Originally posted by Unregistered
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Oregon travel clubs no selections us nat u17..no surprise
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Unregistered
Originally posted by Unregistered View PostYour exaggeration is noted as well as the stupidity of your negative and pointless posts. The truth of the matter tracks to the lazy and incompetent DOCs desperate to protect their turf. A successful club competing outside Oregon hurts their narrative and casts a light on the incompetence of Oregon coaching.
OSAA Championships have been won 13x by Jesuit most of those former teams had far better players than the current travel charade flunkies.
Competing for airline miles, quite the success.
Outside of Oregon.
Preach it and sell it.
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Unregistered
Originally posted by Unregistered View PostYour rich history of getting annihilated when all clubs were in US Club, should not be forgotten, especially since it frames your present day fantasyland.
OSAA Championships have been won 13x by Jesuit most of those former teams had far better players than the current travel charade flunkies.
Competing for airline miles, quite the success.
Outside of Oregon.
Preach it and sell it.
Try harder...
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Unregistered
Originally posted by Unregistered View PostYour effort is commendable, yet devoid of substance.
Which is truly poetic & poignant.
Facts are facts.
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Unregistered
Originally posted by Unregistered View PostLet’s just bring this back to scoreboard. At the end of the day, CU is the top club in Oregon who consistently gets results in the region and across the country. CU players end up playing in college at the highest rate of any club. CU has no peer in Oregon and should be the destination for top players across Oregon.
Facts are facts.
Title ix mandates do give all girls a great opportunity, thanks for the reminder.
THUSC is a club, CU is part of THISC.
Since you want to pivot to facts.
The fact you travel all year avoid usys state and regional to get prepared for recreational HS play is truly illogical.
Keep digging.
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Unregistered
Originally posted by Unregistered View PostScoreboard the -90 goal differential is something most would want to avoid. This fact is irrefutable.
Title ix mandates do give all girls a great opportunity, thanks for the reminder.
THUSC is a club, CU is part of THISC.
Since you want to pivot to facts.
The fact you travel all year avoid usys state and regional to get prepared for recreational HS play is truly illogical.
Keep digging.
Only one of these girls, if any at all, has any realistic shot of playing professionally or internationally. A few others are good enough to play D1, and would likely get a D1 offer regardless of what league they played in. And some will benefit from ECNL, and get to a showcase and catch the attention of the assistant coach at a D3 diploma mill, and opportunity they would not get in OYSA.
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Unregistered
Originally posted by Unregistered View PostDon't bother. If it weren't youth soccer, it would be beauty pageants, horsey shows, or any way that those with money can burn it at the potlatch to show how much better they are. Paying for travel soccer is to some of them like buying shoes is for some of us, if fools want to be parted from their money, don't let them. Rich guys financing soccer bums is a form of socialism, if you think about it.
Only one of these girls, if any at all, has any realistic shot of playing professionally or internationally. A few others are good enough to play D1, and would likely get a D1 offer regardless of what league they played in. And some will benefit from ECNL, and get to a showcase and catch the attention of the assistant coach at a D3 diploma mill, and opportunity they would not get in OYSA.
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Unregistered
Originally posted by Unregistered View PostDon't bother. If it weren't youth soccer, it would be beauty pageants, horsey shows, or any way that those with money can burn it at the potlatch to show how much better they are. Paying for travel soccer is to some of them like buying shoes is for some of us, if fools want to be parted from their money, don't let them. Rich guys financing soccer bums is a form of socialism, if you think about it.
Only one of these girls, if any at all, has any realistic shot of playing professionally or internationally. A few others are good enough to play D1, and would likely get a D1 offer regardless of what league they played in. And some will benefit from ECNL, and get to a showcase and catch the attention of the assistant coach at a D3 diploma mill, and opportunity they would not get in OYSA.
Most kids don’t care about national team or going pro. They want to play in college which is why ECNL is a better program than DA.
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Unregistered
Originally posted by Unregistered View PostMore facts easily disproven with results. Making arrogant and ignorant posts about where players are going is wrong and you know it. You are other trolling or purposefully making false posts in hopes you keep your top players from pursuing better options.
Most kids don’t care about national team or going pro. They want to play in college which is why ECNL is a better program than DA.
ECNL is arguably a better program if your DD is a marginal player who needs to attend cattle calls to get recruited. If she is solid D1 material, it doesn't really matter where she plays club soccer. The only other advantage is that at some age groups, such as CU's 03 team, there is a critical mass of players on the team and practices will be more intense than at other club teams where there may a bigger variation in talent on the roster. But such teams aren't unique to ECNL; joining Salmon Creek or CU or THUSC simply because some other age group than your DD is at, does not guarantee good results. (And if you try to join an already-solid team, chances are that your DD won't make that cut).
Traveling can be fun, and some families enjoy the experience. But anyone who tells you that being on an ECNL team is necessary to either be considered elite or receive elite level training, is a liar and/or a fool. It's a college recruiting platform, first and foremost. The coaching isn't really any better than anywhere else; find a coach you like and who your daughter responds to.
And as always, caveat emptor. Your kid only has one childhood.
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Unregistered
Originally posted by Unregistered View PostNot a coach, tool; the only players I'm concerned about are my own kids. The evidence is right here in this forum; arrogant rich parents boasting about how they can afford things that make them and their kid the best.
DA is an excellent platform for getting into college, both Timbers and Thorns provide a lot of assistance with that. They know most of the kids that go through their program won't be turning pro, and that college is a fallback position for many of them. (Or they might go to college and then pro after that, although this pathway is less common, as players who wait until graduating will be a lot further behind).
ECNL is arguably a better program if your DD is a marginal player who needs to attend cattle calls to get recruited. If she is solid D1 material, it doesn't really matter where she plays club soccer. The only other advantage is that at some age groups, such as CU's 03 team, there is a critical mass of players on the team and practices will be more intense than at other club teams where there may a bigger variation in talent on the roster. But such teams aren't unique to ECNL; joining Salmon Creek or CU or THUSC simply because some other age group than your DD is at, does not guarantee good results. (And if you try to join an already-solid team, chances are that your DD won't make that cut).
Traveling can be fun, and some families enjoy the experience. But anyone who tells you that being on an ECNL team is necessary to either be considered elite or receive elite level training, is a liar and/or a fool. It's a college recruiting platform, first and foremost. The coaching isn't really any better than anywhere else; find a coach you like and who your daughter responds to.
And as always, caveat emptor. Your kid only has one childhood.
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Unregistered
Originally posted by Unregistered View PostWishful thinking.... DA has already failed. If it were an excellent platform, top clubs from across the country would not drop out.
If you say it has failed to destroy ECNL--true, it hasn't accomplished that. But that was never its purpose, as much as the paranoid morons at US Club Soccer may think otherwise. There's no reason the two platforms cannot and should not co-exist, given that (as you admit) they serve different purposes: one is mainly about college prep and recruiting, the other is about identifying and training professionals and international-caliber players. The DA has higher technical standards, including asking players to refrain from playing organized scholastic bootball, as well as imposing standards on the coaching staff. Complying with these requirements is both expensive for clubs and unpopular with many families; and given the limited professional opportunities for women (compared to the ample scholarship opportunities afforded by Title IX), it is unsurprising that many girls prefer to not participate in DA programs, and many clubs have returned to ECNL and are thus saving money by not having to run full-year programs, record matches and submit to technical evaluation, or hire A-licensed coaches.
The DA has succeeded mightily in one regard: it has broken the ECNL monopoly on college recruiting. Many of the best prospects are in the DA and college coaches know it, from Anson Dorrance (himself a frequent DA skeptic) on down; the days in which lazy coaches could simply attend ECNL cattle calls and call it good are over.
And while the Thorns may be lacking in quality--if they want to be more than just another youth club, they need to be free rather than at the pricepoint they currently are--many of the top girls' programs in the country remain in the DA.
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Unregistered
Originally posted by Unregistered View PostFailed to do what, exactly?
If you say it has failed to destroy ECNL--true, it hasn't accomplished that. But that was never its purpose, as much as the paranoid morons at US Club Soccer may think otherwise. There's no reason the two platforms cannot and should not co-exist, given that (as you admit) they serve different purposes: one is mainly about college prep and recruiting, the other is about identifying and training professionals and international-caliber players. The DA has higher technical standards, including asking players to refrain from playing organized scholastic bootball, as well as imposing standards on the coaching staff. Complying with these requirements is both expensive for clubs and unpopular with many families; and given the limited professional opportunities for women (compared to the ample scholarship opportunities afforded by Title IX), it is unsurprising that many girls prefer to not participate in DA programs, and many clubs have returned to ECNL and are thus saving money by not having to run full-year programs, record matches and submit to technical evaluation, or hire A-licensed coaches.
The DA has succeeded mightily in one regard: it has broken the ECNL monopoly on college recruiting. Many of the best prospects are in the DA and college coaches know it, from Anson Dorrance (himself a frequent DA skeptic) on down; the days in which lazy coaches could simply attend ECNL cattle calls and call it good are over.
And while the Thorns may be lacking in quality--if they want to be more than just another youth club, they need to be free rather than at the pricepoint they currently are--many of the top girls' programs in the country remain in the DA.
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Unregistered
Originally posted by Unregistered View PostNot exactly sure what was so bad about ECNL ( “cattle calls” as you called them ) . Now as before the bulk of talent is in ECNL and it is run buy business and marketing people; for the kids and college coaches. But many options are always better then one. If a less competitive show pony is your choice then ride it I guess.
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Unregistered
Originally posted by Unregistered View PostNot exactly sure what was so bad about ECNL ( “cattle calls” as you called them ) . Now as before the bulk of talent is in ECNL and it is run buy business and marketing people; for the kids and college coaches. But many options are always better then one. If a less competitive show pony is your choice then ride it I guess.
ECNL did not adequately prepare girls well for international play. You are correct that for most, international play is not a concern, but there are some who have that as a goal, even if it is a goal that most will fail to reach. (The boys' side is no different; most male players, including those at MLS academies, will never be capped with the senior NT or sign a first team contract).
The presence of GDA helps to solve both problems--US Soccer can impose their technical standards on clubs in the DA, and now college coaches (poor them) can't simply limit themselves to scouting ECNL showcases, they have to pound pavement. Families thus have more choices, which is generally beneficial. Plus those that prefer ECNL can still do it; US Soccer has never attempted to shut down ECNL; they've simply offered an alternate program that some clubs, including some top ones, have chosen instead.
Unfortunately, ECNL and US Club act as though they won't be happy unless the GDA is closed down, or made irrelevant. Their conduct suggests that they really want to be a monopoly, and won't be happy if they simply are just another platform choice. It seems that many involved, including quite a few of the local club coaches, want to be able to walk up to a talented player and be able to tell her that her chances of getting a college scholarship will be low unless she quits her current club and joins theirs. And a few years ago, that's where we were heading. But today, girls and parents can laugh at such nonsense, and find the club and environment that suits them best (which might be ECNL but might not be).
Freedom of choice is a wonderful thing. Don't be the sort of tool that thinks that your choices are the only right ones, and that competing choices should be taken away.
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