Originally posted by Unregistered
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Unregistered
Originally posted by Unregistered View PostNo, sounds like the coach got his/her ego hurt and acted like a petulant child
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Unregistered
My player has made the commitment to travel soccer for many years. Having missed most school functions, friend's birthdays, and family gatherings to play with the team. Step back and look at the big picture. They want to play for school in front of their friends. Ask your player. A good travel coach gets it and will work with them.
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Unregistered
Originally posted by Unregistered View PostMy player has made the commitment to travel soccer for many years. Having missed most school functions, friend's birthdays, and family gatherings to play with the team. Step back and look at the big picture. They want to play for school in front of their friends. Ask your player. A good travel coach gets it and will work with them.
Play anytime you can:)
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Unregistered
Originally posted by Unregistered View PostLike many, our HS coach also coaches at a local club - HS age, same gender team. This coach falls into the category of hypocrite. Everyone knows he allows flexibility with his own club players when they run afoul of rules for HS practice, timeliness to games, etc, he is not so flexible if you happen to play for another club. Not only has this been a topic of conversation for all parents of all players while sitting in the stands FOR YEARS, the players actually taunt each other with this information during school. Yea, great guy. Parents are afraid to approach him as they are rightly concerned there will be retribution for it. The kids know what they can get away with and throw it in the faces of the other kids. They know the Coach looks the other way. It has given us the opportunity to speak with our kid about life lessons, and how people can be treated, but the only solution is to not allow the kid to play HS soccer, or to allow them to try to work through it.
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Unregistered
Originally posted by Unregistered View PostHe/she doesn't sound petulant. He/she is not the one on here complaining, you are. Guess the coach succeeded in the point that he/she was trying to make. Did the team win the games that your kid missed because she was benched? If they did, maybe your kid isn't the impact player you think she is.
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Unregistered
Originally posted by Unregistered View PostMy player has made the commitment to travel soccer for many years. Having missed most school functions, friend's birthdays, and family gatherings to play with the team. Step back and look at the big picture. They want to play for school in front of their friends. Ask your player. A good travel coach gets it and will work with them.
HS plays a ridiculous number of games. Sometimes several a week. *** is that all about? It proves nothing and the number of injuries in HS as compared to club is a stark reminder that there are kids out there that have no idea of how to play the game. The season should be shorter with 11 games and then play-offs. FHSAA needs to wake up and realize they are not driving the sport. They need to reach out to the clubs and figure out how to coexist.
If it was the other way around and HS was the pipeline to college, then the clubs would need to work around the HS season as they do in football, basketball, baseball and softball. If FHSAA thinks for one minute that HS soccer is a pipeline to college, then I have some soccer fields in the green swamp I would like to sell them.
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Unregistered
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Unregistered
Originally posted by Unregistered View PostWhy does the club coach have to work with them? Is the HS coach getting them recruited by colleges? Can you name the last time a college coach came to a regular season high school game? So if the goal is to play in college, then who should be trying to work out a compromise?
HS plays a ridiculous number of games. Sometimes several a week. *** is that all about? It proves nothing and the number of injuries in HS as compared to club is a stark reminder that there are kids out there that have no idea of how to play the game. The season should be shorter with 11 games and then play-offs. FHSAA needs to wake up and realize they are not driving the sport. They need to reach out to the clubs and figure out how to coexist.
If it was the other way around and HS was the pipeline to college, then the clubs would need to work around the HS season as they do in football, basketball, baseball and softball. If FHSAA thinks for one minute that HS soccer is a pipeline to college, then I have some soccer fields in the green swamp I would like to sell them.
Too many games in H.S. Its almost laughable how many games they play in 3 months.
H.S. does not develop players.
The only thing I will say to 'semi-defend' H.S. soccer is that the kids WANT to play. And they enjoy it. And at the end of the day, that's what its about. The PLAYER needs to decide which is bigger priority: H.S. pride or development in Club.
Many of the people arguing here on TS are parents that are deciding for their kid based on what they want for them.
While I think that we SHOULD be guiding our kids to the right decision, we sometimes try to live through them and force them one way or the other.
Besides, its a HIGH percentage of parents that force their kids the club route for the purpose of chasing scholarships (they all think their kid is good enough). Yet its a small percentage of players that will actually get a scholarship to play in college.
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Unregistered
Originally posted by Unregistered View PostHard to believe that people are still buying the showcase pitch after all of these years. Unless your kid is playing in the finals AND a coach already has him/her on his radar, nobody is going to see them. And if you are one of the lucky ones, you better perform your best for the 5 minutes that the coach is going to watch you for. You better get playing time that day as well. Coaches don't look at the bench.
If your kid is strong player, identify the colleges they may be interested in attending and attend their ID camps. And if your kid is REALLY good, don't worry,they will find him/her even behind a school house. Can't keep soccer talent hidden for long. Eventually someone makes a call and doors open.
I don't recommend any kid try that, but showcases matter.
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Unregistered
Originally posted by Unregistered View PostActually the team lost every game that the coach benched the players who missed games for club tournaments. He basically had to call up JV and they were beaten very badly. This is not about one player. This is about a coach who thinks his team is more important than playing for ODP, ID2, US National teams. The guy is a complete idiot.
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Unregistered
Originally posted by Unregistered View PostThat may be the rule, but my kid was spotted by a power conference school scouting someone else. (Had a career game), that coach at next showcase attended all 3 of our games. Kid went to ID camp next week and an unofficial visit. Has an offer and is a 2018. Never made ODP or had written coach before. Lucky yes. However, it goes to show that previous unknown players to get noticed.
I don't recommend any kid try that, but showcases matter.
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Unregistered
Originally posted by Unregistered View PostI agree 100%. Club drives college recruitment.
Too many games in H.S. Its almost laughable how many games they play in 3 months.
H.S. does not develop players.
The only thing I will say to 'semi-defend' H.S. soccer is that the kids WANT to play. And they enjoy it. And at the end of the day, that's what its about. The PLAYER needs to decide which is bigger priority: H.S. pride or development in Club.
Many of the people arguing here on TS are parents that are deciding for their kid based on what they want for them.
While I think that we SHOULD be guiding our kids to the right decision, we sometimes try to live through them and force them one way or the other.
Besides, its a HIGH percentage of parents that force their kids the club route for the purpose of chasing scholarships (they all think their kid is good enough). Yet its a small percentage of players that will actually get a scholarship to play in college.
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