Can the ECNL please go ahead and announce the next DA defection already to get everyone's mind off the virus?????
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ECNL-DA club jumping season is upon us
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DA should have been created to be a 10-12 team (per age group) national league, maybe even combining age groups, u16/17 u18/19. Only the truly elite players who have been identified by US soccer and are in the actual player pool and have been called into camp. ECNL should have stayed a 40 team league. They would be second tier and funnel players to DA. These players are your power 5 level player, not elite, but good. It makes sense for them to travel around the country battling for a power 5 scholarship and roster spot. The rest of the players that are interchangeable, should stay in local league, if they have greater ambitions and are late bloomers then they can work their way through the system through ODP which would become relevant again.
3 different paths to the top. No watering down of talent, similar ability level, and all with an opportunity to play, compete, and be seen. US soccer should track all the DA players, the ECNL players who are on the bubble of a national team call up, and those girls that dominate the ODP state/regional/national level. Everyone gets an opportunity.
The way it’s set up now is an absolute joke. National team players playing with girls who can’t make their high school varsity team as freshmen and girls traveling all over the country to end up at a mid major school that they could have gone to if they would have just stayed in their local league.
Logistics would make this difficult but there are a lot of national team girls who have moved away from their families, drive 2 hours to practice, and made huge sacrifices to get this far, so it’s doable. Again, just for the national team girls does it make sense. For the vast majority, the local league, couple out of state showcases a year, and a shot at ODP is totally sufficient for a girl to move on to college soccer.
If this was the format, college coaches would go back to scouting local leagues, ODP events, state championships, etc. They wouldn’t just scout DA and ECNL because unless you are a power 5, you probably couldn’t get any of those girls any way.
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[QUOTE=Unregistered;2671673]DA should have been created to be a 10-12 team (per age group) national league, maybe even combining age groups, u16/17 u18/19. Only the truly elite players who have been identified by US soccer and are in the actual player pool and have been called into camp. ECNL should have stayed a 40 team league. They would be second tier and funnel players to DA. These players are your power 5 level player, not elite, but good. It makes sense for them to travel around the country battling for a power 5 scholarship and roster spot. The rest of the players that are interchangeable, should stay in local league, if they have greater ambitions and are late bloomers then they can work their way through the system through ODP which would become relevant again.
3 different paths to the top. No watering down of talent, similar ability level, and all with an opportunity to play, compete, and be seen. US soccer should track all the DA players, the ECNL players who are on the bubble of a national team call up, and those girls that dominate the ODP state/regional/national level. Everyone gets an opportunity.
The way it’s set up now is an absolute joke. National team players playing with girls who can’t make their high school varsity team as freshmen and girls traveling all over the country to end up at a mid major school that they could have gone to if they would have just stayed in their local league.
Logistics would make this difficult but there are a lot of national team girls who have moved away from their families, drive 2 hours to practice, and made huge sacrifices to get this far, so it’s doable. Again, just for the national team girls does it make sense. For the vast majority, the local league, couple out of state showcases a year, and a shot at ODP is totally sufficient for a girl to move on to college soccer.
If this was the format, college coaches would go back to scouting local leagues, ODP events, state championships, etc. They wouldn’t just scout DA and ECNL because unless you are a power 5, you probably couldn’t get any of those girls any way.[/QUO
You forgot the biggest issue in all of this . MONEY$$$$$ where will the funds come from? You have lots of people banking off the system that we have now. Also , the days of HS and ODP are no longer relevant .
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The ECNL will not be adding a team from New England to the Northeast division. They will go to Maryland or Penn. NEFC and Penn Fusion have zero chance of ever getting into ECNL. I would go with Pipeline or Beadling
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Originally posted by Unregistered View PostSame travel, even lower quality competition.
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Originally posted by Unregistered View PostThe ECNL will not be adding a team from New England to the Northeast division. They will go to Maryland or Penn. NEFC and Penn Fusion have zero chance of ever getting into ECNL. I would go with Pipeline or Beadling
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Originally posted by Unregistered View PostPenn Fusion is about 15 minutes from FC Delco. What about PA Classics who are an hour or more away from Bucks & Delco?
Baltimore Celtic, Premier and Pipeline are three clubs that would fit well in the ECNL. Pipeline have ties to DA. As for the person that wrote about Beadling, that won’t happen with Riverhouds in the league now.
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Originally posted by Unregistered View PostFC Delco-Penn Fusion merger would be a monster club.
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Originally posted by Unregistered View PostDA should have been created to be a 10-12 team (per age group) national league, maybe even combining age groups, u16/17 u18/19. Only the truly elite players who have been identified by US soccer and are in the actual player pool and have been called into camp. ECNL should have stayed a 40 team league. They would be second tier and funnel players to DA. These players are your power 5 level player, not elite, but good. It makes sense for them to travel around the country battling for a power 5 scholarship and roster spot. The rest of the players that are interchangeable, should stay in local league, if they have greater ambitions and are late bloomers then they can work their way through the system through ODP which would become relevant again.
3 different paths to the top. No watering down of talent, similar ability level, and all with an opportunity to play, compete, and be seen. US soccer should track all the DA players, the ECNL players who are on the bubble of a national team call up, and those girls that dominate the ODP state/regional/national level. Everyone gets an opportunity.
The way it’s set up now is an absolute joke. National team players playing with girls who can’t make their high school varsity team as freshmen and girls traveling all over the country to end up at a mid major school that they could have gone to if they would have just stayed in their local league.
Logistics would make this difficult but there are a lot of national team girls who have moved away from their families, drive 2 hours to practice, and made huge sacrifices to get this far, so it’s doable. Again, just for the national team girls does it make sense. For the vast majority, the local league, couple out of state showcases a year, and a shot at ODP is totally sufficient for a girl to move on to college soccer.
If this was the format, college coaches would go back to scouting local leagues, ODP events, state championships, etc. They wouldn’t just scout DA and ECNL because unless you are a power 5, you probably couldn’t get any of those girls any way.
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Originally posted by Unregistered View PostGenerally, college coaches know who is attracted to their program and where they fit in skill-wise. They also have limited travel budgets so they target the events they attend. Contrary to popular belief regional or national ECNL and DA tournaments are not one-stop shopping for the vast majority of them. It defies logic that a college coach from New England or the Northeast in general would have to fly out to a national event in Colorado or Arizona to scout a prospect who lives a 2-3 hour drive of their campus. These events are done more for club bragging rights than sensible recruiting for the majority of programs. But if you see the top 100 D1 programs on the sidelines, then every coach feels like they should be there regardless of whether it’s the best way for their program.
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