Mystery Train
GOLD
Yep. Been there.Guess I'm going to be commuting...
Yep. Been there.Guess I'm going to be commuting...
My son played for a coach who had an A and B teams training at the same time at U-9 (top tier both teams)
The A team won a lot of tournaments and my son was at the bench most of the time
The B team lost games most of the times and my son played the complete games
My son is a great defender but a mistake on the A team ended up for a lot of yelling from the coach
A mistake on the B team not a big deal
Before the season started I told the coach I wanted my son to be on the B team because we where going to face the same competition anyway and my son will have more touches on the ball (he was stopping forwards 30 or more times per game and allowing 3 to 5 goals per game)
The defender on the A team will have it easy an allowing only 0 or 1 goal
My son was identified by a good coach on a great team (my son was 10 years old) and he was invited to try out for the team. My son made the team (bench)
Right from the beginning it was all about development and the coach teached how to play from the back and if mistakes happened he will tell defenders he rather have mistakes right now than later in their soccer life’s
Now my son plays DA (he is 15) He has been the starter for the past 3 years and his team always finish on the top 3 teams and the goals allowed are one of the lowest
The A team from U-9 is playing silver level with no development and most of the defenders quit the game of soccer
Most of our kids were on a losing team at some point or another. At your daughter's age, the only reason to be concerned about losing or winning is in the "how" of the losing or winning. If the team is competitive but coming up short frequently, or if the coach is developing the girls' style and they are making mistakes (you said most of them are new to club, so this is to be expected) then the losing season(s) will just make the payoff that much sweeter as they get better. If they work through the trust issues and develop, the losses are actually quite valuable. On the other hand, if they are getting blown out in Bronze level games and the coach is yelling at players and the families are backstabbing over playing time and the girls are blaming each other, well then that's a whole different story. A couple of seasons of that will kill off a kid's desire to continue forever.
The big questions you need to ask yourself as a parent to figure out how to manage your kids playing club soccer are: Why are we doing this? What are the short term and long term goals for the kids? You and the kids need to have a very solid agreement on this. Those answers will dictate the rest. If they're doing it for fun, to learn the lessons that come from physical competition and team sports, to give them a foundation for a life-long love of sports, then your choice of coach/team/club will always be answered by them with this: Are you having fun? Some kids aren't having fun unless they are winning and improving, so winning may be a factor in the decision, but it isn't the big one.
If you are doing this because you think your kid is good and could get a college scholarship or could be a "star" with the right coach, with the right club, and in the right league, then your choices will not matter because all of that is out of your hands anyway: If your kid is destined to be that good, they'll end up making it no matter what obstacles are there. (And God help you if that is how it goes because that's no easy road despite being what every parent dreams of...such a life is filled with pressure, stress, and much anguish.) They will literally drive the whole process of their growth, and leave you (and the coaches) helpless to keep them from it. If they're not that kid, they're going to end up miserable no matter what choices you make because these are the wrong goals to begin with.
It is common to get caught in the middle of those two goals. A kid who is better than 75% of everyone else but not in the top 10% and who has big ambitions may end up very frustrated in the club soccer world, because lower level "fun" soccer isn't competitive enough, and they continually get overlooked by the high level teams where they might have the opportunity to work their way into their highest potential. This is kind of the worst case scenario, because as a parent you just don't know how far to go down the rabbit hole before you say, "this is insane."
So, in the end, it must always come back to "Are you having fun?" Because it's sports, right?
To go back to the initial discussion and questions:
- Coach has 14 U12 Bronze players now, some don’t play much currently
- Coach wants to split this into two teams of U13 Bronze players in the fall.
- Means they still need 14 more girls for two, 11x11 teams with 14-player rosters.
So, yes, he is taking on Players for the money right now, because he needs to find enough girls for a second team.
That doesn’t necessarily mean you should leave. It’s a good situation for your two girls, both are bronze level players right now, training sound OK, and the girls are happy. What you should want to know more about: Where are these other girls going to come from? Does he have another complete AYSO Team to bring over (which is one source)? Is the club you’re in helping with this? That’s what would concern me more because of the potential chaos of having 17 girls for 14 spots.
There is a book called “Surving Club Soccer” which is a good read if you are new to this twisted little world.
From your various comments, I haven't seen anything that actually says the coach is a terrible soccer coach and not able to develop your girls. Your girls are improving, getting playing time, and will get playing time if there will indeed be two teams. Those are not the worst situations even if the coach is not the best communicator. Perhaps give yourself a deadline to wait for the two teams situation to work out, but definitely protect yourself by paying the club fee monthly instead of a big lump sum (especially since you're paying for two).What are the appropriate "steps" to leaving 1 team for abother, in case it got to that point?
1. They get along well with almost all the girls on the team and ate happy to go to practice/games. On few occasions, they say they arent too happy with the coach.
2. We heard good an bad things about tje coach before starting. In our own experience, he has great training drills and ideas... communication (with both parents and players) needs alot of work!
We come from the AYSO world, so we may not know all the criteria of what exactly a good coach should look like...
3. He does have a daughter on the team.
Exactly. Sophomore daughter goes about 18 hours per week with High School dance plus her competition studio. All honors classes, has time to hit Disneyland once every other week, and spends way too much time with makeup and her phone. I admit this is pushing her limit, but it is her choice. I think every college would want to see kids spend at least 8-10 hours doing something outside school to show the balance in their life with their studies. Kids are done with school by 3 pm. Two hours soccer and 3 hours homework and its only 8 pm. Middle school even easier. Thus soccer for 8 hours is nothing. I think it is more difficult on the parents.8 hours is nothing for a kid that is passionate and committed to their sport. I can show you a whole room of dance girls that train 20 hours per week and are academic high achievers. None of which will likely see a dime of scholarship money for dance.
Exactly. Sophomore daughter goes about 18 hours per week with High School dance plus her competition studio. All honors classes, has time to hit Disneyland once every other week, and spends way too much time with makeup and her phone. I admit this is pushing her limit, but it is her choice. I think every college would want to see kids spend at least 8-10 hours doing something outside school to show the balance in their life with their studies. Kids are done with school by 3 pm. Two hours soccer and 3 hours homework and its only 8 pm. Middle school even easier. Thus soccer for 8 hours is nothing. I think it is more difficult on the parents.
Wow! You said it's only 8PM. And then what? Work a PT job till 10PM. Or are you meaning that sarcastic? Because I'm not sure what we are asking of these kids. In talking to colleges of late, they are more interested in what kids have to say and what they are willing to do for the future. Burn out is insane!!! No dig on you, just that I'm not sure we have to fill every minute of every hour doing "something".