I've seen many posts about clubs joining, adding extra teams, parents saying it's a second team and this and that. In the end, is this league good enough to play college soccer or is it just a way to keep kids entertained.
Announcement
Collapse
No announcement yet.
Is the NAL league good enough to play college soccer?
Collapse
X
-
GuestTags: None
- Quote
-
Guest
There are over a thousand college programs. Roughly broken down to 250-350-450 for D1-2-3 respectively. GA and ECNL cannot fill all those slots, so yes NAL can get you a chance at college soccer. It will all depend on setting proper expectations though. If your goals match the realistic level of placement then you are in a good spot. If not, either your expectations or your spot need to change.
- Quote
-
Guest
Originally posted by Guest View PostThere are over a thousand college programs. Roughly broken down to 250-350-450 for D1-2-3 respectively. GA and ECNL cannot fill all those slots, so yes NAL can get you a chance at college soccer. It will all depend on setting proper expectations though. If your goals match the realistic level of placement then you are in a good spot. If not, either your expectations or your spot need to change.
Narrow down what "playing college soccer" means and then we can discuss further. Take a sampling of college rosters of various levels and look at their bios to see where their players come from.
- Quote
Comment
-
Guest
Originally posted by Guest View Post
^^ This. "Playing college soccer" is a massively broad description. There are teams at the bottom of really all divisions that would get trounced by a decent high school team. There are teams at the top of D1 that are filled with NT and professional capable players. And, there is everything in between.
Narrow down what "playing college soccer" means and then we can discuss further. Take a sampling of college rosters of various levels and look at their bios to see where their players come from.
- Quote
Comment
-
Guest
Originally posted by Guest View PostThere are over a thousand college programs. Roughly broken down to 250-350-450 for D1-2-3 respectively. GA and ECNL cannot fill all those slots, so yes NAL can get you a chance at college soccer. It will all depend on setting proper expectations though. If your goals match the realistic level of placement then you are in a good spot. If not, either your expectations or your spot need to change.
- Quote
Comment
-
Guest
It it's helpful, my daughter was on an NAL team (only last year moved to an ECRL team) and she was having multiple college coach (D3) conversations and coaches who were expressing interest (vs. just email blast invites to camps). As others have stated, it depends on what level your daughter wants to compete at, but following the regular process (creating a player profile, reels, touch points with coaches, attending ID camps for schools you are definitely interested in) is even more important (in my experience) at the NAL level because you aren't getting the same level of exposure as the higher level teams. I did a review at one point lists of college commits across some area clubs at all levels (GA, DPL, NAL, Impact, ECNL, ECRL, etc.) and there were many commits at the levels below the top ECNL/GA teams (across a variety of college divisions). It is definitely possible as long as expectations are realistic and you/your daughter is willing to put in the effort for outreach, etc.!
- Quote
Comment
-
Guest
Even saying D1 is a little too broad. Stanford and Bryant are not the same. An NAL player will have to work a little harder to get the attention of any D1 coach but it can and has been accomplished. If they are a shooting for P4 ish teams…no, NAL is not the pathway
- Quote
Comment
-
Guest
Originally posted by Guest View Post
Let's say to play a top college program, since this is a second team, we could say playing here should open opportunities to be recruited to a top school as club are offering this league a a top league. I just want to understand the opportunities a player could recieve from playing here as all club are going crazy adding extra teams.
- Quote
Comment
-
Guest
I have 5 graduating seniors this year on my prep school team moving on to college soccer. All five play NAL. They all committed to great college programs (Bowdoin, Bowdoin, Middlebury, Middlebury, Tufts). They all had multiple offers from D1 and the top D3 schools. All committed prior to starting their senior year. This is similar to the past several years with non MLS Next players. Based on my experience, our NAL players are having the same outcomes as our MLS Next players, so I wouldn’t shy away from NAL. I think the key is to play for a top NAL team with a very good coach. Our non MLS Next players over the past 3 years committed to:
Bowdoin (3)
Milddlebury (2)
Tufts (3)
Colgate (2)
Northeastern (1)
Hobart (1))
Johns Hopkins (1)
Hamilton (1)
- Quote
Comment
-
Guest
In the example above, it's the prep school getting them in front of schools, not NAL. I'll bet my right testicle on that.
- Quote
Comment
-
Guest
Originally posted by Guest View PostI have 5 graduating seniors this year on my prep school team moving on to college soccer. All five play NAL. They all committed to great college programs (Bowdoin, Bowdoin, Middlebury, Middlebury, Tufts). They all had multiple offers from D1 and the top D3 schools. All committed prior to starting their senior year. This is similar to the past several years with non MLS Next players. Based on my experience, our NAL players are having the same outcomes as our MLS Next players, so I wouldn’t shy away from NAL. I think the key is to play for a top NAL team with a very good coach. Our non MLS Next players over the past 3 years committed to:
Bowdoin (3)
Milddlebury (2)
Tufts (3)
Colgate (2)
Northeastern (1)
Hobart (1))
Johns Hopkins (1)
Hamilton (1)
- Quote
Comment
-
Guest
Originally posted by Guest View PostI have 5 graduating seniors this year on my prep school team moving on to college soccer. All five play NAL. They all committed to great college programs (Bowdoin, Bowdoin, Middlebury, Middlebury, Tufts). They all had multiple offers from D1 and the top D3 schools. All committed prior to starting their senior year. This is similar to the past several years with non MLS Next players. Based on my experience, our NAL players are having the same outcomes as our MLS Next players, so I wouldn’t shy away from NAL. I think the key is to play for a top NAL team with a very good coach. Our non MLS Next players over the past 3 years committed to:
Bowdoin (3)
Milddlebury (2)
Tufts (3)
Colgate (2)
Northeastern (1)
Hobart (1))
Johns Hopkins (1)
Hamilton (1)
- Quote
Comment
-
Guest
Originally posted by Guest View PostI have 5 graduating seniors this year on my prep school team moving on to college soccer. All five play NAL. They all committed to great college programs (Bowdoin, Bowdoin, Middlebury, Middlebury, Tufts). They all had multiple offers from D1 and the top D3 schools. All committed prior to starting their senior year. This is similar to the past several years with non MLS Next players. Based on my experience, our NAL players are having the same outcomes as our MLS Next players, so I wouldn’t shy away from NAL. I think the key is to play for a top NAL team with a very good coach. Our non MLS Next players over the past 3 years committed to:
Bowdoin (3)
Milddlebury (2)
Tufts (3)
Colgate (2)
Northeastern (1)
Hobart (1))
Johns Hopkins (1)
Hamilton (1)
- Quote
Comment
Comment