Not intended as a swipe.
Actually, that's good to hear, and my remarks here shouldn't be interpreted as a swipe. My biggest concern about e.g. NEU is size more than quality--does it have enough players to field a credible DA team?--but if it's partnering with other clubs in a joint endeavor, many of those concerns vanish. None of the constituent Crossfire clubs would merit a DA program as presently defined on their own, but a joint DA program serving the south side makes sense.
Actually, thinking about it some more--I guess one of my concerns with DA as currently implemented (this applies somewhat to ECNL as well) is its elite nature--if DA clubs are meant to be elite clubs, stuffed to the gills with kids with pro potential, then I'm not sure there are enough kids in the area to form six teams. OTOH, if "DA" were defined to simply mean focused on development rather than winning games--a program of more frequent training, less travel, and no six-games-in-a-weekend tournaments, but the opportunity were extended to all sufficiently motivated players, not just the already-elite ones, including at older ages at least through U14) then I would whole-heartedly support the formation of more. (In practice, many clubs, including Westside, tend to treat their non-A teams as development-focused; but a "DA" designation would make that more explicit--my SS's team had lots of parents whining about why "that kid" got playing time; he got playing time because the coach is trying to help him improve, rather than putting the best IX on the field at any given time).
That seems to be more like how foreign soccer academies work--they are designed to give large number of players the opportunity to excel, rather than filtering out the chaff when they are young and seemingly protecting the elite players from being troubled by less-talented teammates. (This is particularly important at U12 and below--many talented kids this age simply don't have the attention spans or maturity to put up with hard-*** coaches, intense training sessions, or long repetitive drills--but will once they hit puberty. And many hotshot U12s and below are early bloomers physically, who may falter when their peers catch up to them in physical development).
But right now, the DA team at Westside (and elsewhere) is being marketed as only-already-elite-players-need-apply. If you try out for Westside's DA and get cut, they'll happily roll your application over to the Copa and Samba teams, there's even a box to check on the application form to request it. But lots of kids might benefit from DA style training and explicitly less focus on winning tourneys, not just those who happen look like Messi while in elementary school.
Apologies if you mistook my remarks as a slam on NEU. I've dished out some grief to FCP this past weekend, mainly because this forum seems filled with obnoxious parents therefrom who need a good helping of crow, but both are good clubs that I bear no ill will towards.
Originally posted by Slow Xavi
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Actually, thinking about it some more--I guess one of my concerns with DA as currently implemented (this applies somewhat to ECNL as well) is its elite nature--if DA clubs are meant to be elite clubs, stuffed to the gills with kids with pro potential, then I'm not sure there are enough kids in the area to form six teams. OTOH, if "DA" were defined to simply mean focused on development rather than winning games--a program of more frequent training, less travel, and no six-games-in-a-weekend tournaments, but the opportunity were extended to all sufficiently motivated players, not just the already-elite ones, including at older ages at least through U14) then I would whole-heartedly support the formation of more. (In practice, many clubs, including Westside, tend to treat their non-A teams as development-focused; but a "DA" designation would make that more explicit--my SS's team had lots of parents whining about why "that kid" got playing time; he got playing time because the coach is trying to help him improve, rather than putting the best IX on the field at any given time).
That seems to be more like how foreign soccer academies work--they are designed to give large number of players the opportunity to excel, rather than filtering out the chaff when they are young and seemingly protecting the elite players from being troubled by less-talented teammates. (This is particularly important at U12 and below--many talented kids this age simply don't have the attention spans or maturity to put up with hard-*** coaches, intense training sessions, or long repetitive drills--but will once they hit puberty. And many hotshot U12s and below are early bloomers physically, who may falter when their peers catch up to them in physical development).
But right now, the DA team at Westside (and elsewhere) is being marketed as only-already-elite-players-need-apply. If you try out for Westside's DA and get cut, they'll happily roll your application over to the Copa and Samba teams, there's even a box to check on the application form to request it. But lots of kids might benefit from DA style training and explicitly less focus on winning tourneys, not just those who happen look like Messi while in elementary school.
Apologies if you mistook my remarks as a slam on NEU. I've dished out some grief to FCP this past weekend, mainly because this forum seems filled with obnoxious parents therefrom who need a good helping of crow, but both are good clubs that I bear no ill will towards.
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