Anonymous wrote:It’s on both male and female. Turns out even male players have moms and some of them are Mean Girls.
I’ll tell you what else, I hope the parents on my new team are not cultish followers who hang out together nonstop. The parents on our last team hung out slavishly at one parents house, frequently got falling down drunk together in my opinion, took lavish vacations together other parents were not invited to, and bought matching outfits to wear the games that other parents were not included in. It was super weird.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Sounds like this is a bigger problem on girls teams. We haven't had any issues with our son's team. If anything a lack of team bonding has been an issue. We have been friendly with all of the parents but no one hangs out outside of soccer (kids or parents). Moving to a new club/team next year and we will see what that's like. Hopefully the parents are welcoming. We won't be the only new ones.
Bingo! Now extrapolate that to adult chicks… yeah, and now throw their woke stuff where if you ain’t from their isle of orientation you are excluded and isolated.
Lastly, the technical and tactical level is inferior to 15 year old boys and voilà: perfect storm of why soccer fans and lovers aren’t interested in female “pros”
Anonymous wrote:Sounds like this is a bigger problem on girls teams. We haven't had any issues with our son's team. If anything a lack of team bonding has been an issue. We have been friendly with all of the parents but no one hangs out outside of soccer (kids or parents). Moving to a new club/team next year and we will see what that's like. Hopefully the parents are welcoming. We won't be the only new ones.

and if ur club folds and unites/merges/changes badges they stop hanging. Its fascinatingAnonymous wrote:Also, this thread could be re-written each year. Cliques happen. The reason they happen is because those parents formed a circle of trust to gossip about everyone else. They love it. It's natural. You can't stop cliques.
But what is in your power, is to ignore them or work hard to join one... either way it doesn't matter and that is just the way it goes!
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:I love these discussions. The cliquey parents try to cast it off as nothing, and the other side does the same in another way by telling you to ignore it. What they're not telling you is how this plays out as they get older, ESPECIALLY girls. You'll see them go from very friendly classmates to not speaking at all due to how things are portrayed to them surrounding soccer. If you progress into travel and the time that takes away from you, not having those relationships with those parents turns into some awkward trips. Party invites start getting weird and all. It's almost as if the parents subconsciously reenact their own ms/hs days.
Continue to be cordial, but also don't full on ignore everything. You'd be amazed at the topics that go on.
How is any of this related to performance on the field?
The awkwardness youre referring to is intentional by cliquey moms. They want others to do what they say. By controlling party invites or just being nasty some parents will just fall in line and do what they say.
Again, for youngers parents this all goes away when team performance and wins are more important than the nonsense party planners. If you want a more serious team look around at other clubs.
Also keep in mind that it could be worse. Our neighbors kid is on a competitive dance team that travels. Its just like soccer but the mom's are 100x worse and wins are are determined by corrupt judges.
You're a bit naive by thinking this magically goes away. As much as people come here for gossip, there's a whole lot of personal experiences poured into these posts. A cliquey group of 5-6 parents can include a few star players that the club may have zero interest in letting go. Package deals are commonplace in this area. If appeasing those parents means keeping some friends that might not be at the level, it'll happen.
At least in that situation the cliquey annoyingness is backed up by a kids performance level.
Also package deals generally don't happen with olders.
How old are you talking? I just watched this happen with U19s last season. Check the 2011 roster for one of the local clubs next season. As mentioned, there's plenty of first hand experiences being referenced on this forum. That's not being backed by performance, that's being good friends with a top level player.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:I love these discussions. The cliquey parents try to cast it off as nothing, and the other side does the same in another way by telling you to ignore it. What they're not telling you is how this plays out as they get older, ESPECIALLY girls. You'll see them go from very friendly classmates to not speaking at all due to how things are portrayed to them surrounding soccer. If you progress into travel and the time that takes away from you, not having those relationships with those parents turns into some awkward trips. Party invites start getting weird and all. It's almost as if the parents subconsciously reenact their own ms/hs days.
Continue to be cordial, but also don't full on ignore everything. You'd be amazed at the topics that go on.
How is any of this related to performance on the field?
The awkwardness youre referring to is intentional by cliquey moms. They want others to do what they say. By controlling party invites or just being nasty some parents will just fall in line and do what they say.
Again, for youngers parents this all goes away when team performance and wins are more important than the nonsense party planners. If you want a more serious team look around at other clubs.
Also keep in mind that it could be worse. Our neighbors kid is on a competitive dance team that travels. Its just like soccer but the mom's are 100x worse and wins are are determined by corrupt judges.
You're a bit naive by thinking this magically goes away. As much as people come here for gossip, there's a whole lot of personal experiences poured into these posts. A cliquey group of 5-6 parents can include a few star players that the club may have zero interest in letting go. Package deals are commonplace in this area. If appeasing those parents means keeping some friends that might not be at the level, it'll happen.
At least in that situation the cliquey annoyingness is backed up by a kids performance level.
Also package deals generally don't happen with olders.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:I love these discussions. The cliquey parents try to cast it off as nothing, and the other side does the same in another way by telling you to ignore it. What they're not telling you is how this plays out as they get older, ESPECIALLY girls. You'll see them go from very friendly classmates to not speaking at all due to how things are portrayed to them surrounding soccer. If you progress into travel and the time that takes away from you, not having those relationships with those parents turns into some awkward trips. Party invites start getting weird and all. It's almost as if the parents subconsciously reenact their own ms/hs days.
Continue to be cordial, but also don't full on ignore everything. You'd be amazed at the topics that go on.
How is any of this related to performance on the field?
The awkwardness youre referring to is intentional by cliquey moms. They want others to do what they say. By controlling party invites or just being nasty some parents will just fall in line and do what they say.
Again, for youngers parents this all goes away when team performance and wins are more important than the nonsense party planners. If you want a more serious team look around at other clubs.
Also keep in mind that it could be worse. Our neighbors kid is on a competitive dance team that travels. Its just like soccer but the mom's are 100x worse and wins are are determined by corrupt judges.
You're a bit naive by thinking this magically goes away. As much as people come here for gossip, there's a whole lot of personal experiences poured into these posts. A cliquey group of 5-6 parents can include a few star players that the club may have zero interest in letting go. Package deals are commonplace in this area. If appeasing those parents means keeping some friends that might not be at the level, it'll happen.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:I love these discussions. The cliquey parents try to cast it off as nothing, and the other side does the same in another way by telling you to ignore it. What they're not telling you is how this plays out as they get older, ESPECIALLY girls. You'll see them go from very friendly classmates to not speaking at all due to how things are portrayed to them surrounding soccer. If you progress into travel and the time that takes away from you, not having those relationships with those parents turns into some awkward trips. Party invites start getting weird and all. It's almost as if the parents subconsciously reenact their own ms/hs days.
Continue to be cordial, but also don't full on ignore everything. You'd be amazed at the topics that go on.
How is any of this related to performance on the field?
The awkwardness youre referring to is intentional by cliquey moms. They want others to do what they say. By controlling party invites or just being nasty some parents will just fall in line and do what they say.
Again, for youngers parents this all goes away when team performance and wins are more important than the nonsense party planners. If you want a more serious team look around at other clubs.
Also keep in mind that it could be worse. Our neighbors kid is on a competitive dance team that travels. Its just like soccer but the mom's are 100x worse and wins are are determined by corrupt judges.
Anonymous wrote:How did you find a thread from 2013?