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Unregistered
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You know there are plenty of good players that don't get sucked into the whole "premier" thing. There is at least one player from South County with a signed LOI at newly D-I UMass-Lowell (and another likely). So to say it's only 4 and that they only come from "premier" teams is more than a little presumptuous.
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Unregistered
Originally posted by BWags View PostYou know there are plenty of good players that don't get sucked into the whole "premier" thing. There is at least one player from South County with a signed LOI at newly D-I UMass-Lowell (and another likely). So to say it's only 4 and that they only come from "premier" teams is more than a little presumptuous.
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Originally posted by BWags View PostWell some said "know of" others said "know" and only from this club and not another. I'm just trying to point out that some of these team trolls and self-proclaimed experts are not seeing the whole picture if they think the the only quality players are on premier clubs.
Signed,
The Troll
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Unregistered
Originally posted by BWags View PostYou know there are plenty of good players that don't get sucked into the whole "premier" thing. There is at least one player from South County with a signed LOI at newly D-I UMass-Lowell (and another likely). So to say it's only 4 and that they only come from "premier" teams is more than a little presumptuous.
There are some clubs in RI that shouldn't be considered premier and probably aren't better than SC.
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Frankly, there are a lot of premier clubs that shouldn't be considered premier and put teams on the field just to accommodate people willing to write an obscenely large check.
I was steered away from premier several years ago by a HS coach who was/is in fact a premier coach. That person said that the whole system is so watered down that it's no longer worth the money and that I should concentrate on finding a good coach and save my money. I know more people that have returned to town clubs completely dissatisfied with their premier experience than I do people who say that the loved the experience.
My daughter didn't have to travel hours and hours for practice and games, played with her friends, didn't have to deal with egos infighting and awful team chemistry, found a great coach, took advantage of outside training opportunities like ODP, played other sports in the off season for cross conditioning and to avoid repetitive stress injuries, worked hard, had fun and, most importantly, still loves the game. I don't care how talented you are you'll never be at your best if you don't love the game and have fun playing it.
Can premier help - yes. Are there some excellent programs - yes. Is it the only way to give a kid the opportunity to compete after HS - not by a long shot.Last edited by BWags; 03-13-2013, 09:42 PM.
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Unregistered
Originally posted by BWags View PostFrankly, there are a lot of premier clubs that shouldn't be considered premier and put teams on the field just to accommodate people willing to write an obscenely large check.
I was steered away from premier several years ago by a HS coach who was/is in fact a premier coach. That person said that the whole system is so watered down that it's no longer worth the money and that I should concentrate on finding a good coach and save my money. I know more people that have returned to town clubs completely dissatisfied with their premier experience than I do people who say that the loved the experience.
My daughter didn't have to travel hours and hours for practice and games, played with her friends, didn't have to deal with egos infighting and awful team chemistry, found a great coach, took advantage of outside training opportunities like ODP, played other sports in the off season for cross conditioning and to avoid repetitive stress injuries, worked hard, had fun and, most importantly, still loves the game. I don't care how talented you are you'll never be at your best if you don't love the game and have fun playing it.
Can premier help - yes. Are there some excellent programs - yes. Is it the only way to give a kid the opportunity to compete after HS - not by a long shot.
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Sure, ODP helped - the one year that she did it after she decided that she wanted to continue playing in college. I wish RI's ODP program would continue the 1995 age bracket so my daughter could do it for another year. Anytime you have the opportunity to train with someone new you should take advantage of it. You never know what you might learn from someone with a slightly different approach. Be open to new ideas, take the different things that every coach tells you, find what works for you and make it your own.
That being said I spoke to many ODP parents from RI and elsewhere who all say that premier coaches are telling players to stay away from ODP and just train with their clubs 24/7/365. Given the number of excellent players that I know in my daughter's age group that played premier and not ODP, there must be some truth to what these parents are saying. This: (a) is stupid - see my comment above; and (b) means that the quality of play at ODP is not what it could be or should be.
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Unregistered
Originally posted by Unregistered View PostIf you are still referring to the South County player that signed with UMass Lowell, then it sounds like ODP was probably a factor in her ability to go to D2 (now D1) college soccer?
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Unregistered
Originally posted by BWags View PostSure, ODP helped - the one year that she did it after she decided that she wanted to continue playing in college. I wish RI's ODP program would continue the 1995 age bracket so my daughter could do it for another year. Anytime you have the opportunity to train with someone new you should take advantage of it. You never know what you might learn from someone with a slightly different approach. Be open to new ideas, take the different things that every coach tells you, find what works for you and make it your own.
That being said I spoke to many ODP parents from RI and elsewhere who all say that premier coaches are telling players to stay away from ODP and just train with their clubs 24/7/365. Given the number of excellent players that I know in my daughter's age group that played premier and not ODP, there must be some truth to what these parents are saying. This: (a) is stupid - see my comment above; and (b) means that the quality of play at ODP is not what it could be or should be.
Be careful with how you state things and get the facts before you post.
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Unregistered
Originally posted by Unregistered View PostSure, and so did her first grade gym teacher. The fact of the matter is that South County teams typically play more than half their schedules against premier teams, have the URI Womans coaching staff (who by the way have been terrific) as professional trainers, and at U15 and above have no limitations that other premier teams don't have. While there may be leagues that the South County teams don't play in, they are welcome in nearly any tournament they apply to.
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Unregistered
Originally posted by BWags View PostSure, ODP helped - That being said I spoke to many ODP parents from RI and elsewhere who all say that premier coaches are telling players to stay away from ODP and just train with their clubs 24/7/365.
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