I heard Akeem's sister is good from Zamunda.Yes. And the comment above on Intrenational players coming to that program is spot on. Coach Randy loves the international recruits and he does the travel to find them. I.e. Africa.
I heard Akeem's sister is good from Zamunda.Yes. And the comment above on Intrenational players coming to that program is spot on. Coach Randy loves the international recruits and he does the travel to find them. I.e. Africa.
She made the All- McDowells team in her home countryI heard Akeem's sister is good from Zamunda.
Maybe teens and the parents (and their club coaches who push for P4 or bust) need to make better choices as well. Why choose a P4 that will never see you play more than 25% of the time when you could grab a mid major D1 scholarship. Lower D1 schools still play good colleges.Under the current system teams are limited to 14 scholorships. If there's 38 players and you figure 5 are full scholorship, 6 are half scholorship, and everyone else 27 players are quarter or no scholorship I guess the numbers work.
I'm not sure if I'd want to send my kid to a meat grinder situation like that.
The college game needs some serious cleaning up.
This is a good point. Will be interesting to see what happens when they don’t have the flexibility for huge turnover and rebuild every year. There are certain colleges like those you mentioned that are notorious for over recruiting and dumping players. Roster size (prior to the change), number of transfers historically, long term program success/coaching stability, and picking a school you actually WANT to go to academically/location were huge factors in the schools my kids decided to take visits on and ultimately commit to. Hard to not be wooed by sales pitches from coaches or go with the very best ranked soccer program at the moment, but if the research doesn’t align with what they are saying and the school isn’t really a fit if soccer wasn’t in the mix, it isn’t worth the time and risk just to say you are playing at a particular school.Its just their MO on how they operate. They bring in about 10 recruits and purge a good portion of their roster every year. They are not interested in developing just bring in talent and see who floats to the top. Unfortunately they are not the only program that does this....Look at Mich St., Kentucky, and Arkansas. This new roster cap is going to destroy this method and they will now have to rely on development and coaching. We'll see how well they do moving forward.
My daughter desperately wanted to play for Arizona State. I told her, "good luck hun... you're American."Yes. And the comment above on Intrenational players coming to that program is spot on. Coach Randy loves the international recruits and he does the travel to find them. I.e. Africa.
International players are much more widespread on the men’s side. Lots of Canadian players on the women’s side, but still a fairly small percentage of total international players (about 6% of the D1 recruitment class for the 2025s). Definitely may start growing, though. I think it’s just the poor timing of a max exodus at Pitt in the transfer portal and immediately turning around and signing 4 International players. Yeah, roster limits BUT that in no way explains 14 leaving and then signing 4 more right away.My daughter desperately wanted to play for Arizona State. I told her, "good luck hun... you're American."
Spot on - Winkworth's rosters typically touch 40-50% Canadian, Brit, and other Europeans. I'm surprised he still has a job.My daughter desperately wanted to play for Arizona State. I told her, "good luck hun... you're American."
My dd wanted to please her old man and go to UCLA. I told her, "good luck hun...I'm not an actor and I'm not rich."My daughter desperately wanted to play for Arizona State. I told her, "good luck hun... you're American."
Well, frankly, I believe he brought in a bunch of Euros because he was a gnat's ass away from getting canned. You hit it... he doesn't win.Spot on - Winkworth's rosters typically touch 40-50% Canadian, Brit, and other Europeans. I'm surprised he still has a job.
Why? Egos.Maybe teens and the parents (and their club coaches who push for P4 or bust) need to make better choices as well. Why choose a P4 that will never see you play more than 25% of the time when you could grab a mid major D1 scholarship. Lower D1 schools still play good colleges.
Ego + Social media = Boomerang commits.Why? Egos.
I bet scouting "vacations" in Europe somehow fit into the equation. (And cash)Ego + Social media = Boomerang commits.
So true. Lower D1 or mid major. OR..........a p4 that has you as a priority. I tell people with younger DDs playing, one of the worst things you can do is chase a school because it's a big name or a dream school. One, you're probably not gonna play much and two you're not gonna get much if any money at all. Go where you're wanted or needed. Get on the field and get some money!Maybe teens and the parents (and their club coaches who push for P4 or bust) need to make better choices as well. Why choose a P4 that will never see you play more than 25% of the time when you could grab a mid major D1 scholarship. Lower D1 schools still play good colleges.
If education and saving money are the only objectives then soccer is not the best pathway. Just go to a good community college and transfer to a UC after two years.Kids and parents chase P4. Kids and parents chase D1. Kids and parents chase D2.
I'd like to see Kids and parents chase a good education with as little debt as possible.
If your goal is simply to get a "sports" scholorship.If education and saving money are the only objectives then soccer is not the best pathway. Just go to a good community college and transfer to a UC after two years.
Oh great now you tell me .... a little too late hahahaIf your goal is simply to get a "sports" scholorship.
1. Be a girl (title 9)
2. Get involved with competitive fencing
Nearly everyone involved with fencing gets a D1 scholorship.
My kid would have loved fencing. She was really pissed off missing girls flag football. 5'10", great hands as a goalkeeper, great leaping ability, ran the 100 and made league finals in that event. She was made for the sport. Got to play one game and beat coverage in less than a second every time.If your goal is simply to get a "sports" scholorship.
1. Be a girl (title 9)
2. Get involved with competitive fencing
Nearly everyone involved with fencing gets a D1 scholorship.
Sure but you are introducing a soccer objective. If only looking at education and cost then you need to consider the savings from not participating in elite youth soccer.My kid would have loved fencing. She was really pissed off missing girls flag football. 5'10", great hands as a goalkeeper, great leaping ability, ran the 100 and made league finals in that event. She was made for the sport. Got to play one game and beat coverage in less than a second every time.
If education and saving money are the only objectives then soccer is not the best pathway. Just go to a good community college and transfer to a UC after two years.
JC, then UC playing college soccer on scholarship saves you even more. Still a good way. Every ECNL player can get at least a D2 scholarship. There are 9000 D1 soccer players. Figure 1/4 of them graduate each year, giving us 2250. 5%, or about 100 players will go pro. The other 95% will end their careers in college. Choose a school with a good scholarship, a chance to play, that is top 100 in education. If after a couple years it looks like you might be one of those 5%, transfer if needed to better your chances at playing professional.
Time savings is something to consider as wellSure but you are introducing a soccer objective. If only looking at education and cost then you need to consider the savings from not participating in elite youth soccer.