What defines ‘town’ soccer anymore? Most of these so called ‘town’ clubs hire and (add cost to tuition )trainers/companies to train the teams… so is that technically town soccer anymore? Thoughts?
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Originally posted by Unregistered View PostWhat defines ‘town’ soccer anymore? Most of these so called ‘town’ clubs hire and (add cost to tuition )trainers/companies to train the teams… so is that technically town soccer anymore? Thoughts?
In our case we have parent coaches for games. But majority of those parents are meh..
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Originally posted by Unregistered View PostWhat defines ‘town’ soccer anymore? Most of these so called ‘town’ clubs hire and (add cost to tuition )trainers/companies to train the teams… so is that technically town soccer anymore? Thoughts?
Our town program added pro coaches several years ago in part because decent parent coaches were hard to find, but to also offer something more professional so families stopped leaving for over priced premier clubs. The board is still all volunteer and there's a parent manager that helps with scheduling etc Yes, some kids need to move up the ladder for sure and they should go to a premier team, hopefully one of the stronger ones. But there's a lot of families that waste thousand on so called premier teams that have garbage coaching - and more importantly their kid will be lucky to make varsity by junior year. It's worked for our town. The bleed slowed down a lot, some players even came back.
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Originally posted by Unregistered View PostWhat defines ‘town’ soccer anymore? Most of these so called ‘town’ clubs hire and (add cost to tuition )trainers/companies to train the teams… so is that technically town soccer anymore? Thoughts?
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Originally posted by Unregistered View PostUsually a "town team" is defined in its by-laws that a majority of players in the club need to be residents of that town.
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Originally posted by Unregistered View PostWhat defines ‘town’ soccer anymore? Most of these so called ‘town’ clubs hire and (add cost to tuition )trainers/companies to train the teams… so is that technically town soccer anymore? Thoughts?
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Originally posted by Unregistered View PostSimple definition: Quality over Quantity. As opposed to academies which are Quantity over Quality. Does not get much easier than that.
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More club teams are providing services to help keep kids local.. Trainers, paid coaches, competitive competition, etc.. Keep in mind that not all teams in the club are at the same levels either. Some teams within the club might only play in local leagues while some might play in EDP.
I think today the main difference between club teams and academy teams is cost and playing in regional and national leagues (ECNL, GA, MLS Next, etc..) as they hit U13
It really comes down to doing your homework
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Originally posted by Unregistered View PostMore club teams are providing services to help keep kids local.. Trainers, paid coaches, competitive competition, etc.. Keep in mind that not all teams in the club are at the same levels either. Some teams within the club might only play in local leagues while some might play in EDP.
I think today the main difference between club teams and academy teams is cost and playing in regional and national leagues (ECNL, GA, MLS Next, etc..) as they hit U13
It really comes down to doing your homework
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Originally posted by Unregistered View PostTown teams are great when players are young. It’s like learning to ride a bicycle with training wheels. Once the player gets accustomed to that and develops further it’s time for them to remove the training wheels and move on. The difference as the players get older is competition and competitiveness. Watch Town teams vs. ECNL teams at the same ages. If you think the main difference is cost and competition than you are in denial.
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Originally posted by Unregistered View PostSorry but Wall, Real, Howell, Phi Copa (all town teams) beat GA clubs on a regular basis and some of the games are not even close. They must have forgotten to take the training wheels off. Speaking of training all these places have better training than the “pros”. And they are coached by volunteer coaches that probably are not even paid!
If Real NJ is a just town program, then World Class and East Meadow are as well and this obviously is not true.
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Originally posted by Unregistered View PostTown teams are great when players are young. It’s like learning to ride a bicycle with training wheels. Once the player gets accustomed to that and develops further it’s time for them to remove the training wheels and move on. The difference as the players get older is competition and competitiveness. Watch Town teams vs. ECNL teams at the same ages. If you think the main difference is cost and competition than you are in denial.
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Originally posted by Unregistered View PostSorry but Wall, Real, Howell, Phi Copa (all town teams) beat GA clubs on a regular basis and some of the games are not even close. They must have forgotten to take the training wheels off. Speaking of training all these places have better training than the “pros”. And they are coached by volunteer coaches that probably are not even paid!
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Originally posted by Unregistered View PostYes once you hit U13 you need to pay to play in these "Competitive Leagues". It is unfortunate the only way to do so is by joining an academy program.
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Originally posted by Unregistered View PostIt’s all about the training folks, poor training (which is what you see at most academies) equals poor results. Some of the town clubs mentioned have better training and dad coaches that actually care not just go through the motions collecting a paycheck.
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