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ECNL wants to switch back to school year from birth year
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Guest
Originally posted by Guest View Post
...however, the Jan to May group already reaped the benefit of years of relative age bias...
Young players with strong skills are some of the best anyway.
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Guest
Originally posted by Guest View Post
There is a lot of injustice in the world but 99.999% of the kids playing club soccer have tons of advantages and are not going anywhere long-term with soccer anyway. You can't have everything in life so no need to whinge about this birth month stuff.
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Originally posted by Guest View Post
There is a lot of injustice in the world but 99.999% of the kids playing club soccer have tons of advantages and are not going anywhere long-term with soccer anyway. You can't have everything in life so no need to whinge about this birth month stuff.
Young players with strong skills are some of the best anyway.
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Guest
Age, size and puberty will always be a challenge for middle school players who are smaller due to being the youngest on the roster and genetics. Then there’s the very tall athletic girls on my daughter’s team born in. December and they are keeping up despite age. Some kids are late bloomers. Some kids have short parents. That’s life. Look at Crystal Dunn. Shortest and one of the oldest USWNT players and heading to the Olympics again.
The need to change the cutoff is not to help smaller younger kids. It’s to resolve trapped 8th graders, and 11th graders.
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Guest
It's funny that we have 41 pages of parents going back and forth about why the system needs to be one way or the other because of their kid.
Here's the stone cold facts: The club sports machine doesn't care about your kid; they care about the business model and financial success. The business model is not "we'll teach your child to love The Beautiful Game" it's "we'll get your child into that exclusive college they wouldn't otherwise get into; maybe even for FREE!" or sometimes "we'll prepare your kid to win a spot on Varsity in your uber competitive town". The leagues have been told by the college coaches that they are tired of dealing with mixed-graduation year teams and that is what ECNL is about solving for. They don't care about "trapped" players or kids getting shuffled around in two of the most important club soccer years, they're responding to what college coaches have told them. Losing some currently RAE advantaged kids does not matter to them because there is an unlimited supply of customers and after one bumpy year it goes back to normal. Everyone with kids in club soccer back in 2017 went through this already, in the other direction, when the switch to birth year was made....
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Guest
Originally posted by Guest View PostIt's funny that we have 41 pages of parents going back and forth about why the system needs to be one way or the other because of their kid.
Here's the stone cold facts: The club sports machine doesn't care about your kid; they care about the business model and financial success. The business model is not "we'll teach your child to love The Beautiful Game" it's "we'll get your child into that exclusive college they wouldn't otherwise get into; maybe even for FREE!" or sometimes "we'll prepare your kid to win a spot on Varsity in your uber competitive town". The leagues have been told by the college coaches that they are tired of dealing with mixed-graduation year teams and that is what ECNL is about solving for. They don't care about "trapped" players or kids getting shuffled around in two of the most important club soccer years, they're responding to what college coaches have told them. Losing some currently RAE advantaged kids does not matter to them because there is an unlimited supply of customers and after one bumpy year it goes back to normal. Everyone with kids in club soccer back in 2017 went through this already, in the other direction, when the switch to birth year was made....
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Guest
Actually most of the high schools who have an age cutoff are 8/31 and 9/1 combined. It will likely be 8/31 if ECNL wants to choose cut off by the majority of high schools.
8/31-8/30 would be the likely best soccer age grouping in line with the majority.
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Guest
Originally posted by Guest View Post
No, it's a 12 month range on when you were born, August - July or September - August, what people have been discussing. There won't be HS freshmen aged kids playing elementary school 6th graders because parents held the kid back 3 year for a club soccer advantage. Can you imagine if that happened? What development is there for a 15 year old playing with 12 year olds?
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Guest
Originally posted by Guest View PostCan we please stay grounded in reality. No school would allow a student to stay back more than one year. You predominantly see families waiting to start kindergarten not reclassing and almost no one reclasses in the same public school system it’s 98% kids attending new private high schools.
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Guest
Originally posted by Guest View Post
Not OP but he was making a point with exaggeration. We all got it. Point was the shift will not be grade based, it will be a shifted range of birthdates.
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Guest
Originally posted by Guest View Post
Actually I have heard with a fair amount of certainty that it will be hard year. The defining issue is college coaches want to see kids in same GRADE playing each other for recruiting purposes. The switch will be to grad year. Yes kids can re-grade but that’s a small population and can’t solve every issue.
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Guest
Originally posted by Guest View Post
Please excuse my spelling awesomeness my phone hates me! But comment still stands my understanding is the change will be to graduation year to have players in same recruiting year competing together.
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Originally posted by Guest View Post
I just don't see how this would be possible. What if a kid reclassifies, or fails a grade or gets held back? They then get to play with kids 1-2 years younger just because they now have the same "grad year"? I guess it's possible, but seems like the right way to do it. I would think it would be by birth year, but within the parameters of the school year. For example, the September 2011 - August 2012 birthday kids all play for the same team regardless of grad year. Most of those kids will graduate the same year, but some may not.
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Guest
Originally posted by Guest View Post
He failed to get a spot at the area club and played a season on the C team in his town before giving up the game. The problem in all of this isn't whining it's that this same kid if he could continue probably would overcome that bias a little each year but like some many others we'll never know.
Obviously the goal for society is to reduce the amount of artificial blocks on talent, so that we don't 'waste' talent.
But again, 99.9999% of these kids aren't going anywhere after club soccer (or the little college experience), so it doesn't matter if they play soccer or tennis or baseball or whatever. Society survives and Messi and Morgan still get discovered.
That said, there are lots of ways to improve youth soccer in the US to make it more organized. But not because of the 'travesty' of someone being the youngest on the team.
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