So many of us parents have heard it before from coaches, the "bubble" word.
You get to pick, play on the 'A' team and get the glory of being on the 'A' team and get a few mintues here and there
OR
pick the 'B' team, get all the play time in the world and hope some day your kid improves enough to get out of the stereo type "bubble" word and gets moved up.
You see the two choices and most of the kids would pick the 'B' team, work hard and prove themselves for the following season. I mean after all play time is learning too and all kids want to play!
So, how do you really get your kid out of this "bubble"? The coach keeps saying it will take time, but you see all the 'A' players advancing -- is this because they play with "better" players/teams?
NOT knocking ANY of the 'B' teams, but c'mon seriously, WHAT DO YOU DO?
This is what I see from the "bubble" players -- they work hard, do extra trainings, privates, guest playing, etc..
Some get moved up to the 'A' team, following year back to 'B' team...yo-yo each year. Finally just stuck at 'B' team.
Has anyone ever just picked the other route and went with being on the 'A' team, stuck it out with sitting on bench to get the training under that 'A' team to prove yourself that way? or in the end it just doesn't really matter?

Just curious.
I think some of the answer depends on the type of bubble player you have. What I mean is this: kids go through growth spurts, burn out, moves, hard year at school--whatever, and their game can slide off. Suddenly your little stud is a bubble player. Better at that point to stick with the A team and get back into form. Coaches know this happens and often will carry a child for a while, waiting forthe child to get back in the game. One of our daughter's had an injury and this happened to her. Now she is back in top form and a key member of the team again.
Although it is true that good competition makes for good players, I don't really think that this is what keeps all B team players from advancing. There are too many other factors such as speed, skill, touch, attitude, agressiveness, etc. One year we had two girls who moved from our B team to our A team. No question that their speed of play was behind. About 6 months into the year, one girl had bascially "caught up." She just needed a little time to get there, but all the other factors were in place. The other girl never got there. After 12 months on the A team, she was still struggling.
But we had a friend whose daughter was truly a bubble player--every year she was the top 3 on the B team and the bottom 3 on the A team. She started on the A team at U11, got cut, guest played up, made the A team the next year, sat on the bench, etc. She did private training TWICE EVERY week to try and break through to that next level, but it just never happened. This was really hard. Eventually she left the club looking for a team (A or B) where she would not be on the bubble and finally found it. So some of the "bubble" designation is dependent on the team/club where you play. Leaving your particular club is one way "out" of the bubble.
My gut instinct, however, if your child is one of these types of bubble players, however, is to join the team where you
play. I cannot imagine my kids being in an activity where they don't participate in the game on a steady and regular basis. For me, this would be a waste of time, money and their childhood.