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Originally posted by Unregistered View PostTotally over done but that being what it is, the open weekends will have to be organized to be left open by several competitive leagues so these casual scrimmages can be casually played.
you assume that the teams are of similar type? How about boys teams? or pick up ?
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Unregistered
Originally posted by Unregistered View Postyou assume that the teams are of similar type? How about boys teams? or pick up ?
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Originally posted by Unregistered View Postdo boys teams just happen to have the same weekends off without organization? If the point is to give our GDA players some low travel quality local competition, put a little effort into giving them that or what is the point?
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Originally posted by Unregistered View Postdo boys teams just happen to have the same weekends off without organization? If the point is to give our GDA players some low travel quality local competition, put a little effort into giving them that or what is the point?
There isn't a lot of incentive for other teams to play this either -- some teams/coaches would feel it might be a poaching opportunity. No one is truly focused on development or what is best for the kids.
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Originally posted by Unregistered View Postnot everything has to be as structured as some people seem to want it to be. I would happily drive my kid to a facilty up to an hour away and simply meet other kids on off days and play pick up small sided games.
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Originally posted by Unregistered View PostThat is not how I was interpreting the comments by US soccer. I read it as she was trying to address the problem of far travel for weak competition. This is an issue in my players age group. Scrimmages against other good local players would be a reasonable solution to try.
there is no way some lawmaker in an ivory tower in Chicago can address it. This is the huge problem here. in a country this size the implementation of various directives is going to vary. the focus here is always on the 20 or so structured games in the season. too little time is spent on the rest.
What Clubs offer in between games is where the real differentiation is. USSF can only suggest best practices the rest is up to Clubs
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Originally posted by Unregistered View Postthere is no way some lawmaker in an ivory tower in Chicago can address it. This is the huge problem here. in a country this size the implementation of various directives is going to vary. the focus here is always on the 20 or so structured games in the season. too little time is spent on the rest.
What Clubs offer in between games is where the real differentiation is. USSF can only suggest best practices the rest is up to Clubs
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Originally posted by Unregistered View PostIf USSF wants to run a league and control this level, then there should be stricter implementation requirements of the clubs. There should be a standard curriculum and process that every team follows. Of course, there will always be variances from the individual coaches, but the overall "plan" shouldn't be that different from club to club. Otherwise, what is the point of the GDA anyway if all they are doing is organizing games and it falls back down to the clubs to implement?
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Originally posted by Unregistered View Postbut that is always going to be the case. ECNL is no different right? USSF lays down guidelines and the club operates within them. USSF do not own the people doing the coaching.
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Honestly this is already happening. NYCFC played a series of formal (refs) friendlies with Penn Fusion both in the summer and spring. They weren't scheduled to play Penn Fusion and took the opportunity to play them on an off weekend. More locally some age groups (00) would benefit playing HBC etc. That was never not allowed. I think some ages have participated in non DA tournaments that even put DA versus ECNL allowed if the tournament follows DA sub rules
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Originally posted by Unregistered View PostGood. There are good teams in DA and non DA leagues and they can play locally. From a soccer parent's perspective that is progress. No wasted gas, mileage, or hotel.
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Originally posted by Unregistered View PostHonestly this is already happening. NYCFC played a series of formal (refs) friendlies with Penn Fusion both in the summer and spring. They weren't scheduled to play Penn Fusion and took the opportunity to play them on an off weekend. More locally some age groups (00) would benefit playing HBC etc. That was never not allowed. I think some ages have participated in non DA tournaments that even put DA versus ECNL allowed if the tournament follows DA sub rules
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Originally posted by Unregistered View PostGood luck with that. Already was asked : who will you play and when? Fall has high school. Spring? Too busy. So you get in some winter games if you can find anyone to play. What if a club can't find anyone to play or doesn't want to play anyone (in case of a loss or possibly poaching)? There's already not that many games as it is. People are paying significant dollars for an organized, quality league, not one that's 1/3 pickup games. Players are sacrificing time and high school sports and are getting less than before. To me it smacks of UASF throwing in the towel.
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Originally posted by Unregistered View PostPeople are so caught up in structure. Fear of loss. These are the coaches and clubs you want to avoid. very few people do. Playing games and getting better includes losing. Includes trying things etc. This is one reason why we will never be what we could unless things change .
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