Anonymous wrote:if by solid you mean none of their age groups were even close to winning the Midwest Conference then yes, they are definitely solid. The move just proved the case that the most dominant GA clubs are just middle of the pack ECNL clubs. The GA is still a second tier developmental league.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Hmm.. the girls academy latest post features Nationals (Michigan based club)…..
Could they be making return?
Where is this link? National just spend a few days with full ECNL posts and why it ECNL is great ... so perhaps GA used them, but a simple check and you can easily see Nationals is all in on ECNL.
Nationals, even after switching to ECNL, STILL call their highest level program for girs, its girls academy. Confusing for sure.
Nationals were the UNDISPUTED champions of the GA. Now they’re a solid ECNL club.
They are a great club no doubt, BUT Michigan has gotten super competitive for the top talent with more ENCL and GA club options. And while there a great many things to say about the Nationals, the biggest knock on them is their price.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Hmm.. the girls academy latest post features Nationals (Michigan based club)…..
Could they be making return?
Where is this link? National just spend a few days with full ECNL posts and why it ECNL is great ... so perhaps GA used them, but a simple check and you can easily see Nationals is all in on ECNL.
Nationals, even after switching to ECNL, STILL call their highest level program for girs, its girls academy. Confusing for sure.
Nationals were the UNDISPUTED champions of the GA. Now they’re a solid ECNL club.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Hmm.. the girls academy latest post features Nationals (Michigan based club)…..
Could they be making return?
Where is this link? National just spend a few days with full ECNL posts and why it ECNL is great ... so perhaps GA used them, but a simple check and you can easily see Nationals is all in on ECNL.
Nationals, even after switching to ECNL, STILL call their highest level program for girs, its girls academy. Confusing for sure.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Hmm.. the girls academy latest post features Nationals (Michigan based club)…..
Could they be making return?
Where is this link? National just spend a few days with full ECNL posts and why it ECNL is great ... so perhaps GA used them, but a simple check and you can easily see Nationals is all in on ECNL.
Anonymous wrote:Hmm.. the girls academy latest post features Nationals (Michigan based club)…..
Could they be making return?
Anonymous wrote:I hear announcements coming soon.....
Anonymous wrote:What in DA, ECNL, MLS history would cause you to think they will merge? They will try to destroy each other as they have always done. Too much money involved.
Anonymous wrote:And what are they?
Anonymous wrote:Gotcha, I’m leaning towards the NFL approach.Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Interesting take and probably right. However, is there a situation in which this new pyramid actually shows for girls ECNL>GA>RL>Aspire, etc., so putting a rest to all of this back and forth, at least for the interim. Remember, the DMV is not a reflection of the nation, just our own personal bubble hell. My theory is probably unlikely, but that is essentially how the boys are setup today. It would be interesting if in this integrated pyramid they establish a hierarchy/ pathway.Anonymous wrote:Short answer: a full ECNL–Girls Academy merger under U.S. Soccer is unlikely in the near term, but partial convergence is very much in motion. Think gravitational pull, not a sudden collision.
What this release signals clearly is U.S. Soccer reclaiming architectural authority over the competition ecosystem. For years, the pyramid sprawled sideways: ECNL, GA, NPL, National League, MLS NEXT, all optimizing locally, none fully interoperable. This document is the federation saying, politely but firmly, “We’re going to connect the pipes.”
What could realistically happen, and this release quietly sets the table for is:
• Shared standards (calendar alignment, roster rules, substitution rules, event windows)
• Formal recognition of equivalency (both leagues acknowledged as top-tier Tier I platforms under U.S. Soccer)
• Performance-based interconnectivity beneath them, so movement into ECNL or GA comes from a unified, merit-based system
• Eventually, national competitions or showcases that mix ECNL and GA teams, without dissolving either brand
What is present is something subtler and more powerful: path dependency. Once the layers below ECNL and GA are unified, aligned, and U.S. Soccer–endorsed, the top layers become the only remaining fragmentation. At that point, the question stops being “Should we merge?” and becomes “Why are we still separate?”
So the future likely looks like this:
Not ECNL vs GA → but ECNL and GA inside a common U.S. Soccer–defined architecture, orbiting closer each year, until the distinction matters less to players than the pathway itself.
It's going to mirror college with D1 D2 D3 levels and different geographies will have their own regional league where either all clubs independent of league play each other. Or regional leagues are split out and Finals are where leagues play each other.