussion.
Especially for the younger levels, what does each club emphasize in player development?
I'll start: ASA seems to focus on individual ball handling skills and game IQ (player positioning, spreading the field), passing. They are not very physical and there is no emphasis on shooting/kicking (U9).
Are we talking about Arundel? Because that certainly doesn't sound like the Arlington I know.
Alexandria used to be so possession-oriented that they had a blog giving the passing stats for each U9 game. They were awesome.
But in general -- yeah, so many teams in one club, so if you're talking about the second team in an age group, let alone the fourth or fifth, whatever style the TD or DOC is trying to instill is less and less likely to be what you actually see. Tough to get everyone on the same page.
This is a good description of Arlington these days. I think they've made a big effort to change the philosophy on the last 3-4 years. It started with the academy teams and now the younger teams and red teams are starting to play the same way.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Loudoun: beautiful intricate tiki-taka style, they routinely put together 20+ pass sequence and tend to pick smaller technical kids;
Arlington: lots of Brazilian style flair with razzle dazzle moves, but unathletic and poorly organized defensively;
Alexandria, defensive power house with fast direct counter attacks and a requisite target man, they tend to avoid pattern play and short passes;
McLean: crosses and long distance shots all day, the coaches always have a great game plan and tend to prefer gritty players from rough neighborhoods.
This is great
RantingSoccerDad wrote:Anonymous wrote:This topic came up in the ASA ECNL/Red team movement thread. Thought it was worthy of its own discussion.
Especially for the younger levels, what does each club emphasize in player development?
I'll start: ASA seems to focus on individual ball handling skills and game IQ (player positioning, spreading the field), passing. They are not very physical and there is no emphasis on shooting/kicking (U9).
Are we talking about Arundel? Because that certainly doesn't sound like the Arlington I know.
Alexandria used to be so possession-oriented that they had a blog giving the passing stats for each U9 game. They were awesome.
But in general -- yeah, so many teams in one club, so if you're talking about the second team in an age group, let alone the fourth or fifth, whatever style the TD or DOC is trying to instill is less and less likely to be what you actually see. Tough to get everyone on the same page.
RantingSoccerDad wrote:Anonymous wrote:This topic came up in the ASA ECNL/Red team movement thread. Thought it was worthy of its own discussion.
Especially for the younger levels, what does each club emphasize in player development?
I'll start: ASA seems to focus on individual ball handling skills and game IQ (player positioning, spreading the field), passing. They are not very physical and there is no emphasis on shooting/kicking (U9).
Are we talking about Arundel? Because that certainly doesn't sound like the Arlington I know.
Alexandria used to be so possession-oriented that they had a blog giving the passing stats for each U9 game. They were awesome.
But in general -- yeah, so many teams in one club, so if you're talking about the second team in an age group, let alone the fourth or fifth, whatever style the TD or DOC is trying to instill is less and less likely to be what you actually see. Tough to get everyone on the same page.
Anonymous wrote:Loudoun: beautiful intricate tiki-taka style, they routinely put together 20+ pass sequence and tend to pick smaller technical kids;
Arlington: lots of Brazilian style flair with razzle dazzle moves, but unathletic and poorly organized defensively;
Alexandria, defensive power house with fast direct counter attacks and a requisite target man, they tend to avoid pattern play and short passes;
McLean: crosses and long distance shots all day, the coaches always have a great game plan and tend to prefer gritty players from rough neighborhoods.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Arlington plays with Brazilian style flair? Really?
I take it that’s sarcasm. God, I hope it is. A bunch of white Peles. Ha.
Arlington has a very high percentage of central/south american kids on most of its top teams.
JFC. yes, such brazilian flair. OMG
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Arlington plays with Brazilian style flair? Really?
I take it that’s sarcasm. God, I hope it is. A bunch of white Peles. Ha.
Arlington has a very high percentage of central/south american kids on most of its top teams.
JFC. yes, such brazilian flair. OMG
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Arlington plays with Brazilian style flair? Really?
I take it that’s sarcasm. God, I hope it is. A bunch of white Peles. Ha.
Arlington has a very high percentage of central/south american kids on most of its top teams.