Programs

Welcome to Rec Soccer!

SCSA offers recreational soccer for BOYS ages 5-19.

For information on GIRLS programs, please visit:
Girls SE Cincinnati Soccer Association.

A Guide to Recreational Soccer

SCSA is organized to let all boys have fun, get exercise, and learn sportsmanship by playing soccer. We are a volunteer organization, including coaches and league officers. There are no tryouts. Players are placed on teams by impartial league officials, mostly based on school district, in an effort to keep competition balanced and the distance from home to practice short.

The SCSA league serves boys in the southeast quadrant of greater Cincinnati, including Anderson Township, Union Township, Amelia, Batavia, Newtown, Mariemont, Mt Washington and some Northern Kentucky communities. Leagues are based on the players birth year. Our youngest players can be four years old as long as they will turn 5 years old by December 31, and the oldest players will turn 19. Teams typically practice one or two days a week and have games on weekends. All games are played at school or park fields in Anderson and Union Townships.

The Leagues

The youngest players, Dribblers (5 year olds by Dec 31) and Trappers (6) play a simple 4v4 game. There is no goal keeper, no throw-ins, no indirect kicks. Boys use a #3 soccer ball. Teams actually play two games at once so that all twelve boys on the team get plenty of time on the field. Primarily, we want them to learn individual skills, such as how to dribble the ball and how to shoot at the goal. Coaches substitute players freely between either game, trying to get each boy about 2/3 playing time. Scores can be high, but we don’t keep statistics for this age group. All players receive participation trophies or bobbleheads after the fall season.

As the boys get older, they play on bigger fields with more players, until they are playing a full 11v11 game that is very similar to high school soccer. For more information, check out our year-by-year cheat sheets.

Safety First

Soccer is a contact sport. Normal play will sometimes result in injuries, including concussions. As recent research has uncovered the dangers of suffering multiple concussions, Ohio Law now requires coaches and referees to look for signs of concussion. If a player shows these signs, he will not be allowed to continue playing that day, and must receive written clearance from a medical professional before resuming play or practice.