Originally posted by Unregistered
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What I don't understand is prohibiting players from quality training opportunities outside the DA program, such as practicing with a college team once a week, camps (either local or abroad) during school breaks, or, for the younger age groups, attending position or skill focused clinics with older players, and even private training sessions. A wide range of varied training opportunities can only make a player's skill set more diverse, making for a more complete player. Why the USSF wants to stifle player growth in this way is something I can't figure out. The kids who happen to have parents who are top club coaches, or who were quality collegiate players, are the lucky ones here, in that they can at least get private training from their parent.
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