Breaking News from the Long Island Elite National Team Program.
TUESDAY MARCH 17
4 STORIES
#1
Players, before you follow that @***FBRECRUITING X account or any of the thousands of bogus recruiting accounts out there, think about this:
Not every recruiting account represents you in the light you want to be known for. Every coach, recruiting account, agent and person in your network that you align yourself
with speaks to your character and reputation.
Vet the account. Ask who they are, who’s the face behind the account before you follow or allow them to repost your content.
In the modern recruiting landscape, the most powerful thing a player
owns... [read the full article]
#2
Some fathers help their sons get recruited. While others quietly destroy their chances.
Film gets a prospect on the board. Measurables get him evaluated. But the moment a serious college program starts considering a scholarship
offer, the evaluation expands. Coaches begin studying something else entirely: the environment that produced the player.
In football recruiting rooms across the country—from the SEC to the Big Ten to the Ivy League—coaches are quietly evaluating the people around the athlete. And very often, the most
important person in that evaluation is the father.
Not because coaches are judging parenting styles. Not because they want perfect families.
But because decades of recruiting have taught them a simple truth:
Players usually reflect the standards of the house they come from.
Nick Saban has often talked about recruiting the “people around the player.” Kirby Smart regularly references family and character when discussing prospects. James Franklin has openly said Penn State prioritizes high-character families, not just talented athletes.
When Toxic Youth Football Programs Turn 9-Year-Olds Into “Transfer Portal” Free Agents
A viral social media post recently showed a 9-year-old football player “entering the transfer
portal.”
Yes — nine years old.
The graphic featured Levi “Tonka” Rodriguez, listed as
a Class of 2036 offensive lineman, middle linebacker, defensive lineman, and kicker, announcing he was leaving his youth team for the upcoming fall season.
The caption read like a college athlete announcing a major decision:
“First, a huge thank you to the Kowboys organization for being great to me and my family. With that said, I’m officially hitting the portal for the 2026 fall season.”
The internet laughed.
But the situation isn’t funny.
It’s a perfect example of what happens when toxic youth football culture takes over the game.
There are two kinds of youth football programs in America.
The first kind teaches football and is run by experienced leaders and coaches. This type of program produces players with high football I.Q’s and skills.
The second kind are teams created and run by parents living vicariously through their kids. These teams often don’t produce much more than noise and dissolve then the kids age out.
College coaches know the difference almost immediately.
Last year we had over 200 players attend our spring combine. There were high school and college coaches from all over the region, scouts, and media coverage. It was so successful that we have made it
a 2 day event for 2026 with different age groups going on opposite days.
We have also added additional staff and multiple combine stations for this year to accomodate the overwhelming interest and registration!
SPRING FOOTBALL COMBINE
YOUTH UP TO 7TH GRADE WEDNESDAY MARCH 18 CHECK IN STARTS
AT 6:00PM
8TH-12TH GRADE THURSDAY MARCH 19 CHECK IN STARTS AT 6:00PM
PARENT/PLAYER MEETING 6:45PM
Do not register if you aren’t willing to travel.
OPEN TO THE PUBLIC AGES 7-16
SEE HOW YOU MEASURE UP AND RECEIVE TOP INSTRUCTION
$29 – NO EQUIPMENT NEEDED MUST REGISTER ONLINE 👉 Click the registration link in our bio @lielitefootball or go to longislandelitefootball.com
ALL TALENT LEVELS WELCOME, BEGINNER TO ELITE
* TOP PERFORMERS AT THE COMBINE WILL GET A DIRECT INVITE TO THE LONG ISLAND ELITE NATIONAL TEAM * COACHES
The combine will be led by Justin Kull from Revolution Athletics and his staff, Coach King from Big Dawg Athletes, Coach
Wilson from LI Runningback Academy and supported by the Long Island Elite National team coaching staff and other top High School and College coaches from around the region.
REVOLUTION ATHLETICS HAS PUT MORE LONG ISLAND PLAYERS IN TOP HIGH SCHOOLS, COLLEGES, AND THE NFL THAN ANY OTHER TRAINING FACILITY IN NEW YORK!
NFL Players Trevor Coston –
Bears/Lions Ifeanyi Momah – Eagles/Lions/Cardinals Emmanuel Sanders – Steelers/Broncos/Saints/Bills Jerrick McKinnon – 49ers/Chiefs Dalton Crossan – Colts/Bucs Rasul Douglas – Eagles/Panthers/Raiders Timmon Paris – Browns/Redskins/Dolphins Golden Ukonu – Titans Andre Cisco – Jaguars Miguel Maysonet – Eagles/Browns Andrew Tiller – 49ers Jacky Chen – Minnesota Vikings
Notable DI Schools our Football Athletes have Attended Stony Brook Notre Dame Georgia Syracuse Wisconsin New Hampshire Navy Yale Towson Virginia Bucknell Louisville Robert Morris UMass Central Connecticut State Brown Buffalo
AGES 8 - 13 | LIMITED FALL SEASON ROSTER SPOTS OPEN!
TRY
OUT FOR THE FALL LONG ISLAND ELITE NATIONAL TEAM
FULL REGULAR SEASON SCHEDULE IN BIG TRI-STATE LEAGUE
FULL AYF PLAYOFF SEASON AND PATH TO NATIONALS.
DOB CUT-OFF IS JULY 1ST FOR AGE GROUPS
THIS IS THE MOST COMPETITIVE YOUTH LEAGUE IN
NEW YORK STATE FEATURING TEAMS LIKE BERGEN STARS (NJ), BRICK CITY ELITE (NJ), BROOKLYN CHIEFS, SHO, HARLEM JETS, BROOKLYN TITANS, AND OTHER TOP PROGRAMS.
READ OUR "HOW TO CHOOSE A TRAVEL YOUTH FOOTBALL TEAM" IN THIS EMAIL.
SIGN UP FOR SPRING BALL! NO TRYOUTS OPEN TO ALL LEVELS!
#1 SPRING DEVELOPMENTAL CAMP IN NEW YORK
SIGN UP NOW FOR THE BIGGEST SPRING COMBINE AND PLAYER DEVELOPMENT CAMP SEASON IN LONG ISLAND! AGES 6 TO 16 YEARS OLD, ALL ABILITIES BEGINNER TO ADVANCED.
Spring Football on Long Island: What Ages 7–16 Should Really Be Working On
Spring football gets misunderstood. Some parents think it’s all about trophies. Others think it’s pointless because “the real season is in the fall.” The truth is, spring football is one of the most important development windows for young players ages 7 through 16. On Long Island and across the New York metro area...