US CLUB SOCCER AND USYS

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CHARLESTON, S.C. (Feb. 27, 2026) – US Club Soccer and US Youth Soccer are proud to announce the first round of league operators of a new competition, beginning with the 2026-27 season, that serves as the top team-based league of both organizations. This new league, temporarily referred to as “NewComp,” will bring together the National Premier Leagues (NPL) and National League, ushering in a new era of collaboration in the youth soccer ecosystem and serving 10,000 teams and more than 150,000 players.

The competition’s inaugural season will be capped in summer 2027, as part of a postseason structure operated by the Elite Clubs National League (ECNL). Qualification will include the top-performing teams from this competition, along with selected ECNL Regional League (ECNL RL) teams, creating a highly competitive and meaningful postseason event. The existing postseason structures within the ECNL and ECNL RL will remain, and this new additional postseason pathway will further strengthen and integrate the competitive pyramid while adding opportunity. The combination of postseason pathways will offer best-in-class college scouting opportunities and event experience for families. More information about the playoff structure will be announced next week.


The new competition will consist of eight conferences – Northwest, West, Central, South, Midwest, Northeast, Mid-Atlantic and Southeast – with multiple districts in each conference and those districts advancing teams to the postseason. The first round of operators is as follows in alphabetical order, and the remaining operators will be announced in the coming weeks:

  • Arizona Youth Soccer (West Districts 2-3)
  • Carolina Premier Soccer League (Mid-Atlantic District 3)
  • Colorado Soccer Association (West District 1)
  • El Paso Premier League (South District 4)
  • Elite Development Program (Northeast Districts 1-4)
  • Florida Club Leagues (Southeast District 2)
  • Great Lakes Alliance (Midwest District 1)
  • Michigan State Youth Soccer Association (Midwest District 5)
  • Mid-Atlantic Premier League (Northeast District 3)
  • NorCal Premier Soccer (West District 4)
  • Northern Illinois Soccer League (Midwest District 4)
  • SOCAL Soccer League (West District 3)
  • Southeastern Clubs Champions League (Southeast District 1)
  • Texas Club Soccer League (South District 2)
  • Twin Cities Soccer Leagues (Central District 1)
  • Virginia Premier Soccer League & National Capital Soccer League (co-operated; Mid-Atlantic District 2)
  • Washington Premier League (Northwest District 3)

A breakdown of the conferences, league operators and districts is available here. Additional operators will contribute to the eight conferences on a to-be-announced district-by-district approach. By layering districts into each conference, the new competition reaches more players and reduces travel burdens for families. Leagues that wish to apply for open districts may do so via this application. League operators will meet next month in Atlanta with team registration opening early April.

A committee comprised of US Club Soccer and US Youth Soccer representatives will consider all applications based on demonstrated success, operational plans, staffing structure, league management experience and market knowledge. Operators were selected based on their commitment to access and inclusivity, quality competition, and player-first decision-making across all districts. Additional approvals will be announced as applications are finalized, and all designations remain subject to ongoing compliance. This committee was approved by both organizations’ board of directors and will support the new league in its inaugural season.

"Having been involved in the oversight of national youth leagues for almost a decade, this competition is exactly what youth soccer needs," said Marc Frankland, commissioner of the new competition. "I’m proud to work with US Club Soccer and US Youth Soccer to develop a league that focuses more on local travel and aligns with the U.S. Soccer Pathways Strategy to create a unified, team-based competition that is player-focused and merit-based."

These efforts coincide with U.S. Soccer’s Pathways Strategy, an initiative committed to making the game easier to navigate, more accessible and more supportive. The NewComp pathway is inclusive of ECNL, ECNL RL and localized/state competitions, providing opportunities for promotion of top clubs within this new competition into the ECNL RL, as well as localized competitions and state leagues into NewComp.

“An extraordinary amount of diligence and care are being put into the creation of this new competition,” said Alexandra Rieben, US Club Soccer Senior Vice President of Programs & Partnerships. “US Club Soccer, US Youth Soccer and the ECNL are all working to provide a league platform that welcomes more players, minimizes travel, connects above and below in the current pathways structure, and elevates the best teams in the country. Because of our collective commitment to collaboration, the next chapter of American youth soccer is one that the entire ecosystem will be proud of and model after for years to come.”

Tom Condone, US Youth Soccer CEO, added: “We are committed to a competitive structure defined by clear standards, consistent accountability and expanded opportunity for players."
 
Which league (NPL or National League) currently has more teams nationally? In our area (either socal or norcal), NPL seems much more significant, but I imagine there are others where the NL is more prevalent. Norcal Premier already operates NPL and ECNL-RL, SoCal Soccer league operates NPL, does it operate RL down there as well?
 
Which league (NPL or National League) currently has more teams nationally? In our area (either socal or norcal), NPL seems much more significant, but I imagine there are others where the NL is more prevalent. Norcal Premier already operates NPL and ECNL-RL, SoCal Soccer league operates NPL, does it operate RL down there as well?
Southern California has ECNL-RL at a variety of clubs but it is my understanding that ENCL operates the RL. SoCal as a league is a member of NPL but I do not believe they govern the ECNL-RL teams. Hope that answers that part of your question. A

As far as National League - I believe that is simply the E64 with a new branding. And I am seeing a lot of clubs in the San Diego area putting teams into that instead of SoCal or other alphabet leagues. But down here E64 didn't gain a good reputation so I am not sure why clubs are doing this.
 
This is a somewhat strange announcement, at least as I read it. It seems like the high level orgs (USCS and USYS) are trying to create a way for top NPL teams to play ECNL-RL teams in post-season competition, while sorta giving ECNL more clout (by allowing them to run the league). Note also the mention that "top clubs" within the new competition might be eligible to move "up" to ECNL-RL.

The reality on the ground is somewhat different, though (at least from what I see). Top NPL teams are already better than ECNL-RL teams, in many cases (and maybe even on average), and while a cross-league playoff structure will be welcome, I'd be curious how many clubs would really jump at the opportunity to pay more money (to ECNL) for potentially a worse travel and competitive experience. Additionally, of course, the announcement ignores the other major leagues entirely (eg: MLSN-AD and EA/EA2, at least on the boys side).

To me, this reads like the larger orgs just trying to get ECNL to cross-compete a bit more with NPL and NL/E64, by kissing their ass (ie: allowing them to run the playoff league and pretend like ECNL-RL is a step up from the other designations). But I guess we'll see how it shakes out.
 
This is a somewhat strange announcement, at least as I read it. It seems like the high level orgs (USCS and USYS) are trying to create a way for top NPL teams to play ECNL-RL teams in post-season competition, while sorta giving ECNL more clout (by allowing them to run the league). Note also the mention that "top clubs" within the new competition might be eligible to move "up" to ECNL-RL.

The reality on the ground is somewhat different, though (at least from what I see). Top NPL teams are already better than ECNL-RL teams, in many cases (and maybe even on average), and while a cross-league playoff structure will be welcome, I'd be curious how many clubs would really jump at the opportunity to pay more money (to ECNL) for potentially a worse travel and competitive experience. Additionally, of course, the announcement ignores the other major leagues entirely (eg: MLSN-AD and EA/EA2, at least on the boys side).

To me, this reads like the larger orgs just trying to get ECNL to cross-compete a bit more with NPL and NL/E64, by kissing their ass (ie: allowing them to run the playoff league and pretend like ECNL-RL is a step up from the other designations). But I guess we'll see how it shakes out.
I think this is an effort for ECNL to further consolidate their closed pyramid. Open up RL post-season to top NPL/NL teams, see which clubs do well in multiple age groups, promote club to RL.
 
This is a somewhat strange announcement, at least as I read it. It seems like the high level orgs (USCS and USYS) are trying to create a way for top NPL teams to play ECNL-RL teams in post-season competition, while sorta giving ECNL more clout (by allowing them to run the league). Note also the mention that "top clubs" within the new competition might be eligible to move "up" to ECNL-RL.

The reality on the ground is somewhat different, though (at least from what I see). Top NPL teams are already better than ECNL-RL teams, in many cases (and maybe even on average), and while a cross-league playoff structure will be welcome, I'd be curious how many clubs would really jump at the opportunity to pay more money (to ECNL) for potentially a worse travel and competitive experience. Additionally, of course, the announcement ignores the other major leagues entirely (eg: MLSN-AD and EA/EA2, at least on the boys side).

To me, this reads like the larger orgs just trying to get ECNL to cross-compete a bit more with NPL and NL/E64, by kissing their ass (ie: allowing them to run the playoff league and pretend like ECNL-RL is a step up from the other designations). But I guess we'll see how it shakes out.

It's hard not to cherrypick examples, and also hard not to extrapolate from limited data. But a couple things - ECNL-RL teams are stronger than NPL teams. Top teams in one will beat top teams in the other. Average teams in one will beat average teams in the other. Even if it in fact wasn't true in some places prior - ECNL-RL is now simply defined as the top level of NPL in some areas. It gets sorted out after a season or two, and the hierarchy reasserts itself. In any brackets adjacent by skill, the exceptional teams in the lower bracket are probably stronger than the weaker teams in the higher bracket. The brackets themselves will vary 5-7 goals, while the average SR of the brackets might only differ by 1-2 goals.

I think this is an effort for ECNL to further consolidate their closed pyramid. Open up RL post-season to top NPL/NL teams, see which clubs do well in multiple age groups, promote club to RL.

Maybe - but that's not the gist of this announcement. There have already been announcements of ECNL & ECNL-RL post season changes, and yes, some NPL teams might be invited. But this announcement isn't that. It is saying that there is a new post-season setup for this NPL/NL league, and in this new one, some RL teams (who likely aren't in the playoffs in the actual RL postseason), will be able to attend it as well.
 
Maybe - but that's not the gist of this announcement. There have already been announcements of ECNL & ECNL-RL post season changes, and yes, some NPL teams might be invited. But this announcement isn't that. It is saying that there is a new post-season setup for this NPL/NL league, and in this new one, some RL teams (who likely aren't in the playoffs in the actual RL postseason), will be able to attend it as well.
True. Check out the latest ECNL podcast where they discuss "Building The Pyramid". Sort of alludes to this with their concept of 'promoting' clubs into RL and from RL to ECNL.
 
True. Check out the latest ECNL podcast where they discuss "Building The Pyramid". Sort of alludes to this with their concept of 'promoting' clubs into RL and from RL to ECNL.
Actually, it might.

"These efforts coincide with U.S. Soccer’s Pathways Strategy, an initiative committed to making the game easier to navigate, more accessible and more supportive. The NewComp pathway is inclusive of ECNL, ECNL RL and localized/state competitions, providing opportunities for promotion of top clubs within this new competition into the ECNL RL, as well as localized competitions and state leagues into NewComp."
 
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