Originally posted by Unregistered
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Shift to Jan. 1 cutoff next year or year after?
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Unregistered
Originally posted by Unregistered View PostSimilar at our club. Don't care about friends. BUT do care about not being allowed to play with kids in the same grade. Also, no "real" team in 8th grade or senior year for those Sept-Dec kids getting the rules changed on them in the middle of the "soccer game".
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Unregistered
Or play on the middle school team. Or do some extra training with the younger age group. So potentially an 8th grader misses a few games. Big deal. The high school age kids aren't getting any development out of school ball anyway. Take half of August, September and half of October and focus on deficiencies. Might need to buff up anyway to compete with the olders in the age range now...
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Unregistered
Originally posted by Unregistered View PostThe net effect is the same for both the girls and the boys. There will always be kids who will be older and kids who will be younger on a team.
I don't even think it will help the .000001% because if they are in this category then playing a kid 9 month older should not be an issue for these elite players
Those parents/kids who are most concerned with playing with the same group of friends every year are most likely in the 70% of kids who will quit by age 13 regardless of the age cutoffs.
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Unregistered
Originally posted by Unregistered View PostIt's not even about helping an elite individual, or even an elite group that is currently playing. It's about dramatically increasing the pool of elite kids who continue playing soccer beyond age 13. This is supposed to be the point of classic club soccer in the first place.
Those parents/kids who are most concerned with playing with the same group of friends every year are most likely in the 70% of kids who will quit by age 13 regardless of the age cutoffs.
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Unregistered
Originally posted by Unregistered View PostYou do understand that .1% of kids are so elite that they don't care who they are playing with? The rest of the really good kids still love their teammates and get more from the game than just soccer. It takes a certain mentality to continue to train at an elite level when you get to 14, and sometime having friends doing the same thing on a team that has experienced everything together will be the difference when it come to choice. Splitting up those teams is not the best thing. Start with the younger age groups, but leave anything between U11-14 alone.
The age cutoff change won't bother the kids who are developmentally minded regardless of their birth month. They love just playing the game and aren't overly concerned about who they're playing with.
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Unregistered
Originally posted by Unregistered View PostClub 'classic' soccer is supposed to be focussed on developing soccer players. Rec might be more appropriate for kids who are more interested in the social side of the game with a bonus of being a fraction of the cost. Both are equally valid reasons for playing the game. Frankly, too many kids who aren't on the development track are plugged into the classic clubs when they could be enjoying the spirit of competition with their friends on a rec team.
The age cutoff change won't bother the kids who are developmentally minded regardless of their birth month. They love just playing the game and aren't overly concerned about who they're playing with.
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Unregistered
My oldest was on one of the better girls teams of the past ten years, mostly elite level players, and I can tell you 95% of those girls were very interested in the social aspect. Still lots of close friends to this day.
They stuck with it through the years because of those relationships.
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Unregistered
Originally posted by Unregistered View Postif you have a daughter playing soccer right now, on a "classic" team go ask each and every girl on her team if she is there "just to play soccer and develop" ask her if her team was split up how she would feel. And if she would still want to play soccer.
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Unregistered
Originally posted by Unregistered View PostThis is my point exactly. If my daughter would rather quit soccer than make friends with new teammates, then developmental classic soccer isn't the place for her. Rec would be more appropriate for her. I certainly wouldn't expect USSF to consider her feelings while trying to improve US soccer as a whole.
This will negativity affect a lot of kids. Nobody cares. Not even a little.
Girls will be very much affected. But that doesn't matter.
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Unregistered
"If my daughter would rather quit soccer than make friends with new teammates, then developmental classic soccer isn't the place for her. Rec would be more appropriate for her. "
I know two elite level girls that are at the too of their age group. They are great players and will either run track or play soccer at a D1 school. They both would much rather play with their "crew" than follow orders from the US ministers of soccer.
Maybe they should go play rec?
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Unregistered
Originally posted by Unregistered View PostUS soccer doesn't care one iota if they hurt kids, especially girls.
This will negativity affect a lot of kids. Nobody cares. Not even a little.
Girls will be very much affected. But that doesn't matter.
State your name.
This insubordination is out of line. You don't get a say in the matter and need to stop talking about it.
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Unregistered
Originally posted by Unregistered View PostThis is my point exactly. If my daughter would rather quit soccer than make friends with new teammates, then developmental classic soccer isn't the place for her. Rec would be more appropriate for her. I certainly wouldn't expect USSF to consider her feelings while trying to improve US soccer as a whole.
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Unregistered
Originally posted by Unregistered View PostThis is my point exactly. If my daughter would rather quit soccer than make friends with new teammates, then developmental classic soccer isn't the place for her. Rec would be more appropriate for her. I certainly wouldn't expect USSF to consider her feelings while trying to improve US soccer as a whole.
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