Non stop posts on here defending poor performances and putting others down.
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How bad is it at FC Portland??
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I can only speak for the boys side. My son has been at FCP for 5-6 years. The problems I've noticed which may not be unique to FCP is.
1. They never practice on grass, and get beaten on grass fields from equal or lesser teams that they beat on turf.
2. roster of good players is very limited. They do not had the number of players that timbers has to put together a solid team.
3. cost limits the number of kids who can apply and has poor mechanisms for allowing talented kids who do not have the money from staying at FCP.
4. Inconsistent coaching.
5. not addressing the mental issues of soccer. The kids are use to losing and have the mentality of not if we will win but how much will we lose by.
If FCP on the boy side can field a strong team, and work on their will to win. I think they can do better than they have been.
Not harping on FCP since it seems other programs have the same problems.
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Originally posted by Unregistered View PostI can only speak for the boys side. My son has been at FCP for 5-6 years. The problems I've noticed which may not be unique to FCP is.
1. They never practice on grass, and get beaten on grass fields from equal or lesser teams that they beat on turf.
2. roster of good players is very limited. They do not had the number of players that timbers has to put together a solid team.
3. cost limits the number of kids who can apply and has poor mechanisms for allowing talented kids who do not have the money from staying at FCP.
4. Inconsistent coaching.
5. not addressing the mental issues of soccer. The kids are use to losing and have the mentality of not if we will win but how much will we lose by.
If FCP on the boy side can field a strong team, and work on their will to win. I think they can do better than they have been.
Not harping on FCP since it seems other programs have the same problems.
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I wish these clubs in the greater Portland would adapt Seattle Crossfire, PAC North West, and Seattle United's philosophy, but their all stuck on their own system where it's all about power and control.
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Coaches who could care less
Extremely poor development
Heavily based on sales and recruitment otherwise teams are subpar
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Originally posted by Unregistered View PostI can only speak for the boys side. My son has been at FCP for 5-6 years. The problems I've noticed which may not be unique to FCP is.
1. They never practice on grass, and get beaten on grass fields from equal or lesser teams that they beat on turf.
2. roster of good players is very limited. They do not had the number of players that timbers has to put together a solid team.
3. cost limits the number of kids who can apply and has poor mechanisms for allowing talented kids who do not have the money from staying at FCP.
4. Inconsistent coaching.
5. not addressing the mental issues of soccer. The kids are use to losing and have the mentality of not if we will win but how much will we lose by.
If FCP on the boy side can field a strong team, and work on their will to win. I think they can do better than they have been.
Not harping on FCP since it seems other programs have the same problems.
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Originally posted by Unregistered View PostIt sounds like your boy should play Rec. I lost respect for your knowledge of the game as soon as I read your first point. Good teams and players can play on any surface.
I bet your name on here you've never played.
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Originally posted by Unregistered View PostI lost respect for your knowledge in general. How can you be good at something if you've only practice one way. If you think playing on turf prepares you to play on grass that is unpredictable, slick, long, you have never coached or even tried to dribble a ball.
I bet your name on here you've never played.
I agree with the OP that better players and teams adapt to the conditions. Washington premiere has turf, crossfire has grass. Both clubs do well on whatever type of field they're on.
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Originally posted by Unregistered View PostI'm not the OP who answered you. But regarding the first point, I've heard teams whine about not getting to practice on artificial turf, having only grass fields. They then whine about not be able to play well in games or tourneys where there are only turf. So the point is that argument cuts both ways.
I agree with the OP that better players and teams adapt to the conditions. Washington premiere has turf, crossfire has grass. Both clubs do well on whatever type of field they're on.
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Originally posted by Unregistered View PostIf you can play on one surface you can play on the other. It's not a big deal. What is a big deal is being able to train year round regardless of weather. That's more important than the type of surface you train on.
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Originally posted by Unregistered View PostTotally agree with you.
Sign me,
One who's played on both as a youth player, collegiate player, coached youth players, and parent of players.
Our kids know how to play on all surfaces here and elsewhere. Period.
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Originally posted by Unregistered View PostI'm not the OP who answered you. But regarding the first point, I've heard teams whine about not getting to practice on artificial turf, having only grass fields. They then whine about not be able to play well in games or tourneys where there are only turf. So the point is that argument cuts both ways.
I agree with the OP that better players and teams adapt to the conditions. Washington premiere has turf, crossfire has grass. Both clubs do well on whatever type of field they're on.
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Originally posted by Unregistered View PostI lost respect for your knowledge in general. How can you be good at something if you've only practice one way. If you think playing on turf prepares you to play on grass that is unpredictable, slick, long, you have never coached or even tried to dribble a ball.
I bet your name on here you've never played.
Anyone who things that practicing on turf hinders a players development should not be around the game of soccer.
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