Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:OHHHHHHH I CAN"T BELIEVE IT!!! These boys must have been traumatized. Everyone knows these 15-16 year olds in Loudoun County aren't going to vape in the bathrooms, get HJs, BJs and cross dress to go into a specific bathroom.
Were those kids able to survive and go see their mental health professional to get over the fact that a coach told them to work hard or they'll amount to nothing, while they signed up to play competitive sports and pay a hefty amount.
You make your point well, however, it’s never appropriate for an adult to talk this way to a teenager no matter how big of babies they are. If the coach doesn’t like the quality of his players that he selected, maybe he should find other players.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:OHHHHHHH I CAN"T BELIEVE IT!!! These boys must have been traumatized. Everyone knows these 15-16 year olds in Loudoun County aren't going to vape in the bathrooms, get HJs, BJs and cross dress to go into a specific bathroom.
Were those kids able to survive and go see their mental health professional to get over the fact that a coach told them to work hard or they'll amount to nothing, while they signed up to play competitive sports and pay a hefty amount.
You make your point well, however, it’s never appropriate for an adult to talk this way to a teenager no matter how big of babies they are. If the coach doesn’t like the quality of his players that he selected, maybe he should find other players.
Anonymous wrote:OHHHHHHH I CAN"T BELIEVE IT!!! These boys must have been traumatized. Everyone knows these 15-16 year olds in Loudoun County aren't going to vape in the bathrooms, get HJs, BJs and cross dress to go into a specific bathroom.
Were those kids able to survive and go see their mental health professional to get over the fact that a coach told them to work hard or they'll amount to nothing, while they signed up to play competitive sports and pay a hefty amount.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:We are one of the GF who took our DD to a VRSc practice for 2009 and already have an offer for next season 2026/27. My question is are those coaches really as bad as people are saying?
What? That's crazy. No one is sending out offers for the 26/27 yet unless your kid is the next Mia Hamm.
That's what you think, but there are many kids across many clubs that already know exactly where they'll be playing next year.... Realistically if you're top 3 or 4 player on a team, you don't think the club has already extended an offer. It's not as if a team is going to be able to bring in say 16 kids better than your current top 3 or 4 players.
Sure but you're telling me some kid who has been playing at GFR Is now considered one of the top 3 or 4 kids on VRSC's 09 team? Find that very hard to believe having a fairly decent knowledge of both of those teams.
Yep, and you haven’t even seen the best ones yet from GFR.
Actually, I have. The best ones left years ago. A couple good players still there but they won’t beat out the current players for starting positions on a team with 22 on the roster already
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:lol Hans is gone too. How did he split?
What about Frans?
Anonymous wrote:lol Hans is gone too. How did he split?
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:At some point, parents have to be honest about whether a soccer club is actually serving their kids or just perpetuating chaos. When a club is known for coaches playing favorites instead of developing talent, constant turnover with no stability, overpriced fees that do not translate to results, and consistently poor performance on the field, those are already serious red flags. Add in nonstop drama, blurred boundaries between coaches and parents, and a reputation in the local soccer community that people openly laugh at, and it becomes clear the focus is not on the players anymore. Youth soccer should be about growth, discipline, safety, and development, not politics, ego, and off field nonsense. Staying in an environment like that does not build resilience or character. It just wastes time and money while kids fall behind. Leaving is not disloyalty. It is choosing a healthier, more professional place for your child to actually improve.
You just described 90% of all youth soccer clubs.
Source? And no, "it's my opinion" doesn't count. If anything VRSC is amongst the worst in this department.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:This thread really is a joke. Entitled parents complained and now a coach that has a resume for good players and teams has essentially exited. Now instead you have a Director that could not even improve a Club that was already on the bottom of GA.
Congrats to the parents at VRSC, NVA and Loudoun on your successful dismantling of VRSC. And for what, because your kid isn’t getting enough playing time? You just screwed over the 15 other families from your team and all the others. Jerks.
The question one should ask is how you have all this inside information and most of the parents in this club are kept in the dark. Clearly your son is a favorite and given deep preference. Why is information not provided equally to all parents? It's typical of VRSC to crap on their customers and intentionally keep them in the dark. You would think Adam is running this organization.[u]
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:What happened to MA?
They didn't renew his contract. He is no longer with the club.
Fired because he’s better than the “directors” with all their super duper licenses and phony accents. They couldn’t stomach a humble guy from El Salvador schooling them on football knowledge.
VRSC is a toxic cesspool of snakes and rats.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:At some point, parents have to be honest about whether a soccer club is actually serving their kids or just perpetuating chaos. When a club is known for coaches playing favorites instead of developing talent, constant turnover with no stability, overpriced fees that do not translate to results, and consistently poor performance on the field, those are already serious red flags. Add in nonstop drama, blurred boundaries between coaches and parents, and a reputation in the local soccer community that people openly laugh at, and it becomes clear the focus is not on the players anymore. Youth soccer should be about growth, discipline, safety, and development, not politics, ego, and off field nonsense. Staying in an environment like that does not build resilience or character. It just wastes time and money while kids fall behind. Leaving is not disloyalty. It is choosing a healthier, more professional place for your child to actually improve.
You just described 90% of all youth soccer clubs.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:What happened to MA?
They didn't renew his contract. He is no longer with the club.
Anonymous wrote:At some point, parents have to be honest about whether a soccer club is actually serving their kids or just perpetuating chaos. When a club is known for coaches playing favorites instead of developing talent, constant turnover with no stability, overpriced fees that do not translate to results, and consistently poor performance on the field, those are already serious red flags. Add in nonstop drama, blurred boundaries between coaches and parents, and a reputation in the local soccer community that people openly laugh at, and it becomes clear the focus is not on the players anymore. Youth soccer should be about growth, discipline, safety, and development, not politics, ego, and off field nonsense. Staying in an environment like that does not build resilience or character. It just wastes time and money while kids fall behind. Leaving is not disloyalty. It is choosing a healthier, more professional place for your child to actually improve.