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ECNL weekend 3
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Originally posted by Unregistered View PostSo even the bad ECNL teams have some of the best players in the country? Wow. I'm glad we got to play against a great player that demands attention. Oh and we beat her team 4-2. Have a nice day.
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Originally posted by Unregistered View PostJust goes to show what a ****ing idiot you are. So what? Who cares who they are there to see? You don't think that if another player stands out they aren't going to take interest? What are they going to say? "Nah, not gonna recruit her, I was here to see #18 from BUSA" you're a ****tard and clearly don't understand how things work.
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Originally posted by Unregistered View PostFrom which community colleges?
The Atlantic Coast Conference
RICHMOND, Va. (October 22, 2014) - The Elite Clubs National League College Impact series catalogs the huge impact the ECNL has had on college women’s soccer in only 5 years of existence. The College Impact in the Big 12, the Pac-12 and the Big Ten have already been released, and today the ECNL’s impact in the ACC is announced.
In only 5 years, there are 207 ECNL alums currently playing in the ACC – nearly 57% of all ACC women soccer players. The ACC 2014 freshman class alone had 71 ECNL alums - 62% of the class.
Across college soccer, the “ECNL player” has become the epitome of the next generation collegiate soccer player and collegiate soccer star.
The ACC is one of the top women’s soccer conferences in the country, home to 3 NCAA Final Four teams in 2013. The ACC stretches nearly the entire length of the eastern seaboard, including Boston College, Clemson University, Duke University, Florida State University, University of Louisville, Miami University, University of North Carolina, North Carolina State University, University of Notre Dame, University of Pittsburgh, Syracuse University, University of Virginia, Virginia Tech University, and Wake Forest University. The ECNL College Impact for the ACC includes the past 5 freshman classes – the freshmen who began their college careers in the 2010, 2011, 2012, 2013, and 2014 collegiate athletic seasons. In only 5 years of ECNL soccer:
•207 ECNL alumni are currently playing in the ACC - nearly 57% of the ACC.
•There were 71 ECNL alums in the 2014 ACC freshman class, 62% of the class.
•9 of the 11 players in the 2013 ACC All-Freshman team are ECNL alums, including the Freshman of the Year.
•34 ECNL alums are on the 2014 rosters of the three ACC teams that played in the 2013 NCAA Final Four (Florida State, Virginia, and Virginia Tech).
The ECNL is providing a highway to ACC college soccer – and the ECNL College Impact in the ACC is growing. The ECNL is more than four letters. It is a representation of the best platform and program for female soccer in the United States. Beyond that, the ECNL is representative of the vision and goals of the best clubs, teams, and players in the country. The ECNL is the aspirational focus for elite female athletes. Join the ECNL, and start your journey to the school of your dreams.
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Unregistered
Originally posted by Unregistered View PostCoaches at the level of USF and UF do not just watch for any old talent at a specific game. They are there to specifically evaluate a player. Call me all the names you want pal but I have to say that you are living in fantasyland if you think they are there just to watch 22 or more players on the field. You see, they know about all of the players on both teams before they ever walk out on the sideline to evaluate certain talent. They know what they need and how many spots are open in that specific age group year. They have their eye on players that are on their list, period. Good luck to your daughter, and honestly, good luck to you and your dream! And by the way, my daughter played ECNL and is now playing D-1. Not trying to start anything, but only trying to clear up some points about why a college coach comes to a game. Again, good luck to your daughter my friend!
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Unregistered
Originally posted by Unregistered View PostTHE ECNL COLLEGE IMPACT
The Atlantic Coast Conference
RICHMOND, Va. (October 22, 2014) - The Elite Clubs National League College Impact series catalogs the huge impact the ECNL has had on college women’s soccer in only 5 years of existence. The College Impact in the Big 12, the Pac-12 and the Big Ten have already been released, and today the ECNL’s impact in the ACC is announced.
In only 5 years, there are 207 ECNL alums currently playing in the ACC – nearly 57% of all ACC women soccer players. The ACC 2014 freshman class alone had 71 ECNL alums - 62% of the class.
Across college soccer, the “ECNL player” has become the epitome of the next generation collegiate soccer player and collegiate soccer star.
The ACC is one of the top women’s soccer conferences in the country, home to 3 NCAA Final Four teams in 2013. The ACC stretches nearly the entire length of the eastern seaboard, including Boston College, Clemson University, Duke University, Florida State University, University of Louisville, Miami University, University of North Carolina, North Carolina State University, University of Notre Dame, University of Pittsburgh, Syracuse University, University of Virginia, Virginia Tech University, and Wake Forest University. The ECNL College Impact for the ACC includes the past 5 freshman classes – the freshmen who began their college careers in the 2010, 2011, 2012, 2013, and 2014 collegiate athletic seasons. In only 5 years of ECNL soccer:
•207 ECNL alumni are currently playing in the ACC - nearly 57% of the ACC.
•There were 71 ECNL alums in the 2014 ACC freshman class, 62% of the class.
•9 of the 11 players in the 2013 ACC All-Freshman team are ECNL alums, including the Freshman of the Year.
•34 ECNL alums are on the 2014 rosters of the three ACC teams that played in the 2013 NCAA Final Four (Florida State, Virginia, and Virginia Tech).
The ECNL is providing a highway to ACC college soccer – and the ECNL College Impact in the ACC is growing. The ECNL is more than four letters. It is a representation of the best platform and program for female soccer in the United States. Beyond that, the ECNL is representative of the vision and goals of the best clubs, teams, and players in the country. The ECNL is the aspirational focus for elite female athletes. Join the ECNL, and start your journey to the school of your dreams.
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Unregistered
Originally posted by Unregistered View PostMia Hamm? Come on stat clown. The problem with ECNL is the southeast division and every college coach knows it. Give us some stats on southeast division of ECNL. Busa, GSA, OC, Brandon, Atlanta all a joke. I'm sure Rollins and St Leo will be present at most of your games.
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Unregistered
Originally posted by Unregistered View PostMia Hamm? Come on stat clown. The problem with ECNL is the southeast division and every college coach knows it. Give us some stats on southeast division of ECNL. Busa, GSA, OC, Brandon, Atlanta all a joke. I'm sure Rollins and St Leo will be present at most of your games.
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Unregistered
Originally posted by Unregistered View PostCoaches at the level of USF and UF do not just watch for any old talent at a specific game. They are there to specifically evaluate a player. Call me all the names you want pal but I have to say that you are living in fantasyland if you think they are there just to watch 22 or more players on the field. You see, they know about all of the players on both teams before they ever walk out on the sideline to evaluate certain talent. They know what they need and how many spots are open in that specific age group year. They have their eye on players that are on their list, period. Good luck to your daughter, and honestly, good luck to you and your dream! And by the way, my daughter played ECNL and is now playing D-1. Not trying to start anything, but only trying to clear up some points about why a college coach comes to a game. Again, good luck to your daughter my friend!
UF attended several WFF training sessions in the last 9 months. They watched WFF in Seattle, now they were at a game in Brandon, must be a reason. Three of the U17's have had unofficial visits to UF. Oh right, nevermind they were there to watch #18 on BUSA, never mind.
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Originally posted by Unregistered View PostSo hurtful but So true and so accurate. The division compares to FPL
U14:
Concorde - 11
Charlotte - 15
U15:
Concorde - 10
Charlotte - 12
U16:
Concorde - 19
OCYS - 22
U17:
Concorde - 7
OCYS - 25
U18:
GSA - 14
WFF - 21
BUSA - 23
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Unregistered
Originally posted by Unregistered View PostMia Hamm? Come on stat clown. The problem with ECNL is the southeast division and every college coach knows it. Give us some stats on southeast division of ECNL. Busa, GSA, OC, Brandon, Atlanta all a joke. I'm sure Rollins and St Leo will be present at most of your games.
14's tied for first with gsa
15 on top with 4-1-1 record charlotte 2 losses concorde 1 loss two ties
16 1st place
Oh by the way WFF beat charlotte 2-0
Top team in Florida and possibly 2nd in region 3 lost to charlotte 2-0 last year.
Atlanta fire was in region 3 last under other name and finished middle of pack. Coach left they followed and went to ECNL the entire team.
BUSA is bad but OC was bad last year 1 tie in first 6 games last year. All groups.
People don't like change and this here to stay so either jump on board or relax.
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