Putting my prediction down for posterity. Covid-19 will lead to the end of the GDA. Four more top clubs have dropped out in just the past few months. One thing that has become abundantly clear is that putting kids as young as 12-13 years old on an airplane to fly a thousand miles for ONE soccer game is not only a waste of resources, it’s risky behavior and bad parenting. Areas with a more concentrated group of GDA clubs (So Cal, Florida, Northeast) will hang on a bit longer because their kids don’t get on airplanes for away games. But the end is here for Oregon GDA and other states whose GDA teams are geographically isolated.
The GDA model, while admirable in theory, could never practically work in a country as large as the United States. A far wiser plan would have been to use the old ODP structure to form regional teams, and create a free regional live in academy for each region, where players would live, go to school, train. Games could have been played as scrimmages against other age groups in their same academy, against top local youth or college teams (for example putting the region 4 academy in So Cal gives them many many good teams to play against locally), and an annual tournament bringing all four regions together to crown a champion and to form a national pool.
This model would have solved the travel issue and would have done a much better job of consolidating soccer talent. Ecnl teams would have remained for talented kids who didn’t want to leave their home state/school/family. US soccer could have come out and stated what is already obvious - if you want to make a national team you need to go through their academies. And no one could throw a fit about it if the academies were free.
This would have worked! Except for one thing, and don’t forget this. Greedy people saw all the money being spent on ecnl and wanted to get their own snouts in the trough. When the world returns to normal, one thing we should all remember is that none of these programs and none of these coaches have our individual player’s best interests in mind. They are all about money, positioning, and trying to drive the other guy out of business.
The GDA model, while admirable in theory, could never practically work in a country as large as the United States. A far wiser plan would have been to use the old ODP structure to form regional teams, and create a free regional live in academy for each region, where players would live, go to school, train. Games could have been played as scrimmages against other age groups in their same academy, against top local youth or college teams (for example putting the region 4 academy in So Cal gives them many many good teams to play against locally), and an annual tournament bringing all four regions together to crown a champion and to form a national pool.
This model would have solved the travel issue and would have done a much better job of consolidating soccer talent. Ecnl teams would have remained for talented kids who didn’t want to leave their home state/school/family. US soccer could have come out and stated what is already obvious - if you want to make a national team you need to go through their academies. And no one could throw a fit about it if the academies were free.
This would have worked! Except for one thing, and don’t forget this. Greedy people saw all the money being spent on ecnl and wanted to get their own snouts in the trough. When the world returns to normal, one thing we should all remember is that none of these programs and none of these coaches have our individual player’s best interests in mind. They are all about money, positioning, and trying to drive the other guy out of business.
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