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Originally posted by Unregistered View Post
https://docs.google.com/spreadsheets...it?pli=1#gid=0
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I anxiously await posts about how Oregon will be the exception because there is something unique and terrible about our state or because Tom has an ego the size of Texas and Fraser is secretly the devil.
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I am all for ECNL and hope it works out.
Those raw numbers about the PAC 12 don't mean much however. What % of the girls playing ECNL get college scholarships? What % of those PAC 12 scholarships came from soccer hot beds like California, Arizona and Washington, which produced 70%+ of the scholarships prior to ECNL as well?
A very tiny minority of the many kids paying thousands of dollars for premier soccer in Oregon have ever received scholarships for PAC 12 schools and ECNL is not going to change that significantly. Lets just keep this in perspective.
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Originally posted by Unregistered View PostI am all for ECNL and hope it works out.
Those raw numbers about the PAC 12 don't mean much however. What % of the girls playing ECNL get college scholarships? What % of those PAC 12 scholarships came from soccer hot beds like California, Arizona and Washington, which produced 70%+ of the scholarships prior to ECNL as well?
A very tiny minority of the many kids paying thousands of dollars for premier soccer in Oregon have ever received scholarships for PAC 12 schools and ECNL is not going to change that significantly. Lets just keep this in perspective.
As an example, last year there were 3 Oregon girls discovery playing on U18 ECNL teams out of Seattle/Tukwilla. All three were scholarship D1 athletes. All three had scholarships prior to being Discovery Players. Would they have been included in the statistics? Likely yes. My point is that the statement "Girl's playing ECNL get college scholarships" is misleading and it would be more accurate to say "girls with college scholarship offers choose to play ECNL"
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Consider
Originally posted by Unregistered View Post
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Originally posted by Unregistered View PostI am absolutely Pro ECNL. Even so, it is always going to come down to each individual soccer player and how well they do independently. In this news article it would be difficult to discern what happened as a result of ECNL and what would have happened either way.
As an example, last year there were 3 Oregon girls discovery playing on U18 ECNL teams out of Seattle/Tukwilla. All three were scholarship D1 athletes. All three had scholarships prior to being Discovery Players. Would they have been included in the statistics? Likely yes. My point is that the statement "Girl's playing ECNL get college scholarships" is misleading and it would be more accurate to say "girls with college scholarship offers choose to play ECNL"
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No dog in the fight
Originally posted by Unregistered View PostI see your point. Considering many of the D1 players have historically came from a handful of clubs, many of those clubs now being associated with ECNL, those percentages will only go higher. But did ECNL make them D! players, probably not. However, it probably does prepare them better for the next level. Cream will always rise to the top, but it's so much eaisier to see where that cream is with better competition. Which is historically why teams, players travel. Why does ECNL cost so much, because they don't play in a horrific split league, they travel.
ECNL is NOT for everyone. My kid wanted to play in high school. Her club prepared her for that. She has no desire to play in college. Just doesn't have that burning desire. She is a good player. Not great, but a good player.
I don't knock ECNL though. The travel and the tournaments do expose those girls playing to a very high level of competition and to great matches. The girls will get better and they will learn from their mistakes and losses and hopefully take those lessons on to that next level, college, if they so desire.
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Why College coaches like ECNL
Setting aside that it is easier to find the best players what they will tell you is that MORE girls get to play at a higher level than what ODP could accommodate and it prepares them to play at a faster pace than they would if they were on all but the hand full of top teams. This allows more girls from different parts of the country to develop their game beyond what they would without ECNL. Of course this is dependent upon the desire of each player.
This higher level of competition allows more ladies to contribute as Freshman and the coaches to work on things in to match their game to the coaches style not bringing them up to the "speed" of the college game.
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Yes, agree
Originally posted by Unregistered View PostSetting aside that it is easier to find the best players what they will tell you is that MORE girls get to play at a higher level than what ODP could accommodate and it prepares them to play at a faster pace than they would if they were on all but the hand full of top teams. This allows more girls from different parts of the country to develop their game beyond what they would without ECNL. Of course this is dependent upon the desire of each player.
This higher level of competition allows more ladies to contribute as Freshman and the coaches to work on things in to match their game to the coaches style not bringing them up to the "speed" of the college game.
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Originally posted by Unregistered View PostYou are right. These girls have played at so many high level tournaments, across the country, against a variety of styles, and skill levels, that by the time they are freshman in college, they may have played in hundreds of meaningful games....whether it be state cup finals, national championship type games, Surf Cup finals, etc. They will have played in high pressure, high stakes type games and yes, they should be able to walk on to the pitch and play immediately, as a freshman, in college. All of the games and competition should have them both mentally and physically prepared for the rigors and grind of a 18-20 game NCAA season.
Even before the split the Oregon 'State Cup' was kind of a small pond. Now with the split, each pond is about 1/2 the size. They really don't mean much anymore and don't really show what a player can or can't do.
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Originally posted by Unregistered View PostI am absolutely Pro ECNL. Even so, it is always going to come down to each individual soccer player and how well they do independently. In this news article it would be difficult to discern what happened as a result of ECNL and what would have happened either way.
As an example, last year there were 3 Oregon girls discovery playing on U18 ECNL teams out of Seattle/Tukwilla. All three were scholarship D1 athletes. All three had scholarships prior to being Discovery Players. Would they have been included in the statistics? Likely yes. My point is that the statement "Girl's playing ECNL get college scholarships" is misleading and it would be more accurate to say "girls with college scholarship offers choose to play ECNL"
My point is that the statement "Girl's playing ECNL get college scholarships" is misleading and it would be more accurate to say "girls with college scholarship offers choose to play ECNL"
Again, if you are a top player, ECNL is a great place to play. If you are NOT a top player, it's probably not a good place for you and will likely not give you the same offers that top players recieve. Furthermore, you don't have to be in ECNL, if you are a top player, to receive an offer to the Pac 12 (or any other major conference).
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Originally posted by Unregistered View Post
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