DallasAggie97 said:
My kids are not ready for this these types of leagues yet, but I have questions before we think about them.
How much do these leagues cost?
Does it become their life? I know people with kids In these leagues (Texans and FCD) and it seems that they spend a ton on dues and travel, but I don't know.
Do these parents think that their kids will be pros? Get scholarships? I went to a game in Plano, and there were so many teams. I wondered if all of those parents thought that their kids would get full rides?
I spoke to a client that was in the USWNT pool (was on bench for a few WNT games). She seemed down on these leagues. She said that US Soccer was missing out on talent because of fees. That these leagues price talented poor kids out of national team radar.
How much do these leagues cost?It can vary quite a bit. I have seen between $500 a year to $3000 a year. It depends on the club and the age group.
Does it become their life? I know people with kids In these leagues (Texans and FCD) and it seems that they spend a ton on dues and travel, but I don't know.It can. It depends how involved you want to get. At a minimum though, its usually two practices a week, plus one game a week.
On and off, our kids also go to a conditioning or private/group coaching session 1 night a week. Thats not a requirement, just something our kids wanted to do to work on skills or condition.
Do these parents think that their kids will be pros? Get scholarships? I went to a game in Plano, and there were so many teams. I wondered if all of those parents thought that their kids would get full rides?For my kids, I know my kids are not good enough to get a scholarship. As you mentioned, its way too competitive for that. Especially in Collin County. I think this county has either the largest or second largest soccer community in the nation. And the FCD, Solar and Dallas Texans are all in the top 10 youth programs in the nation.
My kids are playing club because they enjoy playing it and want to do it against a higher skill set, play more often and take it more serious than we could find at the rec level. Luckily, we are fortunate enough to be financially capable of letting them do this. As long as they are learning to work hard for something, work with other sand enjoy it... I'm fine with that. But I have no illusion this is getting my kid into college. I think a lot of the parents I have come across have had the same mind set. I do know a few kids though who play DA and ENCL and its not our of the realm of possibility for most of those to get scholarships. If your playing at that level, you can probably get something.
I spoke to a client that was in the USWNT pool (was on bench for a few WNT games). She seemed down on these leagues. She said that US Soccer was missing out on talent because of fees. That these leagues price talented poor kids out of national team radar. Bingo. This is a huge problem. It's a big hurdle for reaching the next level in the US. It's goes beyond these leagues, but really relates to US Soccer, school soccer and competition with other sports.
Right now, a majority of your good athletes are going to Football. There are cheaper avenues to get to a sport are following football and not soccer (as you mentioned). Additionally, the contracts offer more money at the pro level, and there are more scholarships for football than soccer. Even more so when you consider a lot of schools don't have mens soccer teams. There could be an entirely new thread, but I think getting the better talent into soccer will come from two things:
1) Having the great athletes go to soccer instead of football... I see this starting to happen at a small level now as parents are worried about concussions in football.
2) A top down direction from US soccer to completely flip the pyramid so kids can get proper training for free or minimal fees. But this will take buy in from local leagues, pro teams and academies. Basically, the academies have to get paid somehow.