They will post assignments before tryouts.
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Originally posted by Unregistered View PostThey will post assignments before tryouts.
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Originally posted by Unregistered View PostAny club can tell you who will be coaching, but it can and easily will change by the fall. It isn't always the club's fault - things can change out of their control - so look for a good stable of coaches, not just the one you're hoping for or want to avoid
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Originally posted by Unregistered View Postevery team needs a bench, so sure, why not?
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Originally posted by Unregistered View Posthmmm - so FSA C teams you play weak in state competition, pay a lot but save the travel/mileage. Sporting you pay less in fees but have to travel far beat downs in EDP. Not much of a choice is it?
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Originally posted by Unregistered View PostFSA's coaching assignments changed seven times over last weekend alone. FSA is still hiring coaches for next season. FSA's roster will change significantly after tryouts, it seems. So will yours. Coaching assignments now mean diddly, so get over it.
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I miss coaching. I coached town travel for three or so cycles of kids. We had 3 practices a week in the summer, 1 a week indoors in the winter, two tournaments, and 3 sessions indoors, plus usually three or four friendlies each spring and fall. I volunteered my time. Costs including uniform were around $125 plus indoor league fees and tournament fees (costs divided by number of players, maybe another $150-200).
I had season-long lesson plans with room for practices devoted to fixing specific game-related issues, rotated kids through all spots, and earned at least as many wins as losses most seasons. I played. I'm nationally licensed. I miss it. Finding goalies was always tough, but I focused them on field play anyway, because that's what I believe town travel should do, with occasional goalie-specific training.
The trouble is, things begin to break down at U11 and U12, when some parents begin to feel they know better, and are looking to spend lots more money to go play pop-up premier. And, I'm really not in it for the bullsh, I didn't get paid enough. So, on the third go round, I just let it go. I do miss it, though.
A lot of the talk on TS reminds me of those parents I left behind.
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Originally posted by Unregistered View PostI miss coaching. I coached town travel for three or so cycles of kids. We had 3 practices a week in the summer, 1 a week indoors in the winter, two tournaments, and 3 sessions indoors, plus usually three or four friendlies each spring and fall. I volunteered my time. Costs including uniform were around $125 plus indoor league fees and tournament fees (costs divided by number of players, maybe another $150-200).
I had season-long lesson plans with room for practices devoted to fixing specific game-related issues, rotated kids through all spots, and earned at least as many wins as losses most seasons. I played. I'm nationally licensed. I miss it. Finding goalies was always tough, but I focused them on field play anyway, because that's what I believe town travel should do, with occasional goalie-specific training.
The trouble is, things begin to break down at U11 and U12, when some parents begin to feel they know better, and are looking to spend lots more money to go play pop-up premier. And, I'm really not in it for the bullsh, I didn't get paid enough. So, on the third go round, I just let it go. I do miss it, though.
A lot of the talk on TS reminds me of those parents I left behind.
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Originally posted by Unregistered View PostAnd it's because travel is losing coaches like you that parents go to "premier" programs. Some towns still have good coaching and those programs still are doing well. But if the program is faltering, either because of bad coaching, politics, weak management, then parents will be easily lured to premier clubs.
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Originally posted by Unregistered View PostFrom my perspective, it's three things. Firstly, I have no time for the petty politics and bullsh; I could be more tolerant, but I volunteer to do this and so must like what I do to keep going. Secondly, I've seen town travel clubs where board members coach for and recruit for pop-up premier, so the clubs destroy themselves from within. These parasites, btw, only have their own kids agenda in mind AND they are the worst kind of daddy coaches: no experience playing, inability to teach, and no training (E-license doesn't count for anything). Thirdly, some parents are just stupid. They think the grass is greener on the other side of the fence, they are willing to burn money to go there, and for the next 4-5 years they end up bouncing between numerous pop-up premier teams, with an occasional brief FSA/OW appearance, because they remain unsatisfied. Knock that sht off. Anyway, in the end, the issue comes down to parents, and there's probably no fixing it.
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Originally posted by Unregistered View PostFrom my perspective, it's three things. Firstly, I have no time for the petty politics and bullsh; I could be more tolerant, but I volunteer to do this and so must like what I do to keep going. Secondly, I've seen town travel clubs where board members coach for and recruit for pop-up premier, so the clubs destroy themselves from within. These parasites, btw, only have their own kids agenda in mind AND they are the worst kind of daddy coaches: no experience playing, inability to teach, and no training (E-license doesn't count for anything). Thirdly, some parents are just stupid. They think the grass is greener on the other side of the fence, they are willing to burn money to go there, and for the next 4-5 years they end up bouncing between numerous pop-up premier teams, with an occasional brief FSA/OW appearance, because they remain unsatisfied. Knock that sht off. Anyway, in the end, the issue comes down to parents, and there's probably no fixing it.
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I know kids who went premier, and ended up quitting all soccer as a direct result of the premier experience, and who were doing fine with travel and would still be playing if they had stayed with travel. Oh, and they screwed it up for the travel team on the way out because the took a couple of kids with them. Those kids didn't stay together, either. And, so, some might say this is instant karma, but I say it's typical ego-driven bad parenting that ends up doing nobody any good. Nicely played.
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