Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Six month age groups
There is not a single negative to a six month age group.
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Beyond Elementary school there isn't enough advantage to maintain the complexity.
Its not complex. Its very very simple.
Annnndddd...there absolutely are reasons to do this beyond elementary considering puberty isn't done until the middle part of HS.
Next
When you start combining teams, first to expand for 9v9 and then to 11v11 it is unnecessary. Dual age groups is excellent early on to make sure kids are learning the fundamentals in a more developmentally focused environment. But by middle school, frankly it is silly. Kids need to be placed based more on skill than age. We have gone round and round on this and the numbers just don't support dual age groups. The predictable size variance BASED on birth month can be thrown out the window. Genetics NOT birth month plays a greater role in size variance.
If you honestly think you could walk into a middle school and predict kids birth months with any accuracy based on size I have a bridge to sell you. You might not even be able to predict their birth year accurately in many cases.
You didn't make a reasonable argument. Most of it is nonsense.
By middle school size is more defined by individual genetics than birth month and a predictable linear growth chart through middle school.
What makes dual age groups useful in elementary school are it's obvious benefits but the predictability of implementing it properly. A kid born 10 months later than another kid will be predictably smaller at 7-8 years old.
By middle school that is all out the window because specific growth spurts as well as their intensity simply cannot be predicted in middle school based on birth month. If the intent is to have players of similar size grouped together it would fail miserably based on birth month in middle school. Do you understand this?
It not just about size. The lazy analysis is why the debate continues to happen. This is about human development...physically, mentally and emotionally. A tall well developed 12 years, while may look like a 18 year old, but is still mentally a 12 year. Why? Because physical and mental development do not go hand in hand. This is but one of 5,000 senerios.
I need you to understand this.....You should not filter kids out of a pipeline before they had a chance to develop as a human.
You see it is schools all the time. It is a FLAWED approach. Its proven to be wrong
Anonymous wrote:If you look at the BRYC ecnl boys rosters the older age isn't the case. They just dont promote from B teams. They simply keep the same teams together from U9 on up. They are such great talent evaluators they find the top players from the start. This can be seen from the many Pros they've produced (jajajajajaja).
Anonymous wrote:If you look at the BRYC ecnl boys rosters the older age isn't the case. They just dont promote from B teams. They simply keep the same teams together from U9 on up. They are such great talent evaluators they find the top players from the start. This can be seen from the many Pros they've produced (jajajajajaja).
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Six month age groupings doubles the participation.
Yes or no?
Greater numbers is a good thing
Yes or No?
Allowing kids to fully develop before adults determine their worth is good thing
Yes or No?
Now, I said this before and I will say it again. Go to any ECNL or DA roster and I guarantee you that 70-80 percent of the players are of the higher graduation year and with Jan- June birthdays. That means just about all the Aug - Dec kids have been discarded. I bet you can guess why.
Do you see that as a favor flaw?
how does it double participate? Do you really think there are kids who don't play travel because of their birthdays? Most clubs won't cut U9, they'll just form evermore teams to house everyone who is willing to pay
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:
The inherent problem is bias and prediction long term how a players will develop and grow over time. But, at each stage, yearly selections, year after year, the selections, based on the actual information in front of the coaches is usually right. When there are mistakes, of which there are many, it is due to prejudice, bias, impatience and inexperience and the inequitable distribution of quality resources. B team kids get a B team coach and on down the line. The coaches are assigned these team to learn or based on their own coaching experience. That is the biggest fault in our system. The kids that need more specifically qualified coaches for their stage of development simply are not provided them and they fall further behind.
If there is a problem with the system it's because a player slotted U9 will likely occupy that slot with a given club. The top kids on a second team may be marginally better than the bottom kids on a first team, but most area clubs will not swap them, especially if the difference is marginal. There is a reason that a lot of kids end up leaving their club in order to move up.
Anonymous wrote:Six month age groupings doubles the participation.
Yes or no?
Greater numbers is a good thing
Yes or No?
Allowing kids to fully develop before adults determine their worth is good thing
Yes or No?
Now, I said this before and I will say it again. Go to any ECNL or DA roster and I guarantee you that 70-80 percent of the players are of the higher graduation year and with Jan- June birthdays. That means just about all the Aug - Dec kids have been discarded. I bet you can guess why.
Do you see that as a favor flaw?
Anonymous wrote:
The inherent problem is bias and prediction long term how a players will develop and grow over time. But, at each stage, yearly selections, year after year, the selections, based on the actual information in front of the coaches is usually right. When there are mistakes, of which there are many, it is due to prejudice, bias, impatience and inexperience and the inequitable distribution of quality resources. B team kids get a B team coach and on down the line. The coaches are assigned these team to learn or based on their own coaching experience. That is the biggest fault in our system. The kids that need more specifically qualified coaches for their stage of development simply are not provided them and they fall further behind.