MICHIGAN YOUTH SOCCER LEAGUE Newsletter  FEB 2008
Edition
To make announcements or submit materials contact Adolph Reichert by e-mail: adolphreichert@sbcglobal.net  
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Coaches Classes: Check under www.msysa.net for further information.

 IMPORTANT Dates:  

February 25: @ Carpathia Club: Scheduling (U-9 & U-10) @ 7:30pm to 9:00pm

February 26: @ Carpathia Club: Scheduling (U-11 & U-12) @ 7:00pm to 8:30pm; (U-13 & up) @ 8:30pm to 10:00pm

February 26: Last Day To Change Schedule Without $25.00 Change Fee.

March 27: General delegates meeting at Carpathia Club @ 8pm

April 15: Coaches Packet Distribution all age groups at Carpathia Club @ 8pm

April 19: Season Begins

URGENT: Registration Alert and reminder ! - Risk Management - All coaches, managers, assistants and trainers please submit your Risk Management number. The registrar will add the number to the pass cards. Late requests for pass cards will be considered as late registration and with fines imposed.

News To Know:

 

From Passionate to Frenzied

 By Regan McMahon (courtesy Soccer America)

Believe it or not, there was a time not so long ago that families spent Saturday mornings together at home or someplace other than a soccer field. ... When I was growing up, youth sports were dominated by boys, and kids generally didn't get started in team sports until 3rd grade at the earliest, joining seasonal teams like football, baseball and basketball, with some kids not getting involved until middle school and almost no one getting serious till high school. Soccer changed all that, with programs starting in kindergarten and close to 50 percent participation by girls. ...

What's unique about the soccer phenomenon is that this "new" American sport went from being practically unknown to universally embraced within 10 or 15 years. Before soccer took hold, it was understood that there were some kids who played sports and some who didn't. A parent might watch for signs of athleticism when she threw the ball around with her child at a park when he was little and think, "I can see he's got a good arm. Maybe he'll be a good baseball player when he gets old enough for Little League."

But soccer programs inspired such a lemming-like response that a majority of middle- and upper-middle-class parents sign their kids up for soccer at age 5, whether they are athletic or not. To not do it makes you or your child the odd person out. So now it's not just a sport, it's a tool of socialization.

Recreational soccer also fills a gap created by grade school budget constraints and academic priorities that led to the cutting of physical education programs. In times past, kids got exercise, gained skills and learned individual sports in P.E. class. At one time, everything from croquet and badminton to baseball and basketball were taught as part of the regular school curriculum. Students would discover at school if they had a certain aptitude or passion for a sport, and might build their skills in class before ever going out for a team at school or in a recreational league.

Soccer's role as a safe environment for kids to play can't be underestimated, either. The sport's popularity explosion in the '80s came at a time when parents were increasingly worried about their children's safety in day care centers (around the time of the McMartin Preschool case; the owners were indicted in 1984 for sexually abusing the children in their care but acquitted at their 1990 trial) and in their neighborhoods, where there was great concern about child abductions, fueled by the media and a few high-profile incidents. Parents began to believe that it wasn't safe to let their children play in their front yard or even in their backyard, or to walk or ride their bikes to friends' houses or to the local playground to play a pickup game or shoot some baskets. Plugging your child into an organized sport overseen by plenty of adults, with parents on the sidelines, seemed a wise and easy choice. And millions of American parents made their choice.

As soccer grew in the '80s and '90s, U.S. soccer successes mounted in the Olympics and the men's and women's World Cup competitions, and the number of collegiate programs multiplied. Professional soccer matches began to appear on the new 24-hour sports networks and cable TV outlets - including those by the first professional U.S. women's league (which disbanded in 2004) - and parents and kids began to see soccer not just as weekend fun but also a ticket to a college scholarship or even a career path. Consequently, the excitement over soccer went from passionate to frenzied. To not sign your kids up for soccer seemed tantamount to denying them an opportunity for a college education. The pressure was on. Soccer mom and good parent became synonymous.


Please pick up YOUR trophies at Tri-Star Sports:  Tel:  586 - 977 - 0007  at 17 Mile / Dequindre ( north / east corner )

Boys:

U-11 Premier :  1st  Troy Elite, 2nd Vardar

U-11 Major Blue: 1st MBSA Burn, 2nd GPSA Salvo'97F

U-12 Premier: 2nd MBSA Burn Blk.

U12 Major Blue:  1st  MBSA Burn Gold

U-12 Red Div :  1st  MBSA Burn

U-13 Premier:  2nd  PSG FC Nova

U-14 MS Major Gold:  2nd  RSC Lightning White

Girls:

U-11 Premier:  2nd Waza FC Royal

U-11 Major Blue:  2nd GPSA Breakers'97A

U-12 Major Blue North:  1st GSSC Star

U-12 Major Blue South:  2nd  NMSC Storm

U-12 Major Gold:  1st  MBSA Burn

U-13 Major Blue:  1st Vardar

U-16 Girls Div:  2nd  CSSC Shadow

These Trophies belong to the players and they have earned them ! ! !

 

Entry Level Referee Clinic:

Sunday, March 2, 2008  at 8:15 am until 5:15 pm

at Goodells Country Park Community Center ,  8345 County Park Dr,  Goodells, Michigan  48027

Attendees who complete this clinic will be registered as a Grade 9 US Soccer Referee and will be eligible to work soccer matches

involving youths under the age of 14.- This course is recommended for new high school officials.

Clinic Cost: $ 50*   * bring $ 5.00 for lunch or bag a lunch.

To sign up: send e-mail with: Name,Address,Telephone,Date of Birth to: Dale Brasseur. 

e-mail:  dbrasseur@ameritech.net  or more info on-line: http://msysareferee.net/EntryLevel.htm

Local info:EMOA: soccerrefs@comcast.net   Scott Tallmadge:  810-937-2193, Rick Swegles:  810-948-2228

Attendees born before 01/01/1990 must have a RISK MANAGEMENT CARD prior to this course ! !

e-mail:  www.mysa.net/programs/riskmanage.html

Host is Eastern Michigan Officials Association