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    Ecnl

    ECNL Year 5 brings more successes, lessons
    Article Written by Will Parchman
    Published: July 29, 2014


    ...The story of ECNL’s fifth year is one of continued transformation. By Noftsinger’s own admission, the ECNL is now out of its “toddler phase” and has permanently stashed the startup moniker. The league can now be more selective about the clubs it chooses to admit, which became more obvious than ever when the league expelled its first ever club this past year.

    The league moves into its sixth season this fall after recently completing its most expansive year yet. In addition to its five national events from San Diego to New Jersey, the league carried its national playoffs for U15-U17 sides and finals for U14 and U18 sides in Seattle in June, and the last round of finals wrapped in Richmond, Virginia in July. With Richmond becoming an established ending point for each season, Noftsinger said Seattle remains in the picture for future playoff hosting duties as well.

    As the ECNL becomes exponentially more economically and culturally viable and the market becomes flooded with the league’s growing cachet, opportunities are beginning to fly at the league from every corner. The ECNL is reaching a point where it’s begun to examine cost-cutting measures to lessen the burden on families. Over its first five years, the ECNL was slow to bring on big money sponsors to allow itself to become established on firmer ground.

    Now that the league has moved on from the spongier surface of its early years, Noftsinger feels comfortable exploring those big name sponsorship avenues.

    “There are some good ones,” Noftsinger said. “There’s stuff that’s in the pipeline, and it’s a matter of, I’m not just going to take somebody’s money just to take the money. It needs to mean something, and it needs to align with what the ECNL is trying to do.”

    The U.S. Soccer-run Development Academy is making tangible strides to eliminate cost as well, and rumors continue to swirl that soon the league will mandate free-of-cost programs for all its member clubs. Noftsinger was explicit that comparing the ECNL to the DA is “apples to oranges,” but there are some similarities in the way both are going about whittling at the edges of cost for players and families.

    “I think all these clubs, they may not formally say that everything’s free, but they do a really good job of, should there be a kid that wants to play, let’s find a way to get them that opportunity,” Noftsinger said.

    The league is also on the cusp of sending its first wave of youth players into the full senior national team setup. Morgan Brian’s class was involved with the ECNL U23 league, but its first U14-U18 players are beginning to knock on the door. Two years ago, half the players called into the U20 WNT were involved in the ECNL. This past camp, that number skyrocketed to 19 of 20. Standouts like Taylor Racioppi, Cari Roccaro and Mallory Pugh are closing in on those opportunities.

    It hasn’t happened yet, but the inevitable impact of the ECNL on the U.S. women’s national team is almost here. The next cycle of fresh faces will largely be ECNL alums. Though it’ll take years, the trend is impossible to miss: players with ECNL backgrounds are slowly coming to dominate the U.S. women’s soccer landscape. The league says 84 percent of its players move on to play college soccer at the next level.

    That gives the ECNL a stake in just about every level of women’s soccer in the U.S. in the coming years.

    “Our relationship with U.S. Soccer is outstanding,” Noftsinger said. “Sometimes I have to pinch myself, because the relationship we have with them, it’s a strong open relationship. It’s full of support. We would never claim to be the national team, we would never claim to be U.S. Soccer, we’re simply here to support our badge and to help develop the game, grow the game and get players wearing that badge that represent our country on the world stage.”

    Lessons come hard and fast every year for the bourgeoning girls soccer league. The market saturation in certain parts of the country isn’t where the league would prefer, for instance. But the league is undeniably bullish on its progress.

    “This league, it’s not about five years,” Noftsinger said. “It’s about the next 50 years for these kids.”

    #2
    Which shows that top players around the country are choosing to play in ECNL, something that isn't happening in Oregon, yet.

    Comment


      #3
      Originally posted by Unregistered View Post
      Which shows that top players around the country are choosing to play in ECNL, something that isn't happening in Oregon, yet.
      Correction. Top players that can afford it

      Comment


        #4
        Originally posted by Unregistered View Post
        Correction. Top players that can afford it
        They find a way to offer those gifted players a way to play. It's year one in Oregon by year 5 there will be scholarships and gifted young ladies will have a home.

        Comment


          #5
          Just wait. The Timbers academy will sweep the nation changing everything.

          Comment


            #6
            Glory be, ECNL creates WNT players. Does it do that for all players who play ECNL? This is awesome, why didn't they create ECNL years ago.

            Comment


              #7
              Originally posted by Unregistered View Post
              Just wait. The Timbers academy will sweep the nation changing everything.
              That made me chortle.

              Comment


                #8
                Originally posted by Unregistered View Post
                That made me chortle.
                It gave everyone else gas.

                Comment


                  #9
                  Originally posted by Unregistered View Post
                  Glory be, ECNL creates WNT players. Does it do that for all players who play ECNL? This is awesome, why didn't they create ECNL years ago.
                  You're not very bright are you and clearly have a reading disability.

                  Top leagues and top competition attracts top players. ECNL is designed to develop players and the results prove this.

                  Never fear... The Timbers know better than everyone else so I'm sure their Academy will catch on and become the next great program

                  Comment


                    #10
                    Originally posted by Unregistered View Post
                    You're not very bright are you and clearly have a reading disability.

                    Top leagues and top competition attracts top players. ECNL is designed to develop players and the results prove this.

                    Never fear... The Timbers know better than everyone else so I'm sure their Academy will catch on and become the next great program
                    Because they got top players, something that isn't happening in Oregon. Plus we only have enough top players to fill one team, not two. This isn't about the Academy, it's about your false assumptions about ECNL. Sorry to break this to you, but don't expect your kid to be much better at the end of the year than she would have just playing OPL.

                    Comment


                      #11
                      ECNL must not be all that AND a bag of chips if some top CA teams are pulling out of it now. Don't worry, I'm not an Academy boaster either, but I have to admit, I'd rather go that route than spend my DD's college money on something that we can't count on to do what her current coach has already done for her. She and her teammates have college coaches that are already interested in them...and they've never had to brag about being in a program that costs several thousands of dollars to get noticed in the first place.

                      Comment


                        #12
                        Originally posted by Unregistered View Post
                        Because they got top players, something that isn't happening in Oregon. Plus we only have enough top players to fill one team, not two. This isn't about the Academy, it's about your false assumptions about ECNL. Sorry to break this to you, but don't expect your kid to be much better at the end of the year than she would have just playing OPL.
                        LOL! The anonymous authority on something they don't understand. You gotta love Talking Soccer!!!!

                        Comment


                          #13
                          Originally posted by Unregistered View Post
                          ECNL must not be all that AND a bag of chips if some top CA teams are pulling out of it now. Don't worry, I'm not an Academy boaster either, but I have to admit, I'd rather go that route than spend my DD's college money on something that we can't count on to do what her current coach has already done for her. She and her teammates have college coaches that are already interested in them...and they've never had to brag about being in a program that costs several thousands of dollars to get noticed in the first place.
                          Calfornia is it's own anomaly. If you understood soccer you would understand that.

                          Comment


                            #14
                            Originally posted by Unregistered View Post
                            Calfornia is it's own anomaly. If you understood soccer you would understand that.
                            ECNL is ECNL is ECNL.

                            Comment


                              #15
                              Originally posted by Unregistered View Post
                              ECNL must not be all that AND a bag of chips if some top CA teams are pulling out of it now. Don't worry, I'm not an Academy boaster either, but I have to admit, I'd rather go that route than spend my DD's college money on something that we can't count on to do what her current coach has already done for her. She and her teammates have college coaches that are already interested in them...and they've never had to brag about being in a program that costs several thousands of dollars to get noticed in the first place.
                              CA pulling out will just drive up the costs for our teams as they will have to travel further away for games. Plus remove some of the best competition.

                              Comment

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