In my experience, no. League levels help, but on the boys side, except for LAFC and Galaxy, every team is vulnerable to having their best players recruited away (by LAFC or Galaxy, or MLS Next, or ECNL, or a better flight 1 team). Just because a team is considered good, doesn't mean people (read parents) aren't on the lookout for something (they think is) better.Do teams currently in flight 1 have an advantage in recruiting? Meaning more players come to their tryout, getting better players to show up. Are they less likely to lose core players?
I am taking about youngers where flight 1 is the highest level.In my experience, no. League levels help, but on the boys side, except for LAFC and Galaxy, every team is vulnerable to having their best players recruited away (by LAFC or Galaxy, or MLS Next, or ECNL, or a better flight 1 team). Just because a team is considered good, doesn't mean people (read parents) aren't on the lookout for something (they think is) better.
What makes helps recruiting the most is the coach. Kids (and parents) will stay with a great coach at a lower level longer even than is good for them. (The really great coaches will encourage their better players to search for opportunities higher up if they think it'll help them develop.)
Do teams currently in flight 1 have an advantage in recruiting? Meaning more players come to their tryout, getting better players to show up. Are they less likely to lose core players?
I am taking about youngers where flight 1 is the highest level.
Doesn't pre-ECNL start at 9 now? Same with LAFC and Galaxy. Younger than that, the only thing that matters is the coach. In a few years most of the kids will quit soccer altogether, so focus on finding the best coach you can.I am taking about youngers where flight 1 is the highest level.
Doesn't pre-ECNL start at 9 now? Same with LAFC and Galaxy. Younger than that, the only thing that matters is the coach. In a few years most of the kids will quit soccer altogether, so focus on finding the best coach you can.
My kid was on a flight 2 team his first year of playing club. It seems every season they lose a core player. The team is perpetually flight 2 because they are always 1-2 players from being a flight 1 team. We ended up leaving too.I'd argue success is what creates buzz and roster stability, if it is at the highest level then even more so. Getting smoked at Flight 1 is likely to yield more roster turnover (to other flight 1 teams that are doing well) than doing well in Flight 2.
I would argue doing well in flight 2 means nothing. The best players will leave for flight 1 teams.I'd argue success is what creates buzz and roster stability, if it is at the highest level then even more so. Getting smoked at Flight 1 is likely to yield more roster turnover (to other flight 1 teams that are doing well) than doing well in Flight 2.
My kid was on a flight 2 team his first year of playing club. It seems every season they lose a core player. The team is perpetually flight 2 because they are always 1-2 players from being a flight 1 team. We ended up leaving too.
I would argue doing well in flight 2 means nothing. The best players will leave for flight 1 teams.
Let's say you have a flight 1 team that gets smoked. The players aren't going to look for a flight 2 team to jump ship. And the fact they got smoked, maybe 1-3 players on the team can realistically move to another flight 1 team and keep the same playing time. A good flight 1 team is only going to take a player if you are significantly better than the starter they already have.
But if the coach decides they are moving to flight 2 next season since they got killed so badly. That's when people will jump ship because nobody wants to go backwards.
My kid was on a flight 2 team his first year of playing club. It seems every season they lose a core player. The team is perpetually flight 2 because they are always 1-2 players from being a flight 1 team. We ended up leaving too.
This is the problem with small club coach selling development. They think they have a few years to develope. But they really have only one year. People don't have the patience to stick around. Best players will get poached. When they leave, you have to start over.
Do teams currently in flight 1 have an advantage in recruiting? Meaning more players come to their tryout, getting better players to show up. Are they less likely to lose core players?
The same parents go to the tryout for the better team and find out their Johnny couldn't make the team. This is why I think even a bad flight 1 team has the advantage in keeping the core players.A "bad flight 1" team might have just as much or even more turnover than a flight 2/3 team however because of parents believe, often incorrectly, that the reason why the team was so bad is the other kids on the team and their kid is clearly "flight 1 material" and must move on to better teams.![]()
It has an advantage only if you're a competitive flight 1 team. It doesn't necessarily need to be a winning team, but the team needs to be competitive. For example, a 3-6-3 record for a first-year flight 1 team is completely reasonable. No one is lining up to join a winless flight 1 team that cannot compete at all. Trust me, people know the scores even though SoCal does not post scores for the youngest teams.Do teams currently in flight 1 have an advantage in recruiting? Meaning more players come to their tryout, getting better players to show up. Are they less likely to lose core players?
I remember just a few years back that club soccer didn't even start up until U10. That's 1-2 years before you are shifting.It has an advantage only if you're a competitive flight 1 team. It doesn't necessarily need to be a winning team, but the team needs to be competitive. For example, a 3-6-3 record for a first-year flight 1 team is completely reasonable. No one is lining up to join a winless flight 1 team that cannot compete at all. Trust me, people know the scores even though SoCal does not post scores for the youngest teams.
U11 and U13 are good years to look for options as rosters expand to 9v9 and 11v11 respectively.