Originally posted by Unregistered
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The Revolution Academy needs to make some changes.
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Originally posted by Unregistered View PostThey can make up to $200k signing bonus and $175-200k salary on the MLS roster. You are talking about reserve team and not 1st team when you mention USL. Yes, FC Dallas has more homegrown, but frankly there is just more talent down there being so close to Mexico. The talent pool here is smaller. Also, as evidenced by many posts on this thread, too many really don’t want to go pro. They think the academy exists to get them into college.
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Originally posted by Unregistered View PostOakwood? CFC?
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Originally posted by Unregistered View PostBecause the vast majority are realistic - that going pro isn't going to happen and that even amongst those who do make it, the pay is low and careers short. So what if they want to play at the highest level and leverage that for a better college? If the Revs and MLS want to eliminate those players then they need to shrink their DA teams down to just one (all ages). Even then many won't make the final cut. The goals for MLS teams aren't consistent with the goals of the majority of players and that is one of the biggest flaws in the DA system
DA needs to be smarter- splitting into two leagues and not giving out waivers to age 16+ players here in the Northeast (where good players are even harder to find) are two big mistakes.
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Originally posted by Unregistered View PostDA needs to be smarter- splitting into two leagues and not giving out waivers to age 16+ players here in the Northeast (where good players are even harder to find) are two big mistakes.
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Originally posted by Unregistered View PostExactly. The problem with DA is that they think they can have their cake and eat it too. This is NOT Europe or South America where SO MANY players live, dream and breathe soccer (and most of these kid's dreams are shattered early btw- which is what we don't read/hear much about).
DA needs to be smarter- splitting into two leagues and not giving out waivers to age 16+ players here in the Northeast (where good players are even harder to find) are two big mistakes.
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Originally posted by Unregistered View PostThere certainly are players here who live, dream, and breathe soccer, but what crushes most of their dreams are parents who turn their kid’s passion into a way to pay for college. The whole athletic scholarship thing and colleges making money off athletes is a perversion that you don’t see in Europe. It’s one of the reasons soccer there is better with a clear path to pros and good pay for the best. And it’s not as brutal a system as here BECAUSE players are told at a young age whether they are good enough to enter academies. Here they are strung along because of parents willingness to pay and the belief that everyone deserves a “shot”. So better than average, but not great, players get pushed along into their teens here. That’s the real problem.
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Originally posted by Unregistered View PostThere certainly are players here who live, dream, and breathe soccer, but what crushes most of their dreams are parents who turn their kid’s passion into a way to pay for college. The whole athletic scholarship thing and colleges making money off athletes is a perversion that you don’t see in Europe. It’s one of the reasons soccer there is better with a clear path to pros and good pay for the best. And it’s not as brutal a system as here BECAUSE players are told at a young age whether they are good enough to enter academies. Here they are strung along because of parents willingness to pay and the belief that everyone deserves a “shot”. So better than average, but not great, players get pushed along into their teens here. That’s the real problem.
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Originally posted by Unregistered View PostThere certainly are players here who live, dream, and breathe soccer, but what crushes most of their dreams are parents who turn their kid’s passion into a way to pay for college. The whole athletic scholarship thing and colleges making money off athletes is a perversion that you don’t see in Europe. It’s one of the reasons soccer there is better with a clear path to pros and good pay for the best. And it’s not as brutal a system as here BECAUSE players are told at a young age whether they are good enough to enter academies. Here they are strung along because of parents willingness to pay and the belief that everyone deserves a “shot”. So better than average, but not great, players get pushed along into their teens here. That’s the real problem.
2) in Europe many are given low grade nods early in life which leads them to have hope and eventually puts them into 3rd, 4th 5th and even 6th tier teams with little chance of moving up. So these poor kids are in fact strung along and without any backup option. Here the kid who plays D1 soccer at a high level in college at least has a better longer term career chance should he go pro and it doesn’t work out or he retires early.
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Until the pay is better you’ll never attract low income minority athletes. They’ll continue to play the U.S. headcount sports that lead to full college scholarships and potential NFL/NBA fame and fortune.
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Originally posted by Unregistered View Post1) you miss the point. There are much fewer players here that dream soccer . Here many young athletes prefer baseball, b’ball, hockey, football. Throw in the much lower pay in soccer and it’s a done deal for many. The ones who try to go pro are more or less the academically weak ones from blue collar immigrant parents with rose colored glasses. DA is only perpetuating this reality by splitting up and limited/not offering waivers. College offers a much better option to players. If colleges didnt offer these incentives, the situation would be extremely dire for US soccer.
2) in Europe many are given low grade nods early in life which leads them to have hope and eventually puts them into 3rd, 4th 5th and even 6th tier teams with little chance of moving up. So these poor kids are in fact strung along and without any backup option. Here the kid who plays D1 soccer at a high level in college at least has a better longer term career chance should he go pro and it doesn’t work out or he retires early.
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Originally posted by Unregistered View PostYou are spot on. I would add that colleges will always win in the end. DA needs to work with the college bound players not against them. Wrong move by DA!
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Originally posted by Unregistered View PostOf course, the college vs pro debate is also a false choice as the two are not mutually exclusive. A significant majority of the current USMNT players spent some time playing soccer in college, and even among the handful who did not, most went through the college process and had commitments before choosing to go pro. There are very few Christian Pulisics out there. A truly good academy program encourages both option--perform your best, get recruited by colleges, get on the national radar and, if you are good enough, you can always leave go pro. Any academy that ignores the college pathway is not looking out for its players or, in the long run, for itself.
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Originally posted by Unregistered View PostOf course, the college vs pro debate is also a false choice as the two are not mutually exclusive. A significant majority of the current USMNT players spent some time playing soccer in college, and even among the handful who did not, most went through the college process and had commitments before choosing to go pro. There are very few Christian Pulisics out there. A truly good academy program encourages both option--perform your best, get recruited by colleges, get on the national radar and, if you are good enough, you can always leave go pro. Any academy that ignores the college pathway is not looking out for its players or, in the long run, for itself.
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