Originally posted by Anonymous
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'07 High School Soccer #2
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Originally posted by AnonymousI think you're right. AB for instance might be able to give an ISL team a good game without too much imbarassment.
Didn't embarrass AB to win at all and it was great since all the AB players got a lot of playing time.
Is that what you meant?
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Originally posted by AnonymousOriginally posted by CujoOriginally posted by AnonymousOriginally posted by Anonymous[Onthree kept the roster smaller which I think ties into the cohesive group comment above. Adjustments for team chemistry can count as much as tactical adjustments on the field. In addition, the younger players have stepped up.
Do you think it makes a difference how strong the program is? For example the Varsity and JV roster of a very strong program might be smaller because the players are fitter, more experienced, etc. In a weaker program there may be more need for subs for fitness alone and therefore a larger roster necessary - similar to the differences you seem to have with Varsity and JV numbers.
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Originally posted by AnonymousOriginally posted by AnonymousI think dominance is the wrong word. The middle of the pack teams are better in the ISL than the middle of the pack teams in public high school.
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Qualifying for HS State Tournament
What does it take for a HS team to be eligible for the post season State Tournament? Is it based on a point system since teams can have a lot of ties in some leagues? I know in basketball you have to win 50% or more of your games but there are a lot of tie scores in soccer. Can someone explain how qualifying for the post season works in soccer
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I'm pretty sure the AB vs. ISL comment was with tongue planted in cheek. Boys or girls. If not, we should all just read it as such or go watch either AB team play (especially the girls).
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Yeah - maybe - the snotty tone of so many of the pro ISL posts just got to me.
And I attended boarding school for four years myself - on scholarship - so maybe that's the source of the chip on my shoulder.
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Originally posted by AnonymousOriginally posted by AnonymousI think you're right. AB for instance might be able to give an ISL team a good game without too much imbarassment.
Didn't embarrass AB to win at all and it was great since all the AB players got a lot of playing time.
Is that what you meant?
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To answer the ISL - public debate is certainly on the girls side it is not all one way in favor of the ISL. I would estimate that the top couple of teams in every conference (or 25-30 teams) are of the quality to compete with the ISL. The main difference is that ISL teams never play poor teams, whereas a solid public team will play as many as 8-10 games a year against weaker competition. My experience is that this parity is eveolving and the ISL teams are improving as a greater recruitment emphasis is placed on soccer. The big difference is that even the top ISL teams of 7 or 8 years ago would feature some real quality diversity on the roster(three or four great players but a bench loaded with JV talent). Today's teams are far more solid from top to bottom. So on the North Shore teams like Masco, Newburyport, Peabody, Danvers, Billerica and Andover are every bit as good as Phillips, Governor's or Brooks and better than Pingree. Five years from now that may not be the case. As for the tourney, it iworks this way: 2 points for a win one for a tie. If you play 18 games you need 18 points to qualify.You also qualify if you finish first or second in your conference (regardless of points) and there is a special rule for D3 teams that play lots of D1 teams (you basically don't have to count games against teams a double jump ahead of you - like Weston in the DCL).
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Originally posted by AnonymousOriginally posted by AnonymousOriginally posted by AnonymousI think dominance is the wrong word. The middle of the pack teams are better in the ISL than the middle of the pack teams in public high school.
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Originally posted by AnonymousOriginally posted by AnonymousOriginally posted by AnonymousOriginally posted by AnonymousI think dominance is the wrong word. The middle of the pack teams are better in the ISL than the middle of the pack teams in public high school.
The opinion comes from watching several hundred high school games (ISL and public) through four kids: Two in ISL schools, and two in public schools. As ISL schools generaly only play public high schools in meaningless pre-season friendly scrimmages, no accurate direct comparisons can be made. So after watching hundreds of games, I go with what my eyes tell me. Last year's two teams that finished in the middle of the ISL standings, Middlesex School and Roxbury Latin would beat the middle teams in virtually any public high school league in the state.
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