Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:What about the assessment for goalies? At what age do you see Division I potential?
As soon as they hit their growth spurt.
So if they never spurt but keep growing steadily?
Height matters for keepers for keepers it is that simple.
Anonymous wrote:NOVA Coach here. Here's what I have to say about all your ECNL dreams for your kid. Harsh reality is by U12 most can already make an assessment on whether your kid will be good enough for D1. This is not only from technical standpoint but from a Soccer IQ standpoint. If you watch your kid and your kid is losing the ball 50% of the time, can't beat players 1v1, can't dribble or looks to get rid of the ball quickly it's pretty much a wrap for your D1 hopes for your kid. Record your kid's stats whenever they touch the ball and you'll be shocked.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:OMG. Who are these parents of 11 year olds worrying about whether their kid is going to play D1 soccer in college??? They are 11–let them be kids!! Live your own life so they can live theirs, as kids.
Hahaha. You don't understand. These parents need to fulfill THEIR dreams through their kids! lol on them actually letting kids be kids in a calm environment! You must not be from around here.
Anonymous wrote:Have to love this feed. If a parent doesn't know that D1 is a long shot for most soccer players is just ridiculous. While I understand scholarships are what many are looking for academic ones are given more often without the worry of injury. Also, many boys grow a ton after age 12 and their abilities change good or not so. Most of the soccer and field hockey and lax clubs are money makers period. They are not going to definitely get your kid into D1. Does your kid enjoy playing, does your family enjoy spending the money and using up every weekend then awesome go for it.
Anonymous wrote:OMG. Who are these parents of 11 year olds worrying about whether their kid is going to play D1 soccer in college??? They are 11–let them be kids!! Live your own life so they can live theirs, as kids.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Have to love this feed. If a parent doesn't know that D1 is a long shot for most soccer players is just ridiculous. While I understand scholarships are what many are looking for academic ones are given more often without the worry of injury. Also, many boys grow a ton after age 12 and their abilities change good or not so. Most of the soccer and field hockey and lax clubs are money makers period. They are not going to definitely get your kid into D1. Does your kid enjoy playing, does your family enjoy spending the money and using up every weekend then awesome go for it.
Coach here- agree with your comments. Not only that but do parents realize how difficult being a D1 athlete is? It is an incredibly difficult and demanding soccer-school balance. Not only that, it takes incredible amount of mental fortitude with high demands from coaches, teammates, etc. Not only that but then you have to tie in what they are going to do after college. Sometimes it's difficult for student athletes to get a meaningful degree and put efforts into their life after college. Professional soccer is even more of a longshot! Definitely not discouraging anyone from having D1 aspirations but it takes the right kid with the right makeup. Collegiate soccer is not for everyone.
Every once in a while I will see a D1 athlete. They are really noticably. The last girl I saw was u12 and every coach(basketball, lacrosse, soccer, track, etc) was crazy about her. I saw her play basketball for the first time. By the end of the season she was the best player on the court.
I really do not think parents on these top teams at large clubs really understand an athlete like this. She is not just the fastest kid on your top team. She is the fastest kid in the league two years up. This does not mean she will play D1 or become a star college player. She would have to have the right coach, the right mantallity, luck, etc.
OK coach--I'm a little confused about your initial post that seemed to specifically be directed at parents of ECNL players. Your point was that an ECNL player turning into a D1 prospect is very rare. Unfortunately (depending on the club), the numbers don't agree with you. First of all, there are over 300 women's D1 programs in the US (not all of equal quality from a soccer or academic perspective, but that's not the point you were making). My daughter plays ECNL at a large club (not in the DC area). We went to watch an ACC team in a non-conference D1 game a few weeks ago. There were 11 players from her club alone between the 2 teams. In looking at just the 2002 ECNL team, I count 13 D1 commitments so far. Sooooo....
Anonymous wrote:Every once in a while I will see a D1 athlete. They are really noticably. The last girl I saw was u12 and every coach(basketball, lacrosse, soccer, track, etc) was crazy about her. I saw her play basketball for the first time. By the end of the season she was the best player on the court.
I really do not think parents on these top teams at large clubs really understand an athlete like this. She is not just the fastest kid on your top team. She is the fastest kid in the league two years up. This does not mean she will play D1 or become a star college player. She would have to have the right coach, the right mantallity, luck, etc.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Have to love this feed. If a parent doesn't know that D1 is a long shot for most soccer players is just ridiculous. While I understand scholarships are what many are looking for academic ones are given more often without the worry of injury. Also, many boys grow a ton after age 12 and their abilities change good or not so. Most of the soccer and field hockey and lax clubs are money makers period. They are not going to definitely get your kid into D1. Does your kid enjoy playing, does your family enjoy spending the money and using up every weekend then awesome go for it.
Coach here- agree with your comments. Not only that but do parents realize how difficult being a D1 athlete is? It is an incredibly difficult and demanding soccer-school balance. Not only that, it takes incredible amount of mental fortitude with high demands from coaches, teammates, etc. Not only that but then you have to tie in what they are going to do after college. Sometimes it's difficult for student athletes to get a meaningful degree and put efforts into their life after college. Professional soccer is even more of a longshot! Definitely not discouraging anyone from having D1 aspirations but it takes the right kid with the right makeup. Collegiate soccer is not for everyone.
Every once in a while I will see a D1 athlete. They are really noticably. The last girl I saw was u12 and every coach(basketball, lacrosse, soccer, track, etc) was crazy about her. I saw her play basketball for the first time. By the end of the season she was the best player on the court.
I really do not think parents on these top teams at large clubs really understand an athlete like this. She is not just the fastest kid on your top team. She is the fastest kid in the league two years up. This does not mean she will play D1 or become a star college player. She would have to have the right coach, the right mantallity, luck, etc.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Have to love this feed. If a parent doesn't know that D1 is a long shot for most soccer players is just ridiculous. While I understand scholarships are what many are looking for academic ones are given more often without the worry of injury. Also, many boys grow a ton after age 12 and their abilities change good or not so. Most of the soccer and field hockey and lax clubs are money makers period. They are not going to definitely get your kid into D1. Does your kid enjoy playing, does your family enjoy spending the money and using up every weekend then awesome go for it.
Coach here- agree with your comments. Not only that but do parents realize how difficult being a D1 athlete is? It is an incredibly difficult and demanding soccer-school balance. Not only that, it takes incredible amount of mental fortitude with high demands from coaches, teammates, etc. Not only that but then you have to tie in what they are going to do after college. Sometimes it's difficult for student athletes to get a meaningful degree and put efforts into their life after college. Professional soccer is even more of a longshot! Definitely not discouraging anyone from having D1 aspirations but it takes the right kid with the right makeup. Collegiate soccer is not for everyone.
Every once in a while I will see a D1 athlete. They are really noticably. The last girl I saw was u12 and every coach(basketball, lacrosse, soccer, track, etc) was crazy about her. I saw her play basketball for the first time. By the end of the season she was the best player on the court.
I really do not think parents on these top teams at large clubs really understand an athlete like this. She is not just the fastest kid on your top team. She is the fastest kid in the league two years up. This does not mean she will play D1 or become a star college player. She would have to have the right coach, the right mantallity, luck, etc.
I think everyone thinks D1 is UNC and Penn State. There are lots of D1 schools. The commitment is the same but the quality of players can vary widely. The type of girl you mention is a blue chip type of D1 athlete who top 10 programs are drooling over. But there are just as many of those programs as there are kids. There are many programs where kids can land on. The issue hinges on what is more important, the right school or playing soccer in college? Many kids can play in D1 but the sacrifice in either the school choice or commitment level may not be worth doing.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Have to love this feed. If a parent doesn't know that D1 is a long shot for most soccer players is just ridiculous. While I understand scholarships are what many are looking for academic ones are given more often without the worry of injury. Also, many boys grow a ton after age 12 and their abilities change good or not so. Most of the soccer and field hockey and lax clubs are money makers period. They are not going to definitely get your kid into D1. Does your kid enjoy playing, does your family enjoy spending the money and using up every weekend then awesome go for it.
Coach here- agree with your comments. Not only that but do parents realize how difficult being a D1 athlete is? It is an incredibly difficult and demanding soccer-school balance. Not only that, it takes incredible amount of mental fortitude with high demands from coaches, teammates, etc. Not only that but then you have to tie in what they are going to do after college. Sometimes it's difficult for student athletes to get a meaningful degree and put efforts into their life after college. Professional soccer is even more of a longshot! Definitely not discouraging anyone from having D1 aspirations but it takes the right kid with the right makeup. Collegiate soccer is not for everyone.
Every once in a while I will see a D1 athlete. They are really noticably. The last girl I saw was u12 and every coach(basketball, lacrosse, soccer, track, etc) was crazy about her. I saw her play basketball for the first time. By the end of the season she was the best player on the court.
I really do not think parents on these top teams at large clubs really understand an athlete like this. She is not just the fastest kid on your top team. She is the fastest kid in the league two years up. This does not mean she will play D1 or become a star college player. She would have to have the right coach, the right mantallity, luck, etc.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:What about the assessment for goalies? At what age do you see Division I potential?
As soon as they hit their growth spurt.
So if they never spurt but keep growing steadily?