Originally posted by practical
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club soccer and the economy
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Originally posted by AnonymousReality, great post above....
Can you expand a little on this...The incredible systematic upheval on the boys side will also continue to have a huge impact.
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Each academy will need to have teams in several ages. At what age would these properties (that is what the players involved are), "graduate"? One could assume that between U18 and U20, a player is either under a professional contract or cut loose. For those who get the professional contracts such is wonderful. How many would that be per year? 32 - 64? How many plyaers will be let loose with nothing to fall back on? 600 - 1000+?
For every success out of junior hockey there are 100 who are used and discarded.
Will the academy players have the necessary education to pursue careers outside of soccer?
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Originally posted by MASCEach academy will need to have teams in several ages. At what age would these properties (that is what the players involved are), "graduate"? One could assume that between U18 and U20, a player is either under a professional contract or cut loose. For those who get the professional contracts such is wonderful. How many would that be per year? 32 - 64? How many plyaers will be let loose with nothing to fall back on? 600 - 1000+?
For every success out of junior hockey there are 100 who are used and discarded.
Will the academy players have the necessary education to pursue careers outside of soccer?
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I understand that many players have gone the junior route. There are levels and levels. Those players that I know who have done such have had difficulties balancing being away from home, the demands of hockey and school.
For Yale:
27 players
12 played prep-school;HS
1 national team player
13 played juniors
1 college transfer
7 Canadian players
For Dartmouth
27 players
6 played prep-school;HS
21 played juniors
11 Canadian players
For BC
23 players
12 played prep-school;HS
2 national team players
11 played juniors
3 Canadian players
For BU
27 players
8 played prep-school;HS
5 national team players
14 played juniors
3 Canadian players
I have not had the time to correlate year in college to birth year and HS graduation years. In the long gone past (my era), many players attended prep schools, e.g. Choate, Taft, etc. to be better prepared for college.
The reason for listing the Canadian players was to see what percentage of the rosters were taken by Canadians. It was interesting to see the large numbers at Yale and Dartmouth compared to BC and BU. Probably speaks well to the quality of US players
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Re: club soccer and the economy
These multi thousand dollar soccer costs look a bit rich in these times. Air fares and travel costs could double for tournaments next season. credit cards are maxed outand past due.
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Re: club soccer and the economy
Originally posted by GuestThese multi thousand dollar soccer costs look a bit rich in these times. Air fares and travel costs could double for tournaments next season. credit cards are maxed outand past due.
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Re: club soccer and the economy
Funny someone resurrected this thread. I was thinking about this today, stuck in traffic burning close to $5.00 a gallon gasoline.
Lately a few families, some even highly educated and living in the suburbs, moved kids to clubs closer to home and cited travel costs as a contributing factor in their decision.
Tough to justify $5,000 to $10,000 a year on expensive Clubs and even more expensive travel if a decent coaching is available nearby at a fraction of the cost.
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Re: club soccer and the economy
Originally posted by offsideFunny someone resurrected this thread. I was thinking about this today, stuck in traffic burning close to $5.00 a gallon gasoline.
Lately a few families, some even highly educated and living in the suburbs, moved kids to clubs closer to home and cited travel costs as a contributing factor in their decision.
Tough to justify $5,000 to $10,000 a year on expensive Clubs and even more expensive travel if a decent coaching is available nearby at a fraction of the cost.
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Re: club soccer and the economy
Originally posted by GuestOriginally posted by offsideFunny someone resurrected this thread. I was thinking about this today, stuck in traffic burning close to $5.00 a gallon gasoline.
Lately a few families, some even highly educated and living in the suburbs, moved kids to clubs closer to home and cited travel costs as a contributing factor in their decision.
Tough to justify $5,000 to $10,000 a year on expensive Clubs and even more expensive travel if a decent coaching is available nearby at a fraction of the cost.
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Re: club soccer and the economy
Tough to justify $5,000 to $10,000 a year on expensive Clubs and even more expensive travel if a decent coaching is available nearby at a fraction of the cost.[/quote]
Anyone want to still question the reasons MPS, Stars, Seacoast and Aztecs might consider forming a new league?[/quote]
Daddywarbucks will continue to question whether MPS, Seacoast and Aztec can produce teams that can compete with the Stars.[/quote]
Aztecs charge just as much as clubs like Stars actually I think they charge more. MPS charge much more so not sure Stars have been brought into this.
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