Say bye-bye-bye to Girls and Boys DA

I do hear ECNL doing some calls amongst their board members and conference reps so should have some idea how things are shaking out soon.
I think this is an important point. When new clubs join ECNL, the main few clubs in that region have some sort of a say. Not the final call of course but it's a discussion. Don't overlook that fact in terms of who gets in. For so cal I'd imagine LAFC and Blues could have a say in who gets in to see degree. Lavers will be aware of clear bias in discussions but talks will take place at least.
 
There was a conference call yesterday between all the North East Conference GDA clubs and none of them have gotten any clarity from USSF about what is going on. Being completely kept in the dark. I don't think any of the NE GDA clubs are getting ECNL spots.

That is US Soccer being US Soccer. They have got to be the shadiest sports federation in the US. By FIFA standards though they aren't half bad.
 
If this comes to pass, I am not sure I will support US soccer or ECNL . I have been a part of ECNL in the past, they really did nothing to develop players. It has always been the players themselves, their trainers and their coaches that develop them.

If you believe the first half of an incomplete season is the determining factor of final placement, either you have never played soccer or any other sport for that matter.

It was naive of you to ever think that a league would develop players. It has always been about the player, the player's family, the coaches, the team and then the club. A league is just a platform. I will say that when my player played in the ECNL she got to play with and against most of the best players and teams in the country in her age group. That developed her into the player she became in college.

Development is a process. Every brick that is laid in that process has another brick that is uses it as it's foundation. Talent aggregation aids in this process at the elite level and that is undeniable.
 
Most (not all) teams have played 15+ games at this point, so everyone has played at least once.
As you said, some teams have not played other teams even though they are halfway through their season and having played some of those games would definitely impact these standings for some clubs
 
That is US Soccer being US Soccer. They have got to be the shadiest sports federation in the US. By FIFA standards though they aren't half bad.
US soccer could care less what happens to a club. Sad but true. All they ever cared about was creating the next Mia or Alex. It shouldn't be hard to care about both but they've made more mistakes than a 5 year old riding a bike with 2 wheels for the first time except there 50 year olds doing this! I'm kind of happy they won't be part of running youth leagues anymore. Let US club soccer be in charge of that.
 
I bet the LA Galaxy DA peeps are regretting throwing the baby out with the bathwater when they ended their licensing agreement with LAG South Bay. Those DA players will be left to fend for themselves.

From that article posted:

ECNL’s President Christian Lavers told TopDrawerSoccer last month that he felt like the ECNL was close to full for the 2020/2021 season, which could leave a number of storied clubs in the cold"

Along with Beach, Surf, Legend's, RSC, and some others. DPL for them?
 
GDA AND ECNL 2020 Standings Per Club by PPG
GDA Current Standings (Based on PPG)
AVG StandingsU14U15U16U17U18/U19
San Diego Surf2.421441
Legends417525
LA Galaxy536178
Real So Cal5.2482102
Beach Futbol Club6.6132639
SC Blues6.6649113
Albion SC7.25510511
LA Galaxy San Diego8.210133114
Pateadores9.21212787
SC del Sol9.211312614
LA Surf SC9.49911126
Utah Royals FC - Arizona9.814118133
OC Surf Soccer10.671413910
Albion SC Las Vegas11.6810141412
ECNL Current Standings (Based on PPG)AVG StandingsU13U14U15U16U17U18U18 Comp
LAFC Slammers2.42111228
So Cal Blues SC3.73684311
Slammers FC4.663103163
LA Breakers FC6.35868494
Heat FC6.3144710117
Strikers FC6.6117357310
Arizona Arsenal SC7.1911126642
Phoenix Rising FC7.379221212No team
Rebels SC7.6821110589
Eagles SC7.64105121156
Arsenal FC8.9125999711
DMCV Sharks9.010127118105
 
From that article posted:

ECNL’s President Christian Lavers told TopDrawerSoccer last month that he felt like the ECNL was close to full for the 2020/2021 season, which could leave a number of storied clubs in the cold"

Along with Beach, Surf, Legend's, and some others. DPL for them?
Well he said assuming DA was. not folding I'm sure....
 
@Copa9 A few other dads I know on this forum would laugh at your silly jab that I haven't played sports before....but really, your posts add very little value, we are providing statistics and you still argue......
 
Damn, been off the site for the past few days. What a cluster. Glad my dd is already in college. Might as well get rid of ECNL and SCDSL and bring back the good old days of CSL when Premier ruled the land!
 
So, ECNL is suddenly full, when 2 months ago they were granting double slots to attract DA teams?

I am kind of insulted that Lavers thinks people would believe a garbage argument like that.

How about, “Our member clubs don’t like to have competition. Now that DA is gone, we can go back to limiting competition by restricting ECNL access.”
 
Using the Soccer Wire top 100, here are the non-ECNL clubs in the top 40.

1. Top Hat (GA)
5. FC Dallas (TX)
6. Surf
8. Legends
9. Beach
10. Earthquakes
16. FC Virginia (VA)
22. Real So Cal
25. NEFC (MA)
26. Sporting Blue Valley (KS)
28. Cincinnati Development Academy (OH)
29. Lone Star (TX)
32.South Shore Select (MA)
35. LA Galaxy
37. Nationals (MI)
39. Charlotte Soccer Academy (NC)

I'm on a long, boring conference call. Anyone want to take a crack at who gets in? Bonus points if you come up with a club from outside of the top 40 who gets admitted.
 
U.S. Soccer's role in youth soccer will change dramatically. For better or worse?
The future of the Girls Development Academy was already in doubt, pre-coronavirus, because of the defections of major clubs to the ECNL. Now the Boys DA is on very shaky ground.
As of Tuesday, April 14, U.S. Soccer had yet to cancel the remainder of the 2019-20 Development Academy season. The pandemic may have created too much uncertainty to expect U.S. Soccer to promptly detail its long-term plans, but the vacuum of communication from U.S. Soccer led club directors to speculate that the Federation could be pulling the plug on both the Girls and Boys Development Academy programs.
Club directors on the boys side -- not including MLS clubs -- started extensive discussions among themselves aimed at coming up with alternatives to a USSF-operated DA. For some, the Boys ECNL presented the best option. Unclear for all is how U.S. Soccer envisions its future involvement in youth soccer, which increased significantly on the boys side with the DA's launch in 2007, and with the Girls DA launch in 2017.
The coronavirus interruption had already guaranteed that youth soccer would change in the USA and that the Development Academy could not continue in its current form.
U.S. Soccer budgeted $9.4 million for the DA but it will take an economic blow forcing it to reassess that expenditure and all others. Families, if it's even an option for them within the new economic realities, will reconsider spending thousands of dollars on their children's soccer. Even within the more optimistic predictions of when we can be mobile again, will parents sign up their children for teams that require frequent air travel?
Youth soccer will be different, but it could also be better. With this crisis comes the opportunity to reboot American youth soccer, and a chance for U.S. Soccer to regain the trust of its disillusioned membership. The path would include:
1. U.S. Soccer retreats from DA
As I wrote in January, U.S. Soccer started the Boys DA in 2007 with good intentions but the time had come for the USSF to retreat to focusing on its youth national team program and expanding its scouting network -- rather than micromanaging how the nation's elite clubs run their soccer. As the years went on after the 2007 launch, U.S. Soccer ramped up its regulations and restrictions. The one-size-fits-all approach is ill-suited for a nation as geographically and demographically diverse as the USA. And there's been enough improvement in American soccer that the Federation should trust the clubs, leagues and coaches. By leaving the DA, U.S. Soccer would remove itself from the youth turf war and take a first step toward repairing its relationship with the other parts of its membership that represent the vast majority of America's youth players.
2. Support and aid in the transition
For some clubs, the dissolving of the DA may come as a relief, for others it could be a tough blow. U.S. Soccer needs to get all of the youth soccer governing bodies and MLS and USL representation into the same room (or Zoom) to start working together on navigating the new era in youth soccer. Instead of telling clubs and membership how it's going to be, ask them how they think it should be. Even if there's not a consensus, by no longer running the DA, U.S. Soccer can start facilitating instead of dictating.
3. Look for solutions from within
I would never be against looking abroad for ideas, whether it's soccer or anything else. But we've gone too far in trying to imitate countries with which we have so little in common -- while ignoring our own strengths. We have in the USA accomplished, intelligent and dedicated soccer people who have not been asked by U.S. Soccer for their advice or insight. I also have a long list of DOCs of DA clubs with an impressive history of success who haven't been asked for input in U.S. Soccer decision-making. There may be imperfections in the history of American soccer's rise, but to ignore those who made it happen is to waste important resources.
4. Connect with college soccer
American soccer's major leap forward in the 1990s came thanks much to coaches from the college ranks. Now, it'd be difficult to find a college coach who believes U.S. Soccer has any respect for the college game. Whether or not college soccer can produce national team players is not the point. College soccer continues to have a major influence on the youth game. Its ranks include some of the USA's most experienced coaches with a history of guiding various generations of young American players. That the pandemic will have a profound impact on the college game is all the more reason for U.S. Soccer to include college coaches in the process of navigating the future course. It would be mutually beneficial for U.S. Soccer to reconnect with college soccer.
5. Apologize to high school soccer and embrace it
One of the stupidest, most disrespectful and nonsensical moves U.S. Soccer ever made was demonizing high school soccer as a player development detriment. The Federation can make no plausible defense of its attitude toward the high school soccer because it cannot point to any significant progress that the American game has made thanks to in 2012 banning Boys DA players from high school ball -- instead of leaving that decision to the players and clubs. The likes of Christian Pulisic choose not to play high school soccer because a different pathway is obvious to them. Thousands of other players didn't play high school soccer because U.S. Soccer forced their hand and they were denied of a great experience. And isn't it a development truism that playing with and against older players is beneficial? So way deny a DA freshman that chance?
Common for lower-income kids who can't afford club soccer, such as in the Latino community, is to play high school soccer and adult Latin league ball, neither of which U.S. Soccer regularly scouts. A post COVID-19 era would allow mainstream soccer's best to play high school, which could help the marginalized players get the attention of college and even national team scouts. While everybody lamented pay-to-play youth soccer, the Federation disparaged the biggest cost-free youth soccer we have instead of helping it improve. Now U.S. Soccer has a chance to change its attitude when it's more important that ever.
 
Con.......

6. Embrace United Soccer Coaches
The United Soccer Coaches (previously known as the NSCAA) -- the world's largest coaching organization -- continues to be the most unifying soccer organization in the USA. Anyone attending its convention can attest to that. How has it been treated by U.S. Soccer? It stopped recognizing United Soccer Coaches' diplomas, yet when U.S. Soccer couldn't staff its own coaching courses it asked for the United Soccer Coaches' help. The increased travel that U.S. Soccer's higher-level license courses require is even more problematic now. U.S. Soccer should collaborate with the coaching education of United Soccer Coaches, US Youth Soccer, U.S. Club Soccer and AYSO. Last time I checked, they're all decent, similar and none have a magic formula that set it above another.
7. Regionalize youth soccer
Thanks to the DA rules, we have in the USA clubs that travel hundreds of miles to play teams that aren't as competitive as a neighboring team that plays with a different badge. In fact, the original plan for the DA wasn't to create a national league, but to help clubs around the country improve their training environment. We need to go back to that.
U.S. Soccer should aid clubs without dictating to them, and encourage localized soccer. If you have an incredibly talented U-12 team that can't find competitive U-12 games, play in a U-14 league. If your U-18s are so good they win every game, enter them in an adult league if a good one is available. To its credit, U.S. Soccer never went as far as U.S. Youth Soccer or the ECNL on youth national championships for the younger age groups -- but it does create significant travel expenses with showcases that require cross-country flights. And the DA has long-distance travel for regular-season games combined with a sub limit that sends kids on costly trips for limited minutes of action.
The cost-saving by regionalizing play is more important than ever as clubs and parents face the economic fall-out from the pandemic. However it unfolds, decreasing national championships and national showcases for so many age groups at all levels of youth soccer, not just the DA, will be a silver lining to the crisis.
8. Let the pros take the lead
U.S. Soccer's attempt to appease MLS clubs unhappy with the DA only led to discontent from all quarters. In the new era, MLS and USL clubs can take the lead by creating one competition, at U-16 or U-17. That's the age at which they need to make a decision on signing young players. Their older youth players (pros or still on academy contracts) should be playing with reserve teams. MLS needs to finally abolish territorial rights and MLS clubs can scour the nation for the players they feel confident in investing in. The Boys DA had already reached a point at which the amateur DA clubs were ready to forge a path without U.S. Soccer trying to balance their needs with MLS's. For all the other age groups, MLS clubs can work with local clubs -- regardless of what organization the players are registered with. Farther down the road, U.S. Soccer can consider hosting regional championships that invite the best clubs no matter who they're affiliated with. More importantly, U.S. Soccer should redirect resources to expanding talent ID centers around the nation and scouting players regardless of affiliation.
 
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