What is Club Soccer?
Club soccer is usually a locally
organized soccer program whose
purpose is to provide opportunity
for youth soccer players to
experience a healthy, safe, and
developmentally appropriate
environment to learn, love and live
the game of soccer.
The value of club soccer is usually
related to access to higher level of
coaching, year-round soccer,
opportunities to play at a higher
level of competition, and exposure
to various venues. It is typically
through soccer clubs where players
get recognition and exposure to
college opportunities and access to
college coaches and scouts.
Because club soccer is year-round,
club coaches are able to build on
fundamental practices during regular
season and off season training
seasons. Club soccer coaches encourage players to get
fitness and additional
touches on the ball at home and during down time
to build stronger soccer players
with a demanding control of the
ball.
Club Soccer coaches attempt to train
players to their fullest potential
while teaching skills, athleticism,
tactics, teamwork and sportsmanship.
Soccer Clubs often strive to provide
the best soccer training facilities,
coaches, teams and support structure
to facilitate the development and to
provide a positive environment for a
lasting impression.
Club soccer is not for every soccer
player or soccer parent. Most soccer
clubs only consider players who have
a passion for the game, are
coachable, and can commit to
year-round training.
Parental Commitment is equally as
important as player commitment.
Parents cannot be looking for the
"silver bullet". They must
understanding that a player's
development is not instantaneous but
occurs over many seasons of proper
instruction and play along with
positive reinforcement from parents
and coaches.
In addition, the parent's main
interest must not be on positioning
themselves each year to put their
child on a more winning team. This
type of parent behavior is
detrimental to player’s development
and the sheer life lesson of working
hard for something you want is lost.
And in reality, the player who may
show signs of "talent" at age 8 is
not necessarily the strongest player
by age 13.
In club soccer each player is an
integral part of the team, and a
team's success on and off the field
is not dependent on just one or two
players, but the entire squad and
the level of passion for the sport
each player holds.
Usually each club soccer team will
build a budget based on the number
of players on the team's roster.
Basic cost for most soccer clubs
include items such as: tournaments,
league fees, coaching fees, referee
fees, local registration, uniforms
and any other club soccer activity
the team plans to attend.
With higher expenses associated with
club soccer come many opportunities
to defray costs. Many soccer clubs
participate in fund raising
activities such as: hosting a club
sponsored tournament, cookie dough
sales, candy sales, working at local
sports venues, or seeking sponsors
from local vendors. |
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Myths about
Club Soccer
- Soccer is
just another childhood activity.
(Soccer is actually an adult sport
due to it's mental and physical
demands)
- Soccer is the world's least
expensive sport. You can play with
bare feet, a dirt field, and a ball
of rags rolled and tied into a ball.
[A myth only in the
United States where children cannot
play soccer, it seems, without adult
assistance.]
- Competitive youth soccer is not
political.
- You don’t have a life.
- It’s hideously expensive.
- You travel to Jackson, MS and back
each weekend.
- You can play competitively for the
same cost as playing recreationally.
- You will be glad it’s over and you
won’t miss it when your child goes
off to college.
- For children, competitive youth
soccer is about winning.
- For adults, competitive youth
soccer isn't about winning.
- You cannot go to Texas too often
to tire of the many man-made
attractions located nearby. |
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Myths
about Organization, Associations, Soccer Clubs, and Teams
- All soccer
organizations, clubs, and teams are good.
- All soccer organizations, clubs, and teams are bad.
- All soccer organizations, clubs, and teams are the same.
- All organizations are organized.
- A team that doesn’t win is a bad team.
- A team’s winning record is a good measure as to whether or not a
particular player on that team is developing properly.
- Recreational teams can successfully make the transition to
competitive. [A myth only 99% of the time.]
- The teams that are successful at U10 or U12 will be the teams that
are successful at U16 or U18.
- Matching team bags carefully lined up along the touch line are
indicative of a successful team.
- Playing up in age on an inferior team is superior to playing on a
good team in the right age group.
- Long kicks up the field in the direction of the opponent’s goal
are a good strategy, regardless of who wins the ball.
- The more tricks (with the ball) the team can do, the better will
be its on-field performance. |