younothat
PREMIER
Couple of things. (warning: longish post,)
Yes, everybody has to compete in the same system now, but the system can be changed. Defending the status quo as if it’s etched in stone from on high, and effectively saying “get over it”, is not exactly high work rate logic.
Combining age groups, at ages where kids are still rapidly developing over time, favors early developers and older kids. Those early developers and older kids are not - on average – necessarily better, but they are bigger and faster relative to their younger or later developing peers. Not sure that anyone can argue this pair of points.
The analogy I once used with a parent who was lamenting that their kid – who was young for the age group - was smaller and slower than the other players is that everybody ends up with the same set of teeth, some kids just get their teeth in earlier than others. Point being, stick with it.
If US Soccer is looking for the best chewers, they should probably wait until everybody has all their teeth in before making decisions that will be definitive. This was US Soccer’s self-interested reasoning behind separating u12, u13, u14 and u15 into their own age groups.
To be clear, US Soccer’s decision was not about being “fair” and making sure that players got PT.
With u16/u17, then, the questions is whether or not there is still a significant developmental gap between younger players and older players in this combined age group.
Let’s go to the data.
This year, the cut-off for u16/u17 is January 1st, 2002. And with the combined age group, in theory, a player who was born on December 31, 2003 could be put on the same field as a player born on January 1, 2002 with potentially a 24 month age advantage.
Per the CDC boys growth data for ages 2-20, at the start of this year’s season, the older player would, on average, be 2 ½ inches taller and more than 19 pounds heavier.
That’s a significant delta to expect any player to make up when challenging for a 50/50 ball and when making/facing a challenge.
And there’s a fair amount of research available that show a direct correlation with age and the ability to pass accurately, receive the ball and anticipate. Again, all big advantages for older players.
(Granted, the younger player would still face a challenge, even if u16 was its own age group, but it wouldn’t be a nineteen pound weight difference challenge.)
When some parents talk disparagingly of those who want to change the system, I get it. Where you stand depends on where you sit. The combined age groups, favoring older and early developing players, probably worked for them.
Full disclosure. I have a son with a birthday in the second half of the calendar year. He’s kicking butt right now on a DA team, has been called up a couple of times and has more than held his own when he’s played against 04’s. But almost every game, he’s one of the shortest kids on the field.
Our family, while not a tall people, happens to have a solid soccer background, and is very aware of the challenges our son faces, and some of the things he can do to mitigate. However, most families of promising younger players don’t have the same context or resources that we do, and I know the attrition rate for those younger players, which will make up 50% of the potential playing pool for u16, is high and gets worse every year from u12 thru u16/u17.
So the real question is whether or not US Soccer, with the outstanding results it’s been getting lately, can afford to lose up to 50% of the potential player pool at u16?
Because that’s the real potential impact of having a combined u16/u17 age group.
Maybe it makes sense for US Soccer and the Development Academy to now look at players, their families, their work ethic, their resilience and their demonstrated love of and commitment to the game, and start making decisions around who has the best chance – everything considered – to be the best soccer players at age 17 and age 18
And then put resources behind those kids to support them, and make simple changes like breaking out u16 as its own age group.
There’s good reasons that many of the world’s best professional soccer players – Hazard, Salah, Guero, Iniesta, Kante, Modric, Mbappe - are 5’6” to 5’ 10”. A lot of it has to do with the physics of soccer, and the physiological demands of playing a game where players run 8-10+ miles in a start/stop manner with lots of left/right movement over the course of 90 minutes with only one break.
Would love to see the age breakdown by month of the’03 players who are playing u16/17 this year. I have a big pot of money available to bet that the '03 players born after July 1 are significantly under-represented on the current DA u16/u17 teams.
Any takers?
I get you & things have changed quite a bit, all the ages where combined ones when my player started DA and he was normally always on the smaller side until about the 3rd year when he was average.
I talked to a lot of people about those earlier years and ussda was studying what to do, first the calendar year splits and now the Bio-Banding. I was disappointed that ussda despite years of study only offered a solution for 2 players per team to basically play down, which we've seen some take liberty on the guidelines which call for later year birthday and smaller bio footprint.
https://www.ussoccer.com/~/media/files/academy/bio-banding-faq-402018.pdf?la=en
USSDA used to list birthday but switched to birth years a while ago but I do remember looking out of curiosity and you could seen the patterns where some clubs stacked the teams with earlier in the year kids, others mixed but mostly early for the majority i recall.
Used to be only about 25% or less of the players where on the younger side in the combo years but that has increased but not close to the 50% yet so yes the player pool does shrink.
Part of the bio-banding study could have resulted in a recommendation to go full calendar year for all groups which which would better align to what everybody else is doing. For some reason the half baked bio-banding initiative just seems like ussf/da is trying to check a box off for a couple players without doing much for the masses.
DA has shrunk the number of league games down by almost 33% from 30+ games, plus showcase and playoffs to around 2o+ or so plus fewer showcases. With the rise of some of the other new leagues, the reduced schedule, and the insistence on no high school play DA is not as big of a draw to some as it previous was with the exception of any MLS team. The players have been getting better over the years but hard to say the competition level has overall that much.
Speed, tactical IQ, experience, and strength goes along way in over coming size differences and sometimes you do have to go the hard way but the challenge can pay off in the long run, maybe we've been lucky by the combo age groups have actually helped my player in the long teram but at the same time we've seen a bunch of turnover and keeping teams together in DA can be pretty difficult.