Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:I love how now that DA exists ECNL has suddenly become the champion of HS soccer. 3-4 years ago ECNL coaches heavily discouraged their players from participating. Funny how things change.
It says something about a league when ECNL’s best selling point is the opportunity to not actually play in the league.
You sound like a parent of a young player. You dont know what you're taking about.
Ecnl is not structured the same way it was 3 or 4 years ago.
The boys DA is a failed system. No need to repeat it. Enjoy
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:where will Spirit DA players go? Any idea?
There will be Spirit DA teams next year. Stop this nonsense.
Do they suck as bad as i heard?
Well, at least not as good as your wife sucks.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:What doesn’t impress the US Soccer federation is the quality of the actual game on the field not the popcorn being sold at the concession stand.
Exactly. It's bad soccer. Plenty of ECNL players opt out, even though they are allowed to play it.
US soccer federation is a collection of the most unimpressive sports personnel ever assembled.
Anonymous wrote:You are such a blow hard. This BS narrative about HS and top players. Your kid and my kid are not so special that they need to sacrifice for the greater good of US Soccer.
Our kids are not saving American soccer. You are not saving American soccer.
Repeat after me: not special
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:What doesn’t impress the US Soccer federation is the quality of the actual game on the field not the popcorn being sold at the concession stand.
Exactly. It's bad soccer. Plenty of ECNL players opt out, even though they are allowed to play it.
Anonymous wrote:https://www.socceramerica.com/publications/article/77603/us-soccer-blundered-badly-on-high-school-soccer.html
I read it & the comments. Nothing new in the year old argument.
If you want HS soccer, do it!
I do appreciate DCUM trolls telling us that our kids aren’t special. Its true and will continue to be without the commitment, passion and any ambition or stretch goals for the sport and themselves.
I’ve watched the separation of my DD from the majority of peers that she would play against in HS.. It may not be the same argument for all players alongside her. Some of these players are putting in the hours continuing to working on fundamentals alongside creativity, some aren't. Too bad there isnt a super academy that takes all of the top players, not just 18, and provides them similar top level training and guidance. Or attempts to do that across locations. hmmm.
I watched the kids in my densely populated area play pickup soccer over the years. It’s not bringing the characteristics of play described in articles and comments. It looks like a U6 coed rec game.
Anonymous wrote:What doesn’t impress the US Soccer federation is the quality of the actual game on the field not the popcorn being sold at the concession stand.
Anonymous wrote:I love how now that DA exists ECNL has suddenly become the champion of HS soccer. 3-4 years ago ECNL coaches heavily discouraged their players from participating. Funny how things change.
It says something about a league when ECNL’s best selling point is the opportunity to not actually play in the league.
Anonymous wrote:COMMENTARY
U.S. Soccer blundered badly on high school soccer
by Mike Woitalla @MikeWoitalla, Apr 20, 2018
American soccer, so plagued by the pay-to-play problem. If only there was youth soccer that didn't charge kids so much money.
Hold on! It does exist, and it’s massive. Nationwide. It’s called high school soccer.
Sometimes, hundreds of people show up for a high school game, the players are celebrated on campus, rivalries date back for decades, there’s even local media coverage.
Not always, but often around the country, high school games create a special kind of atmosphere in the stadium.
As you enter, there’s a snack bar with homemade baked goods and hot chocolate to raise money for senior night, the annual game when parents tear up like they do at graduation.
There’s a scoreboard, a PA announcer, and music blasting from the mixtape the captains compiled -- making sure they downloaded the censored versions of the latest rap songs -- while the players warm up.
Players from the same clubs play against each other – and the parents who usually root together are on separate sides after exchanging pleasantries. Postgame they congratulate and console each other.
Some club coaches are there too, proud that they’ve got current or former players on the teams. They mingle with the parents and catch up on old times. The boys team shows up to cheer on the girls, or vice versa. Friends and boyfriends and girlfriends are in the stands. The class clowns are leading cheers and jeers.
High school soccer differs from club soccer not just by exposing players to the pressure and exhilaration of playing in front of crowds, it also puts players from ages 14 to 18 -- from freshmen to seniors -- on the same field.
None of that seems to impress the U.S. Soccer Federation.
READ THE ARTICLE