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Originally posted by Guest View Post
Based on your “tiers”, my kid plays in the top tier of ECNL. The “tiers” are for showcases where the league wants teams at similar levels to play one another. Despite your snarky comments, I can tell you that kids from “third tier” ECNL teams/clubs get recruited by strong college soccer programs. When my kid’s “top tier” team plays a “lower tier” team in league play, the college coaches there will notice a kid that does well against that strong competition.
I have never heard about coaches at my kid’s club telling parents that RL kids will train with ECNL teams and get promoted. Parents can do their own research and see how rare that is at the high school ages.
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Guest
Originally posted by Guest View PostActually the opposite is happening. Fewer kids are playing. The sport has lost nearly 600,000 participants. You're the one making up BS.
New Study Shows Negative Trend In Youth Soccer Player Retention
Dec 19, 2023
https://www.soccerwire.com/soccer-bl...yer-retention/
"soccer is the one that is hit the hardest. In a study conducted by the Sport and Fitness Industry Association, it was found that between the years of 2008 and 2022 youth soccer has seen a decline in participation between the ages of 6-12 (down to 8% from 10.4%) and 13-17 (7.1% from 7.9%)."
But sure, let's expand the leagues in a completely nonsensical way, and make families spend more time and money for worse leagues.That should reverse the trends.
did it occur to you that the reduction might be the result of clubs using a different registration system?
Did it occur to you that the author of the article might have a self interest?
Did you ask these questions Or did you just reach blindly for any kind of data to back up the conclusion you started with?
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Originally posted by Guest View Post
The data for the study was collected from Sprocket’s proprietary information via their player registration database
did it occur to you that the reduction might be the result of clubs using a different registration system?
Did it occur to you that the author of the article might have a self interest?
Did you ask these questions Or did you just reach blindly for any kind of data to back up the conclusion you started with?
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Guest
Originally posted by Guest View Post
Based on your “tiers”, my kid plays in the top tier of ECNL. The “tiers” are for showcases where the league wants teams at similar levels to play one another. Despite your snarky comments, I can tell you that kids from “third tier” ECNL teams/clubs get recruited by strong college soccer programs. When my kid’s “top tier” team plays a “lower tier” team in league play, the college coaches there will notice a kid that does well against that strong competition.
I have never heard about coaches at my kid’s club telling parents that RL kids will train with ECNL teams and get promoted. Parents can do their own research and see how rare that is at the high school ages.
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Guest
Originally posted by Guest View Post
Clearly you’re triggered by the tiers comment but this the truth. When it comes to showcases and tournaments the rank and rating of the teams matter. When you go to an ECNL event you could see when the top tier teams are playing because of the amount of coaches on the sidelines. Those looking at players and those looking at their players committed to their schools. There are hundreds of matches being played simultaneously but you know which are the big matches. That’s just how it goes. Parents who come to these events for the first time are taken back at how many games and players are in ECNL. It puts things into perspective. As far as RL, ECNL “sold” this league as an opportunity to be seen by ECNL on a daily basis and be evaluated for possible promotion to ECNL. That is a fact.
This is also why the big GA clubs get annoyed by the ECNL pom pom squad parents.
There are very good ECNL teams there are also very bad ECNL teams. What you're describing as tiers is just ECNL trying to avoid blowouts at events. In doing so the best play the best (which attracts scouts) and the worst play the worst (which attracts nobody).
Leagues don't make bad teams better. The good clubs just beat up on the terrible teams. The players on terrible teams get frustrated and quit or they change clubs and chase getting on a winning team.
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Guest
Originally posted by Guest View Post
This is also why the big GA clubs get annoyed by the ECNL pom pom squad parents.
There are very good ECNL teams there are also very bad ECNL teams. What you're describing as tiers is just ECNL trying to avoid blowouts at events. In doing so the best play the best (which attracts scouts) and the worst play the worst (which attracts nobody).
Leagues don't make bad teams better. The good clubs just beat up on the terrible teams. The players on terrible teams get frustrated and quit or they change clubs and chase getting on a winning team.
100% you can always tell who's kid plays on a crappy ECNL team/club because when you ask them where their daughter plays they respond with "they play in ECNL".
Parents with kids that play on top ECNL clubs always say the club/team their kid plays on and only mentions ECNL if you ask which league they play in.
Try it yourself next time you meet a soccer parent.
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Yet every year I see kids from “crappy” ECNL teams with D1 commitments so I guess it doesn’t matter all that much unless you’re going for a top school.
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Originally posted by Guest View PostYet every year I see kids from “crappy” ECNL teams with D1 commitments so I guess it doesn’t matter all that much unless you’re going for a top school.
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Guest
Originally posted by Guest View Post
Clearly you’re triggered by the tiers comment but this the truth. When it comes to showcases and tournaments the rank and rating of the teams matter. When you go to an ECNL event you could see when the top tier teams are playing because of the amount of coaches on the sidelines. Those looking at players and those looking at their players committed to their schools. There are hundreds of matches being played simultaneously but you know which are the big matches. That’s just how it goes. Parents who come to these events for the first time are taken back at how many games and players are in ECNL. It puts things into perspective. As far as RL, ECNL “sold” this league as an opportunity to be seen by ECNL on a daily basis and be evaluated for possible promotion to ECNL. That is a fact.
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Guest
Originally posted by Guest View PostYet every year I see kids from “crappy” ECNL teams with D1 commitments so I guess it doesn’t matter all that much unless you’re going for a top school.
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Guest
Originally posted by Guest View Post
This is also why the big GA clubs get annoyed by the ECNL pom pom squad parents.
There are very good ECNL teams there are also very bad ECNL teams. What you're describing as tiers is just ECNL trying to avoid blowouts at events. In doing so the best play the best (which attracts scouts) and the worst play the worst (which attracts nobody).
Leagues don't make bad teams better. The good clubs just beat up on the terrible teams. The players on terrible teams get frustrated and quit or they change clubs and chase getting on a winning team.
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