Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:yes they do. Loudoun GA and Loudoun MLSN AD are the B teams.Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Girls who are on loudoun GA or GA aspire cannot play with NVA during the season. NVA during the season can only pull non-GA girls. Hence why they are likely doing this. (So it gives them an extended bench) Now add the money factor.
In the end this further erodes teams. As they get older the TD rather poach current ECNL players or GA players. An Aspire player has almost no chance. NVA coaches rarely if any ever watch B teams. And communication is very limited between the coaches.
How is that different from any other club out there. Every parent of every club in every state that has a 2nd, 3rd, or 4th team have the same complaints about every club out there. Also NVA doesn't have a B team to watch right now anyways.
The Loudoun player pool is not available to NVA midseason. If NVA wants a Loudoun player then they will attempt to poach said player during ID sessions.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:I don't see the point to this whole complicated fake "pathway" to NVA for just the one RBFC team that exists.
From a strategic standpoint, NVA launching an Aspire team in Fairfax with Riverbend makes a lot of sense.
Geography matters more than people admit. Most families prefer a 10–25 minute drive to training. Once you push past 30 minutes multiple nights a week, the pool shrinks fast, especially for multi-kid households. Loudoun and VRSC naturally pull from western Fairfax and Loudoun because of proximity. By placing Aspire’s home base in Fairfax County, NVA opens access to a completely different player base that likely wouldn’t consider driving west consistently.
Fairfax County has over 1.1 million residents and produces one of the deepest youth soccer pools in the region. Yet the top-tier pathway options locally are limited. Great Falls Reston (GFR) offers ECNL-RL, NCSL, and EDP. Vienna competes in the RL. McLean has Aspire, but roster spots are finite and internal competition is tight. For players in central and eastern Fairfax, Aspire in Fairfax becomes a strong, convenient alternative without requiring a Loudoun commute.
From a league positioning standpoint, Aspire generally sits above ECNL-RL in the player development hierarchy, which makes it attractive to families seeking a higher competitive ceiling without jumping immediately to full ECNL travel demands. That naturally creates interest from players currently in RL who feel capped.
It’s also smart portfolio management. Instead of concentrating Aspire talent pools in Loudoun and competing for the same households as VRSC, Fairfax expands the footprint and reduces direct cannibalization. Different geography, different recruiting lanes.
Fairfax is a massive soccer ecosystem with strong rec foundations and competitive club pipelines. Putting Aspire there taps into a dense player base that hasn’t had as many elite pathway options within immediate reach.
Obviously you have FVU (ECNL) and McLean (GA) in Fairfax as well, but we can concentrate on the pool of players right below that level looking for a pathway to ECNL or GA.
I bet they changed their name from Loudoun to NVA as a precursor to this market expansion. Fairfax is a massive soccer ecosystem with strong rec foundations and competitive club pipelines, and you can't succeed there if you are Loudoun Soccer.
This statement is laughable. NVA has been around for several years now and is trying to stay relevant at least on the girls side due to the switch to GA from ECNL. Northern Virginia Alliance (‘NVA’) was originally founded as a “partnership” between Loudoun Soccer, GFRSC and Valor. That partnership failed miserably and GFRSC and Valor quickly pulled out of the relationship. Arguably, NVA already had access to the Fairfax “soccer ecosystem” through GFRSC and Valor but there were hardly any promotions of players from those clubs to the ECNL national platform. What makes you think this new arrangement is going to be any different. NVA is trying to keep afloat and this is one way of doing that. Buyer beware…
Youth soccer in Northern Virginia has had plenty of “partnership” announcements that didn’t live up to the original vision. But a few things are worth separating. The original NVA structure was a multi-club alliance model. That’s very different from placing a team physically in Fairfax with a defined home base and technical control. Shared governance models often struggle because incentives aren’t fully aligned. A centralized model with direct oversight is structurally different from a loose partnership. Also, the ECNL-to-GA shift on the girls side changed the landscape for everyone, not just NVA. When leagues realign, clubs reassess footprint, recruiting lanes, and geography. Expanding into Fairfax isn’t necessarily a survival move, it’s a market move. Fairfax County remains one of the largest youth soccer player pools in the region, and proximity still drives decisions for most families.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:I don't see the point to this whole complicated fake "pathway" to NVA for just the one RBFC team that exists.
From a strategic standpoint, NVA launching an Aspire team in Fairfax with Riverbend makes a lot of sense.
Geography matters more than people admit. Most families prefer a 10–25 minute drive to training. Once you push past 30 minutes multiple nights a week, the pool shrinks fast, especially for multi-kid households. Loudoun and VRSC naturally pull from western Fairfax and Loudoun because of proximity. By placing Aspire’s home base in Fairfax County, NVA opens access to a completely different player base that likely wouldn’t consider driving west consistently.
Fairfax County has over 1.1 million residents and produces one of the deepest youth soccer pools in the region. Yet the top-tier pathway options locally are limited. Great Falls Reston (GFR) offers ECNL-RL, NCSL, and EDP. Vienna competes in the RL. McLean has Aspire, but roster spots are finite and internal competition is tight. For players in central and eastern Fairfax, Aspire in Fairfax becomes a strong, convenient alternative without requiring a Loudoun commute.
From a league positioning standpoint, Aspire generally sits above ECNL-RL in the player development hierarchy, which makes it attractive to families seeking a higher competitive ceiling without jumping immediately to full ECNL travel demands. That naturally creates interest from players currently in RL who feel capped.
It’s also smart portfolio management. Instead of concentrating Aspire talent pools in Loudoun and competing for the same households as VRSC, Fairfax expands the footprint and reduces direct cannibalization. Different geography, different recruiting lanes.
Fairfax is a massive soccer ecosystem with strong rec foundations and competitive club pipelines. Putting Aspire there taps into a dense player base that hasn’t had as many elite pathway options within immediate reach.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:I don't see the point to this whole complicated fake "pathway" to NVA for just the one RBFC team that exists.
From a strategic standpoint, NVA launching an Aspire team in Fairfax with Riverbend makes a lot of sense.
Geography matters more than people admit. Most families prefer a 10–25 minute drive to training. Once you push past 30 minutes multiple nights a week, the pool shrinks fast, especially for multi-kid households. Loudoun and VRSC naturally pull from western Fairfax and Loudoun because of proximity. By placing Aspire’s home base in Fairfax County, NVA opens access to a completely different player base that likely wouldn’t consider driving west consistently.
Fairfax County has over 1.1 million residents and produces one of the deepest youth soccer pools in the region. Yet the top-tier pathway options locally are limited. Great Falls Reston (GFR) offers ECNL-RL, NCSL, and EDP. Vienna competes in the RL. McLean has Aspire, but roster spots are finite and internal competition is tight. For players in central and eastern Fairfax, Aspire in Fairfax becomes a strong, convenient alternative without requiring a Loudoun commute.
From a league positioning standpoint, Aspire generally sits above ECNL-RL in the player development hierarchy, which makes it attractive to families seeking a higher competitive ceiling without jumping immediately to full ECNL travel demands. That naturally creates interest from players currently in RL who feel capped.
It’s also smart portfolio management. Instead of concentrating Aspire talent pools in Loudoun and competing for the same households as VRSC, Fairfax expands the footprint and reduces direct cannibalization. Different geography, different recruiting lanes.
Fairfax is a massive soccer ecosystem with strong rec foundations and competitive club pipelines. Putting Aspire there taps into a dense player base that hasn’t had as many elite pathway options within immediate reach.
Largely agree with this analysis for why NVA would want to do this assuming they have a credible partner.
But the notion that Aspire sits above RL in the hierarchy is laughable. There are maybe three clubs at the GA level in NoVa whose GA teams are consistently better than the top RL teams in the area. Several clubs that top out at RL would have little trouble finishing in the top half of the table for GA. They’d be wasting their time to play in Aspire as it currently stands in NoVa.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:I don't see the point to this whole complicated fake "pathway" to NVA for just the one RBFC team that exists.
From a strategic standpoint, NVA launching an Aspire team in Fairfax with Riverbend makes a lot of sense.
Geography matters more than people admit. Most families prefer a 10–25 minute drive to training. Once you push past 30 minutes multiple nights a week, the pool shrinks fast, especially for multi-kid households. Loudoun and VRSC naturally pull from western Fairfax and Loudoun because of proximity. By placing Aspire’s home base in Fairfax County, NVA opens access to a completely different player base that likely wouldn’t consider driving west consistently.
Fairfax County has over 1.1 million residents and produces one of the deepest youth soccer pools in the region. Yet the top-tier pathway options locally are limited. Great Falls Reston (GFR) offers ECNL-RL, NCSL, and EDP. Vienna competes in the RL. McLean has Aspire, but roster spots are finite and internal competition is tight. For players in central and eastern Fairfax, Aspire in Fairfax becomes a strong, convenient alternative without requiring a Loudoun commute.
From a league positioning standpoint, Aspire generally sits above ECNL-RL in the player development hierarchy, which makes it attractive to families seeking a higher competitive ceiling without jumping immediately to full ECNL travel demands. That naturally creates interest from players currently in RL who feel capped.
It’s also smart portfolio management. Instead of concentrating Aspire talent pools in Loudoun and competing for the same households as VRSC, Fairfax expands the footprint and reduces direct cannibalization. Different geography, different recruiting lanes.
Fairfax is a massive soccer ecosystem with strong rec foundations and competitive club pipelines. Putting Aspire there taps into a dense player base that hasn’t had as many elite pathway options within immediate reach.
This is delusional. The local Aspire teams are made up mostly of ex-NCSL players when the respective clubs went GA. No one is fighting for roster spots on Aspire teams. No rational actor thinks Aspire is better than RL. GA is barely better than RL.
Anonymous wrote:yes they do. Loudoun GA and Loudoun MLSN AD are the B teams.Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Girls who are on loudoun GA or GA aspire cannot play with NVA during the season. NVA during the season can only pull non-GA girls. Hence why they are likely doing this. (So it gives them an extended bench) Now add the money factor.
In the end this further erodes teams. As they get older the TD rather poach current ECNL players or GA players. An Aspire player has almost no chance. NVA coaches rarely if any ever watch B teams. And communication is very limited between the coaches.
How is that different from any other club out there. Every parent of every club in every state that has a 2nd, 3rd, or 4th team have the same complaints about every club out there. Also NVA doesn't have a B team to watch right now anyways.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:I don't see the point to this whole complicated fake "pathway" to NVA for just the one RBFC team that exists.
From a strategic standpoint, NVA launching an Aspire team in Fairfax with Riverbend makes a lot of sense.
Geography matters more than people admit. Most families prefer a 10–25 minute drive to training. Once you push past 30 minutes multiple nights a week, the pool shrinks fast, especially for multi-kid households. Loudoun and VRSC naturally pull from western Fairfax and Loudoun because of proximity. By placing Aspire’s home base in Fairfax County, NVA opens access to a completely different player base that likely wouldn’t consider driving west consistently.
Fairfax County has over 1.1 million residents and produces one of the deepest youth soccer pools in the region. Yet the top-tier pathway options locally are limited. Great Falls Reston (GFR) offers ECNL-RL, NCSL, and EDP. Vienna competes in the RL. McLean has Aspire, but roster spots are finite and internal competition is tight. For players in central and eastern Fairfax, Aspire in Fairfax becomes a strong, convenient alternative without requiring a Loudoun commute.
From a league positioning standpoint, Aspire generally sits above ECNL-RL in the player development hierarchy, which makes it attractive to families seeking a higher competitive ceiling without jumping immediately to full ECNL travel demands. That naturally creates interest from players currently in RL who feel capped.
It’s also smart portfolio management. Instead of concentrating Aspire talent pools in Loudoun and competing for the same households as VRSC, Fairfax expands the footprint and reduces direct cannibalization. Different geography, different recruiting lanes.
Fairfax is a massive soccer ecosystem with strong rec foundations and competitive club pipelines. Putting Aspire there taps into a dense player base that hasn’t had as many elite pathway options within immediate reach.
yes they do. Loudoun GA and Loudoun MLSN AD are the B teams.Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Girls who are on loudoun GA or GA aspire cannot play with NVA during the season. NVA during the season can only pull non-GA girls. Hence why they are likely doing this. (So it gives them an extended bench) Now add the money factor.
In the end this further erodes teams. As they get older the TD rather poach current ECNL players or GA players. An Aspire player has almost no chance. NVA coaches rarely if any ever watch B teams. And communication is very limited between the coaches.
How is that different from any other club out there. Every parent of every club in every state that has a 2nd, 3rd, or 4th team have the same complaints about every club out there. Also NVA doesn't have a B team to watch right now anyways.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:I don't see the point to this whole complicated fake "pathway" to NVA for just the one RBFC team that exists.
From a strategic standpoint, NVA launching an Aspire team in Fairfax with Riverbend makes a lot of sense.
Geography matters more than people admit. Most families prefer a 10–25 minute drive to training. Once you push past 30 minutes multiple nights a week, the pool shrinks fast, especially for multi-kid households. Loudoun and VRSC naturally pull from western Fairfax and Loudoun because of proximity. By placing Aspire’s home base in Fairfax County, NVA opens access to a completely different player base that likely wouldn’t consider driving west consistently.
Fairfax County has over 1.1 million residents and produces one of the deepest youth soccer pools in the region. Yet the top-tier pathway options locally are limited. Great Falls Reston (GFR) offers ECNL-RL, NCSL, and EDP. Vienna competes in the RL. McLean has Aspire, but roster spots are finite and internal competition is tight. For players in central and eastern Fairfax, Aspire in Fairfax becomes a strong, convenient alternative without requiring a Loudoun commute.
From a league positioning standpoint, Aspire generally sits above ECNL-RL in the player development hierarchy, which makes it attractive to families seeking a higher competitive ceiling without jumping immediately to full ECNL travel demands. That naturally creates interest from players currently in RL who feel capped.
It’s also smart portfolio management. Instead of concentrating Aspire talent pools in Loudoun and competing for the same households as VRSC, Fairfax expands the footprint and reduces direct cannibalization. Different geography, different recruiting lanes.
Fairfax is a massive soccer ecosystem with strong rec foundations and competitive club pipelines. Putting Aspire there taps into a dense player base that hasn’t had as many elite pathway options within immediate reach.
Obviously you have FVU (ECNL) and McLean (GA) in Fairfax as well, but we can concentrate on the pool of players right below that level looking for a pathway to ECNL or GA.
I bet they changed their name from Loudoun to NVA as a precursor to this market expansion. Fairfax is a massive soccer ecosystem with strong rec foundations and competitive club pipelines, and you can't succeed there if you are Loudoun Soccer.
This statement is laughable. NVA has been around for several years now and is trying to stay relevant at least on the girls side due to the switch to GA from ECNL. Northern Virginia Alliance (‘NVA’) was originally founded as a “partnership” between Loudoun Soccer, GFRSC and Valor. That partnership failed miserably and GFRSC and Valor quickly pulled out of the relationship. Arguably, NVA already had access to the Fairfax “soccer ecosystem” through GFRSC and Valor but there were hardly any promotions of players from those clubs to the ECNL national platform. What makes you think this new arrangement is going to be any different. NVA is trying to keep afloat and this is one way of doing that. Buyer beware…
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:I don't see the point to this whole complicated fake "pathway" to NVA for just the one RBFC team that exists.
From a strategic standpoint, NVA launching an Aspire team in Fairfax with Riverbend makes a lot of sense.
Geography matters more than people admit. Most families prefer a 10–25 minute drive to training. Once you push past 30 minutes multiple nights a week, the pool shrinks fast, especially for multi-kid households. Loudoun and VRSC naturally pull from western Fairfax and Loudoun because of proximity. By placing Aspire’s home base in Fairfax County, NVA opens access to a completely different player base that likely wouldn’t consider driving west consistently.
Fairfax County has over 1.1 million residents and produces one of the deepest youth soccer pools in the region. Yet the top-tier pathway options locally are limited. Great Falls Reston (GFR) offers ECNL-RL, NCSL, and EDP. Vienna competes in the RL. McLean has Aspire, but roster spots are finite and internal competition is tight. For players in central and eastern Fairfax, Aspire in Fairfax becomes a strong, convenient alternative without requiring a Loudoun commute.
From a league positioning standpoint, Aspire generally sits above ECNL-RL in the player development hierarchy, which makes it attractive to families seeking a higher competitive ceiling without jumping immediately to full ECNL travel demands. That naturally creates interest from players currently in RL who feel capped.
It’s also smart portfolio management. Instead of concentrating Aspire talent pools in Loudoun and competing for the same households as VRSC, Fairfax expands the footprint and reduces direct cannibalization. Different geography, different recruiting lanes.
Fairfax is a massive soccer ecosystem with strong rec foundations and competitive club pipelines. Putting Aspire there taps into a dense player base that hasn’t had as many elite pathway options within immediate reach.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:I don't see the point to this whole complicated fake "pathway" to NVA for just the one RBFC team that exists.
From a strategic standpoint, NVA launching an Aspire team in Fairfax with Riverbend makes a lot of sense.
Geography matters more than people admit. Most families prefer a 10–25 minute drive to training. Once you push past 30 minutes multiple nights a week, the pool shrinks fast, especially for multi-kid households. Loudoun and VRSC naturally pull from western Fairfax and Loudoun because of proximity. By placing Aspire’s home base in Fairfax County, NVA opens access to a completely different player base that likely wouldn’t consider driving west consistently.
Fairfax County has over 1.1 million residents and produces one of the deepest youth soccer pools in the region. Yet the top-tier pathway options locally are limited. Great Falls Reston (GFR) offers ECNL-RL, NCSL, and EDP. Vienna competes in the RL. McLean has Aspire, but roster spots are finite and internal competition is tight. For players in central and eastern Fairfax, Aspire in Fairfax becomes a strong, convenient alternative without requiring a Loudoun commute.
From a league positioning standpoint, Aspire generally sits above ECNL-RL in the player development hierarchy, which makes it attractive to families seeking a higher competitive ceiling without jumping immediately to full ECNL travel demands. That naturally creates interest from players currently in RL who feel capped.
It’s also smart portfolio management. Instead of concentrating Aspire talent pools in Loudoun and competing for the same households as VRSC, Fairfax expands the footprint and reduces direct cannibalization. Different geography, different recruiting lanes.
Fairfax is a massive soccer ecosystem with strong rec foundations and competitive club pipelines. Putting Aspire there taps into a dense player base that hasn’t had as many elite pathway options within immediate reach.
Obviously you have FVU (ECNL) and McLean (GA) in Fairfax as well, but we can concentrate on the pool of players right below that level looking for a pathway to ECNL or GA.
I bet they changed their name from Loudoun to NVA as a precursor to this market expansion. Fairfax is a massive soccer ecosystem with strong rec foundations and competitive club pipelines, and you can't succeed there if you are Loudoun Soccer.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:I don't see the point to this whole complicated fake "pathway" to NVA for just the one RBFC team that exists.
From a strategic standpoint, NVA launching an Aspire team in Fairfax with Riverbend makes a lot of sense.
Geography matters more than people admit. Most families prefer a 10–25 minute drive to training. Once you push past 30 minutes multiple nights a week, the pool shrinks fast, especially for multi-kid households. Loudoun and VRSC naturally pull from western Fairfax and Loudoun because of proximity. By placing Aspire’s home base in Fairfax County, NVA opens access to a completely different player base that likely wouldn’t consider driving west consistently.
Fairfax County has over 1.1 million residents and produces one of the deepest youth soccer pools in the region. Yet the top-tier pathway options locally are limited. Great Falls Reston (GFR) offers ECNL-RL, NCSL, and EDP. Vienna competes in the RL. McLean has Aspire, but roster spots are finite and internal competition is tight. For players in central and eastern Fairfax, Aspire in Fairfax becomes a strong, convenient alternative without requiring a Loudoun commute.
From a league positioning standpoint, Aspire generally sits above ECNL-RL in the player development hierarchy, which makes it attractive to families seeking a higher competitive ceiling without jumping immediately to full ECNL travel demands. That naturally creates interest from players currently in RL who feel capped.
It’s also smart portfolio management. Instead of concentrating Aspire talent pools in Loudoun and competing for the same households as VRSC, Fairfax expands the footprint and reduces direct cannibalization. Different geography, different recruiting lanes.
Fairfax is a massive soccer ecosystem with strong rec foundations and competitive club pipelines. Putting Aspire there taps into a dense player base that hasn’t had as many elite pathway options within immediate reach.
Obviously you have FVU (ECNL) and McLean (GA) in Fairfax as well, but we can concentrate on the pool of players right below that level looking for a pathway to ECNL or GA.
I bet they changed their name from Loudoun to NVA as a precursor to this market expansion. Fairfax is a massive soccer ecosystem with strong rec foundations and competitive club pipelines, and you can't succeed there if you are Loudoun Soccer.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:I don't see the point to this whole complicated fake "pathway" to NVA for just the one RBFC team that exists.
From a strategic standpoint, NVA launching an Aspire team in Fairfax with Riverbend makes a lot of sense.
Geography matters more than people admit. Most families prefer a 10–25 minute drive to training. Once you push past 30 minutes multiple nights a week, the pool shrinks fast, especially for multi-kid households. Loudoun and VRSC naturally pull from western Fairfax and Loudoun because of proximity. By placing Aspire’s home base in Fairfax County, NVA opens access to a completely different player base that likely wouldn’t consider driving west consistently.
Fairfax County has over 1.1 million residents and produces one of the deepest youth soccer pools in the region. Yet the top-tier pathway options locally are limited. Great Falls Reston (GFR) offers ECNL-RL, NCSL, and EDP. Vienna competes in the RL. McLean has Aspire, but roster spots are finite and internal competition is tight. For players in central and eastern Fairfax, Aspire in Fairfax becomes a strong, convenient alternative without requiring a Loudoun commute.
From a league positioning standpoint, Aspire generally sits above ECNL-RL in the player development hierarchy, which makes it attractive to families seeking a higher competitive ceiling without jumping immediately to full ECNL travel demands. That naturally creates interest from players currently in RL who feel capped.
It’s also smart portfolio management. Instead of concentrating Aspire talent pools in Loudoun and competing for the same households as VRSC, Fairfax expands the footprint and reduces direct cannibalization. Different geography, different recruiting lanes.
Fairfax is a massive soccer ecosystem with strong rec foundations and competitive club pipelines. Putting Aspire there taps into a dense player base that hasn’t had as many elite pathway options within immediate reach.
Obviously you have FVU (ECNL) and McLean (GA) in Fairfax as well, but we can concentrate on the pool of players right below that level looking for a pathway to ECNL or GA.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:I don't see the point to this whole complicated fake "pathway" to NVA for just the one RBFC team that exists.
From a strategic standpoint, NVA launching an Aspire team in Fairfax with Riverbend makes a lot of sense.
Geography matters more than people admit. Most families prefer a 10–25 minute drive to training. Once you push past 30 minutes multiple nights a week, the pool shrinks fast, especially for multi-kid households. Loudoun and VRSC naturally pull from western Fairfax and Loudoun because of proximity. By placing Aspire’s home base in Fairfax County, NVA opens access to a completely different player base that likely wouldn’t consider driving west consistently.
Fairfax County has over 1.1 million residents and produces one of the deepest youth soccer pools in the region. Yet the top-tier pathway options locally are limited. Great Falls Reston (GFR) offers ECNL-RL, NCSL, and EDP. Vienna competes in the RL. McLean has Aspire, but roster spots are finite and internal competition is tight. For players in central and eastern Fairfax, Aspire in Fairfax becomes a strong, convenient alternative without requiring a Loudoun commute.
From a league positioning standpoint, Aspire generally sits above ECNL-RL in the player development hierarchy, which makes it attractive to families seeking a higher competitive ceiling without jumping immediately to full ECNL travel demands. That naturally creates interest from players currently in RL who feel capped.
It’s also smart portfolio management. Instead of concentrating Aspire talent pools in Loudoun and competing for the same households as VRSC, Fairfax expands the footprint and reduces direct cannibalization. Different geography, different recruiting lanes.
Fairfax is a massive soccer ecosystem with strong rec foundations and competitive club pipelines. Putting Aspire there taps into a dense player base that hasn’t had as many elite pathway options within immediate reach.