Anonymous wrote:DA will have FCV travel to Long Island for a 4 p.m. Sunday game. This means the girls will be back home after the midnight. On Monday, they will have to wake up early for a school day and then have a DA practice the same night. Yeah, DA is awesome.
Anonymous wrote:Ahhh...rock-em sock-em soccer. Here we go again.
Let me guess...
Over in DA land they are playing the beautiful game while their counterparts are playing street ball fit for heathens.
If you believe that ECNL is to much then you must believe that the DA is to much.
ECNL
3 practices at 1.5 each = 4.5 hours
2 games at 90 minutes a piece = 180 minutes or 3 hours.
Total: 7.5 hours
DA
4 practices ar 1.5 hours each = 6 hours
1 game at 90 minutes = 90 minutes or 1.5 hours
Total: 7.5 hours
So yeah...DA gets an extra practice. ECNL gets an extra game.
Except those weekends DA teams have doubleheader weekends and doubleheader DA cup games.
Go blow smoke elsewhere
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:62 percent of organized sports-related injuries occur during practice
That's worrisome. Guess you better cut back on the amount of practices from 4 to 3.
DA sure is dangerous. Might explain why a local DA cant properly field an 03 team due to the amount of preseason injuries.
Nothing like having to spend another night in a hotel to get your 20 minutes in the next day.
Resort to talking trash because your analysis sucks.
That isn't trash talking. That is what a possible scenario is based on your explanation of minute distribution for a player might look like. It could be a 40/40 split, a 70/10, 60/20, 50/30.
If you think I was talking trash with the previous example it might because fitting 80 minutes into two days is kinda trash.
No. That is talking trash because that is real life for a lot of kids competing. Your calling their efforts trash.
Now, Mr. DA spokesman, check any DA roster this year. The stars get 80. Everyone else gets 40 or 20. Must suck getting 20 minutes of game time a week....huh?
Oh, and those superstars are more likely to get injured because of fatigue because they won't get taken out because of the DA no re-entry rule.
Funny how that works, huh
Their effort isn't trash. The situation the league puts them in is trash. Double header weekends are bad and 9 to 12 of them are really bad.
If a coach is trying to keep a kid safe then it sucks to need waste two days of a weekend just to get in meaningful minutes. Sorry but that is a terrible solution.
Playing 80 minutes a game with a proper break is fine. The whole world plays at those ages without subs without issue. Play a soccer game, go home and rest is better than play a soccer game, go home tired, wake up early the next day, go through warm-ups and play another 20 minutes or so.
The beauty of soccer is that it is slower paced game that requires a unique blend of both stamina and endurance. Controlling the game through proper passing a pace AND playing for long stretches demands thoughtful and purposeful play beyond the back and forth track meets we seem to think it should be. If you are winded in the first half because you are running like a lunatic BECAUSE you can get subbed out to catch your breath then you are not playing the game the right way.
Your full of sxxx.
You posted the schedules because you want to make a DA superiority argument because you have an inferiority complex. Your child doesnt even play ECNL. Yet, here you are. Posting ECNL schedules. For what? To make an argument that its unsafe. Then when confronted with facts based on research, you change the argument to how the rest of the world plays and meaningful playing time.
Which one is it?
You just made an argument that a little DA superstar should be playing 80 minutes a game because that's how the rest of the world does it and she doesnt need subs.
I tell you that's how you increase the chance of injuries. You tell me too bad. We are creating international superstars.
Your argument and analysis sucks major balls.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:62 percent of organized sports-related injuries occur during practice
That's worrisome. Guess you better cut back on the amount of practices from 4 to 3.
DA sure is dangerous. Might explain why a local DA cant properly field an 03 team due to the amount of preseason injuries.
Nothing like having to spend another night in a hotel to get your 20 minutes in the next day.
Resort to talking trash because your analysis sucks.
That isn't trash talking. That is what a possible scenario is based on your explanation of minute distribution for a player might look like. It could be a 40/40 split, a 70/10, 60/20, 50/30.
If you think I was talking trash with the previous example it might because fitting 80 minutes into two days is kinda trash.
No. That is talking trash because that is real life for a lot of kids competing. Your calling their efforts trash.
Now, Mr. DA spokesman, check any DA roster this year. The stars get 80. Everyone else gets 40 or 20. Must suck getting 20 minutes of game time a week....huh?
Oh, and those superstars are more likely to get injured because of fatigue because they won't get taken out because of the DA no re-entry rule.
Funny how that works, huh
Their effort isn't trash. The situation the league puts them in is trash. Double header weekends are bad and 9 to 12 of them are really bad.
If a coach is trying to keep a kid safe then it sucks to need waste two days of a weekend just to get in meaningful minutes. Sorry but that is a terrible solution.
Playing 80 minutes a game with a proper break is fine. The whole world plays at those ages without subs without issue. Play a soccer game, go home and rest is better than play a soccer game, go home tired, wake up early the next day, go through warm-ups and play another 20 minutes or so.
The beauty of soccer is that it is slower paced game that requires a unique blend of both stamina and endurance. Controlling the game through proper passing a pace AND playing for long stretches demands thoughtful and purposeful play beyond the back and forth track meets we seem to think it should be. If you are winded in the first half because you are running like a lunatic BECAUSE you can get subbed out to catch your breath then you are not playing the game the right way.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:62 percent of organized sports-related injuries occur during practice
That's worrisome. Guess you better cut back on the amount of practices from 4 to 3.
DA sure is dangerous. Might explain why a local DA cant properly field an 03 team due to the amount of preseason injuries.
Nothing like having to spend another night in a hotel to get your 20 minutes in the next day.
Resort to talking trash because your analysis sucks.
That isn't trash talking. That is what a possible scenario is based on your explanation of minute distribution for a player might look like. It could be a 40/40 split, a 70/10, 60/20, 50/30.
If you think I was talking trash with the previous example it might because fitting 80 minutes into two days is kinda trash.
No. That is talking trash because that is real life for a lot of kids competing. Your calling their efforts trash.
Now, Mr. DA spokesman, check any DA roster this year. The stars get 80. Everyone else gets 40 or 20. Must suck getting 20 minutes of game time a week....huh?
Oh, and those superstars are more likely to get injured because of fatigue because they won't get taken out because of the DA no re-entry rule.
Funny how that works, huh
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:62 percent of organized sports-related injuries occur during practice
That's worrisome. Guess you better cut back on the amount of practices from 4 to 3.
DA sure is dangerous. Might explain why a local DA cant properly field an 03 team due to the amount of preseason injuries.
Nothing like having to spend another night in a hotel to get your 20 minutes in the next day.
Resort to talking trash because your analysis sucks.
That isn't trash talking. That is what a possible scenario is based on your explanation of minute distribution for a player might look like. It could be a 40/40 split, a 70/10, 60/20, 50/30.
If you think I was talking trash with the previous example it might because fitting 80 minutes into two days is kinda trash.
Anonymous wrote:Its all worthless if your not truly measuring and monitoring the athletes work load . Minutes limits only work if you can accurately asses the work load of the individual athlete. This needs to have both practice/training combined with actual game play measured together and calculated before you can set minutes limits for games. The idea is right but if your not measuring the results correctly it is totally worthless.
Anonymous wrote:https://www.healio.com/internal-medicine/sports-medicine/news/online/%7B9332e0cf-0a66-4c3f-b414-8b8d4def51e8%7D/majority-of-sports-related-injuries-occur-during-practice
Researchers found that an estimated 63.8% of college sports-related injuries occurred during practices, according to data published in Morbidity and Mortality Weekly Report.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:62 percent of organized sports-related injuries occur during practice
That's worrisome. Guess you better cut back on the amount of practices from 4 to 3.
DA sure is dangerous. Might explain why a local DA cant properly field an 03 team due to the amount of preseason injuries.
Nothing like having to spend another night in a hotel to get your 20 minutes in the next day.
Resort to talking trash because your analysis sucks.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:62 percent of organized sports-related injuries occur during practice
That's worrisome. Guess you better cut back on the amount of practices from 4 to 3.
DA sure is dangerous. Might explain why a local DA cant properly field an 03 team due to the amount of preseason injuries.
Nothing like having to spend another night in a hotel to get your 20 minutes in the next day.