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The Revolution Academy needs to make some changes.
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Originally posted by Unregistered View PostThink if they wave their hands enough, no one will notice that they are charging $500 for pre-season DA practices at AB lower fields, on-top of the already huge jump in fees
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I think people with high school aged boys were scared off by the lackluster showing by the Revs in the college recruiting lottery this past year.
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Originally posted by Unregistered View PostI think people with high school aged boys were scared off by the lackluster showing by the Revs in the college recruiting lottery this past year.
Providence College
Princeton University
Bucknell University
University of Connecticut
University of Vermont
Providence College
Dartmouth College
Along with a homegrown signing.
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Originally posted by Unregistered View PostI don’t think these schools are too bad myself.
Providence College (Ranked #110 for soccer, okay academically)
Princeton University (EVERYONE know this was a Bolts commit)
Bucknell University (Ranked #181 for soccer, decent school)
University of Connecticut (Finally cracked the top 100 @ #93, typical state flagship)
University of Vermont (#76 for soccer, typical state flagship)
Dartmouth College (#16, great school and very strong soccer)
Along with a homegrown signing.
Several of those kids listed aren't MA players. If we opened up GPS non-MA commits the Revs would look even more insignificant.
Every time some dope uses the RC commitment to Princeton as a Revs commit I have to laugh. It reflects the desperation of the program more than just about any other indicator.
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Originally posted by Unregistered View PostThe "homegrown" hasn't exactly worked out thus far. He should have gone to college.
Several of those kids listed aren't MA players. If we opened up GPS non-MA commits the Revs would look even more insignificant.
Every time some dope uses the RC commitment to Princeton as a Revs commit I have to laugh. It reflects the desperation of the program more than just about any other indicator.
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Originally posted by Unregistered View PostThe "homegrown" hasn't exactly worked out thus far. He should have gone to college.
Several of those kids listed aren't MA players. If we opened up GPS non-MA commits the Revs would look even more insignificant.
Every time some dope uses the RC commitment to Princeton as a Revs commit I have to laugh. It reflects the desperation of the program more than just about any other indicator.
I only this because my son was looking, but UCONN last year had 30 on the roster, only 3 seniors, incoming class of ???? for 2018, and they are having open tryouts http://www.uconnhuskies.com/sports/m...062518aaa.html
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Originally posted by Unregistered View PostI don’t think these schools are too bad myself.
Providence College
Princeton University
Bucknell University
University of Connecticut
University of Vermont
Providence College
Dartmouth College
Along with a homegrown signing.
Originally posted by Unregistered View PostAZTECS: [17 total college commits]
D1 (2 players)
Cristian Suvak, Aztecs, Winchester, UConn
James McPherson, Aztecs, Danvers, UMass
D2 (1 player)
Michael Budrewicz, Aztecs, Masconomet, St. Anselm's
D3 (14 players)
Mitch Collins, Aztecs, SJP, Babson
Hayden Weatherall, Aztecs, Phillips, Bowdoin
Brian Brennan, Aztecs, SJP, Clark
Joon Bang, Aztecs, Arlington Catholic, Clarkson
Jared Wood, Aztecs, Waring School, Colby
Jacob Cassallas, Aztecs, Peabody, Elmira
Matthew Kuefler, Aztecs, Nashoba, Franciscan
Steven Yakita, Aztecs, SJP, Franklin & Marshall
Cole Hay, Aztecs, Manchester, Hobart
Jake Vacich, Aztecs, Keene St
Chris Belliveau, Aztecs, Peabody, Lasell
Richie Mateo, Aztecs, St. Mary’s, UMass Boston
Austin Ward, Aztecs, North Andover, SJC
Jay Poskitt, Aztecs, Winchester, Stevens Institute of Technology
BOLTS: [29 total college commits]
D1 (13 players)
Jaren Suttles, Bolts, Army
James Swomley, Bolts, Newton, Brown
Jared Bull, Bolts, Algonquin, Bryant
Vittorio Luzio, Bolts, Columbia
Marcelo Lage, Bolts, Brooks, GW
Ben Bryant, Bolts, R&L, Harvard
Gunnar Siegel, Bolts, High Point
Nic Andre, Bolts, HC
John Siracuse, Bolts, HC
Andrew Karalis, Bolts, Belmont, Northeastern
Dylan Curran, Bolts, Jamaica Plain, PC
Julio Fulcar, Bolts, Watertown, Syracuse
Joe Morrison, Bolts, UVM
D2 (2 players)
Thomas Browning, Bolts, Mattapoisett, AIC
Giovanni de Vargas, Bolts, Merrimack
D3 (14 players)
Liam Hanlon, Bolts, Acton Boxboro, Babson
Matthew Uek, Bolts, R&L, Bowdoin
Cameron Schluter, Bolts, Weston, Colby
Erik Oddsund, Bolts, Acton Boxboro, Conn College
Jack Davidge, Bolts, AMSA, Framingham St
Matt Habersaat, Bolts, Hobart
Edson DaSilva, Bolts, Hingham, Lasell
Andre Dumitrescu, Bolts, Philips Andover, MIT
Nick McGrath, Bolts, Westboro, Nichols
Matt Reinsford, Bolts, Wachusett, Nichols
George Gworek, Bolts, Needham, Oberlin
Tim Driscoll, Bolts, Springfield
Robbie West, Bolts, Weymouth, Wentworth Institute of Technology
Henry Osborn, Bolts, Williams
GPS: [24 total college commits]
D1 (6 players)
Nate Cole, GPS, Worcester Academy, BU
Adam Kulick, GPS, Cambridge, Bucknell
Andrew Stevens, GPS, Brooks, Columbia
Alec Szwarcewicz, GPS, Newton South, HC
Nathaniel Cardozo, GPS, Oliver Ames, UMass
Connor Haskell, GPS, Xavier
D2 (5 players)
Connor Willis, MPS, North Andover, Assumption
John Aguiar, GPS, Bishop Connelly, Assumption
Nick Bernardi, GPS, Framingham, Merrimack
Greg Amador, GPS, Westboro, Merrimack
Eric Barry, GPS, Framingham, SNHU
D3 (13 players)
Skylah Dias, GPS, Case, Brandeis
Joshua Kim, GPS, BBN, Colby
Matt Sciascia, GPS, Brooks, Hamilton
Luke Muther, GPS, Brooks, Kenyon
Jonathan Rodrigues, GPS, Brockton, UMass Boston
Chris Garcia Lynn, GPS, UMass Boston
Ryan Pasqual, GPS, North Attleboro, Newbury
Zachary Laware, GPS, Minnechaug, Newbury
Will Raphael, GPS, Andover Academy, Tufts
Harrison Weizen, GPS, Tufts
Zack Dresens, GPS, Wayland, Tufts
Troy Mattos, GPS, Somerset, Wheaton
Mateo Cugno, GPS, Billerica, WPI
NEFC: [18 total college commits]
D1 (5 players)
Christian Garner, NEFC, Brooks, BC
Tyler Stott, NEFC, Westboro, BC
Gregorio Barilla, NEFC, Worcester Academy, BC
Tyler Mann, NEFC, King Phillips, UML
Matt Leigh, NEFC, St Marks, Penn
D2 (4 players)
Jeremy Martin, NEFC, Assumption
Cole Scharland, NEFC, Bishop Feehan, Florida Southern
Sean Lanzillo, NEFC, Mansfield, Merrimack
Jack Moffitt, NEFC, Worcester Academy, St. Anselm's
D3 (9 players)
William Talleri, NEFC, SJP, Babson
Andrew Pimental, NEFC, Clark
Derek Jones, NEFC, Clark
Aiden Scales, NEFC, Conn College (Is this the Revs Academy Director’s son?)
Alex McLaughlin, NEFC, Lexington, Hamilton
Justin Lee, NEFC, NYU
Andrew Collari, NEFC, Worcester Academy, Suffolk
Noah Barney, NEFC, North Attleboro, Union
Peter Pond, NEFC, Wheaton
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Originally posted by Unregistered View PostEveryone should take a look at the lists below. Most of these kids didn't have to give up high school soccer. Most didn't need to abandon their social lives. Most had the time to volunteer or participate in meaningful extracurricular activities that selective colleges look for in an applicant. They got to be normal students.
Unless your a DA kid who lives 2 hours from practice (and I actually know some non-DA kids who live 1.5 hours from their practice), it seems like the time spent on soccer evens out. The social part may look different depending on the player. I know my kid has better friends on his DA team than at school, mostly due to a very strong shared interest in soccer, but I realize this may be the opposite for other kids. You also have to realize for many kids, they don't feel like they're "giving up" anything by not playing high school soccer. They get to continue playing with their club friends they've been with for many seasons, don't have to fight for playing time with high school juniors and seniors, who may have a huge physical advantage, and in almost all cases, have a better pool of players surrounding them, better coaching, and better competition. You're completely right that you don't need DA to play college soccer, but most kids playing DA aren't having their high school years stolen from them, as you are suggesting, and want to be there. Let the kids choose what is right for them.
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Originally posted by Unregistered View PostI would actually love to see a comparison of time spent on soccer between a kid in DA, who has a 10 month schedule, practices 4 days per week (3 days per week for Revs) with one game on most weekends, compared to a kid who participates in a grueling high school season with games and travel during the school week and practices almost every day they aren't playing a game, then moves to a high level ECNL/NPL team training winter and spring with nearly the same amount of travel as DA. Do you really think kids who play DA have that much less time for social life outside of soccer, and for volunteer time and extra curricular activities (soccer is an extra curricular activity, right?).
Unless your a DA kid who lives 2 hours from practice (and I actually know some non-DA kids who live 1.5 hours from their practice), it seems like the time spent on soccer evens out. The social part may look different depending on the player. I know my kid has better friends on his DA team than at school, mostly due to a very strong shared interest in soccer, but I realize this may be the opposite for other kids. You also have to realize for many kids, they don't feel like they're "giving up" anything by not playing high school soccer. They get to continue playing with their club friends they've been with for many seasons, don't have to fight for playing time with high school juniors and seniors, who may have a huge physical advantage, and in almost all cases, have a better pool of players surrounding them, better coaching, and better competition. You're completely right that you don't need DA to play college soccer, but most kids playing DA aren't having their high school years stolen from them, as you are suggesting, and want to be there. Let the kids choose what is right for them.
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To the prior two posters: no not all kids are alike. Other kids wish they had the option to play HS soccer and other sports too. Kids may not realize what they've missed out on until it's too late. For many players, DA isn't a necessity to play in college (assuming they've targeted appropriately). But often 13-14 year old kids are making this choice before they ever walk through a high school door.
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Originally posted by Unregistered View PostAgreed, I have two kids in DA and both kids wanted nothing to do with HS soccer. DA was where they wanted to play.
Our high school team would give any club team in MA a run for their money, including DA.
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Originally posted by Unregistered View PostMy son thought the same thing because his DA coaches told him for years how bad high school soccer was. He smartened up his senior year and played for his school. They won a state championship. He said it was the best thing he ever did.
Our high school team would give any club team in MA a run for their money, including DA.
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