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To ODP or not to ODP
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UnregisteredTags: None
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Unregistered
Originally posted by Unregistered View Post
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Unregistered
Originally posted by Unregistered View PostTough decision. ALL recruit questionnaires ask for ODP experience. We did it for a couple of years. If your kid is playing on a club that that has potential to make it into the State Cup Finals, Region 1 play or ECNL it will be next to impossible to juggle both.
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Unregistered
if your talking Boys, the academy is the way to go.(if your good enough).
Mass ODP will take almost anyone's money
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Unregistered
Originally posted by Unregistered View PostCheck the schedule for ODP and you will see it is not a problem unless your coach schedules practices on Monday evenings. Once in a while your kid may have a regional or national training that comflicts.
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Unregistered
Originally posted by Unregistered View PostThere could exist the situation where your child is taking all honors courses, practicing 3-4 nights per week for club (add a day for ODP), and Ryder Cup is scheduled between the State Cup RR and finals, the R1 ID camp is grueling and is days before a major tournament and you are traveling all over during the month of July. Hypothetically of course.
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Guest
From what I can gather, you either love ODP or hate it. This is our son's second season playing and he's had a great experience so far. He's met kids from all over the state, had great training, traveled, and gained confidence. He looks forward to going each time and has never said he didn't want to. Whether you can juggle everything depends on your child and family and how far you're willing to stretch yourself to make it work. His club team practices several times a week, plays Region I and two other leagues, and they are state cup contenders. He is an excellent student taking honors classes. We are also fortunate that his coach/club is supportive of ODP. I'm sure it's somewhat political, let's face it, soccer is a small community--you don't have to hang around Forekicks on Sunday for long to make all the connections.
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Unregistered
Originally posted by soccerfam6 View PostFrom what I can gather, you either love ODP or hate it. This is our son's second season playing and he's had a great experience so far. He's met kids from all over the state, had great training, traveled, and gained confidence. He looks forward to going each time and has never said he didn't want to. Whether you can juggle everything depends on your child and family and how far you're willing to stretch yourself to make it work. His club team practices several times a week, plays Region I and two other leagues, and they are state cup contenders. He is an excellent student taking honors classes. We are also fortunate that his coach/club is supportive of ODP. I'm sure it's somewhat political, let's face it, soccer is a small community--you don't have to hang around Forekicks on Sunday for long to make all the connections.
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Unregistered
Originally posted by Unregistered View PostI agree with this poster. This is our daughter's third season playing ODP. Her experience has been the same.
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Unregistered
Originally posted by Unregistered View Postsame for my son. Good experience. Not perfect, but worthwhile. It also has a ltime tested path that has exposed many ODP players to Regional and National team attention.
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Unregistered
Unless a player is nationally known and not part of ODP, its a differentiator for most players
2 players of equal ability; 1 does ODP and the other doesn't. the coach will choose the ODP player 99.9% of the time.
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Unregistered
Originally posted by Unregistered View PostUnless a player is nationally known and not part of ODP, its a differentiator for most players
2 players of equal ability; 1 does ODP and the other doesn't. the coach will choose the ODP player 99.9% of the time.
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Unregistered
Originally posted by Unregistered View PostCoaches don't care if player does state ODP. ODP will only make a difference at Regional level and up. Coaches all know that the level of players in state ODP is not that good.
Of course they'd prefer going after the Regional player but if they had to choose between 2 players: 1 who did ODP (and not make the regional pool) and 1 who didnt do ODP, the coach would choose ODP. Makes perfect sense
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Unregistered
Originally posted by Unregistered View PostCoaches don't care if player does state ODP. ODP will only make a difference at Regional level and up. Coaches all know that the level of players in state ODP is not that good.
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Unregistered
Originally posted by Unregistered View PostYou would be incorrect. This very question was asked by a friend and his daughter when they visited a D1 college coach. The answer was as posted
Of course they'd prefer going after the Regional player but if they had to choose between 2 players: 1 who did ODP (and not make the regional pool) and 1 who didnt do ODP, the coach would choose ODP. Makes perfect sense
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