JK told players if you want to go pro don't go to college but play internationally - which is funny because his kid plays at Stanford I think. Anyway, there seems to ha e been a slight uptick in players trying this. Still not many but baby steps. It's a big risk however since you lose college eligibility
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Originally posted by Unregistered View PostJK told players if you want to go pro don't go to college but play internationally - which is funny because his kid plays at Stanford I think. Anyway, there seems to ha e been a slight uptick in players trying this. Still not many but baby steps. It's a big risk however since you lose college eligibility
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Originally posted by Unregistered View PostJK told players if you want to go pro don't go to college but play internationally - which is funny because his kid plays at Stanford I think. Anyway, there seems to ha e been a slight uptick in players trying this. Still not many but baby steps. It's a big risk however since you lose college eligibility
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College is not the place to play if you want to develop. It's like high school soccer on steroids. International players are almost all pro players by age 18, and even younger they're practically not in school anyway. College soccer, even at the D1 level, is still a part time job. If college soccer was more like football and basketball, where there's tremendous coaching and resources then not everyone would feel the pressure to make the tradeoffs. There are more players going for a year or two then dropping out of college but they are almost always going MLS, not international. We have a long way tot go to churn out international quality players in bigger numbers and may never because of the focus on education. And that's ok because realistically still very few players will ever be pro material and should focus on school. But to develop the ones that could be professionals, the system should be much smaller and more focused. Maybe a residency program to ally parent concerns about education? Or financial guarantees (or just better pay) to help pay for college AFTER pursing a pro career? I don't know what the solution is but I don't think it's what we're doing now.
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Originally posted by Unregistered View PostCollege is not the place to play if you want to develop. It's like high school soccer on steroids. International players are almost all pro players by age 18, and even younger they're practically not in school anyway. College soccer, even at the D1 level, is still a part time job. If college soccer was more like football and basketball, where there's tremendous coaching and resources then not everyone would feel the pressure to make the tradeoffs. There are more players going for a year or two then dropping out of college but they are almost always going MLS, not international. We have a long way tot go to churn out international quality players in bigger numbers and may never because of the focus on education. And that's ok because realistically still very few players will ever be pro material and should focus on school. But to develop the ones that could be professionals, the system should be much smaller and more focused. Maybe a residency program to ally parent concerns about education? Or financial guarantees (or just better pay) to help pay for college AFTER pursing a pro career? I don't know what the solution is but I don't think it's what we're doing now.
Yes there will be some college player who make national teams but they are starting to be the exception. Also we will start to see some one and done or two and done players for the late bloomers.
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Originally posted by Unregistered View PostI think what we are starting to see on the men's side is a two track system. College for the good but not international level player. Pro for the very good to international level players
Yes there will be some college player who make national teams but they are starting to be the exception. Also we will start to see some one and done or two and done players for the late bloomers.
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