California Clubs · Updated 2026-05-20
The Girls Academy (GA) League is the ECNL-adjacent national league founded in 2020 after the U.S. Soccer Development Academy folded, and Brava assigns GA competition a 0.95 multiplier — within five percent of ECNL National's 1.00 reference. GA's California footprint is smaller than ECNL's but includes several clubs that field both ECNL and GA teams (So Cal Blues, Eagles SC, LA Premier), which compresses the practical recruiting gap between the two leagues at the top end.
The Girls Academy was launched in spring 2020 by a coalition of girls' clubs after U.S. Soccer ended the Development Academy. The league positioned itself as a player-development-first national league with strong showcase infrastructure and a multi-year commitment to keeping member clubs in regional brackets. GA membership is national; the California clubs play primarily in the GA West and GA Southwest brackets.
GA's stated mission emphasizes development over standings — sub rules, mandatory minutes guidelines, and showcase formats all reflect that priority. The competitive intensity at the top of GA is close to ECNL National. The competitive intensity in the middle and bottom of GA is closer to ECNL-RL.
The California GA footprint has been smaller than ECNL's in every year since GA launched. The list below covers the clubs that have appeared in GA brackets in recent seasons. Several California GA clubs simultaneously field ECNL teams — meaning the club's top-team athletes can play either league depending on the team they make.
| Club | Footprint | Also runs ECNL? |
|---|---|---|
| So Cal Blues | Orange County | Yes (ECNL National) |
| Eagles SC | Inland Empire | Yes (ECNL National) |
| LA Premier FC | LA County | Yes (ECNL National) |
| Real Colorado (West) | National via West bracket | No (GA-only) |
| Legends FC | Inland Empire / SoCal | No (GA-primary) |
| City SC San Diego | San Diego County | No (GA-primary) |
| San Diego Force | San Diego County | No |
The Girls Academy roster is fluid year to year as clubs join, leave, or shift between leagues. Verify current GA membership at the GA League directory (girlsacademyleague.com) before making club decisions based on this snapshot.
The 0.95 multiplier reflects three things. First, top-of-GA opposition strength is within five percent of top-of-ECNL — the marquee GA teams are competitive against ECNL National teams in non-league matchups and at showcase events. Second, GA Showcase attendance by D1 staffs is high — close to ECNL National Event attendance for marquee GA Showcase editions. Third, GA's development-first sub rules mean per-game minutes distributions differ slightly from ECNL — a GA athlete may accumulate fewer minutes per game than her ECNL counterpart at the same age, which affects raw counting numbers.
Brava's forward benchmarks show how a GA athlete's output translates to D1-readable language. A GA U17 forward at 7 goals and 5 assists in 16 league appearances translates to D1 conversation; a GA U17 forward at 14 goals and 9 assists translates to power-program conversation.
Three California clubs — So Cal Blues, Eagles SC, LA Premier FC — run parallel ECNL and GA programs. The reason is roster capacity. A club with 60+ U16 players across two birth years can support two competitive top-team rosters; running ECNL for one and GA for the other gives both teams a credible competition tier and gives the club twice as many recruiting-visible roster spots.
For athletes inside these dual-league clubs, the practical question becomes which team makes which roster. At So Cal Blues, the ECNL U17 team and the GA U17 team are not the "A team" and "B team" — they're two top teams competing in two different national leagues. Both teams produce D1 commits in most cycles. Movement between the two within the club is possible, often driven by roster shape (positional fit) more than by performance.
GA runs a national showcase schedule that mirrors ECNL National Events in cadence: a fall showcase, a winter showcase, and a spring showcase, with a postseason culminating in GA Championships in late June. The marquee GA Showcase editions (Phoenix, Las Vegas, the postseason event) draw deep D1 recruiter fields. For top California GA clubs, showcase attendance is the primary national-recruiter-visibility lever; conference play visibility skews more local.
Compared to ECNL National Events, GA Showcases have slightly smaller per-event D1 attendance on average, but the gap is closer than the multiplier difference suggests. Power Four staffs attend both leagues' marquee showcases.
D1 staffs read GA as a credible ECNL-adjacent league. A GA top-team starter at a national-tier club is a D1 candidate by default, with the same scouting attention an ECNL top-team starter receives. Where the gap shows up is at the middle and bottom of GA — clubs that compete primarily within their regional bracket and whose top teams don't reach the postseason or marquee showcase pool. Recruiter density at those games is meaningfully lower than at top-of-ECNL conference games.
The practical recruiting read: at top-of-GA the multiplier difference (0.95 vs. 1.00) is barely operative; at mid-of-GA the difference is real, and the reduced recruiter density at conference play compounds the statistical translation. Athletes in mid-of-GA programs should plan their showcase attendance and outreach calendar with that in mind. See recruiting timeline for outreach windows that align with the GA Showcase cadence.
GA produces Power Four commits every cycle, and the top California GA clubs (So Cal Blues GA, Eagles SC GA, LA Premier GA, Real Colorado) have placed athletes at programs across the ACC, SEC, Big Ten, and Pac-12-successor conferences. The volume is lower per club than at top-of-ECNL clubs, but the per-recruit profile is similar — a starting U18 GA top-team athlete with strong showcase film and academic alignment is a credible Power Four candidate.
For commit-volume optimization (maximum number of D1 commits per cohort), ECNL National at a top-five California ECNL club is the higher-volume route. For development-first programming at a similar competition tier, GA at a top California GA club is competitive.
About 60% of California GA athletes who reach Brava intake come from one of the three dual-league clubs (So Cal Blues, Eagles SC, LA Premier), with roughly half of those reporting an active option to move between the club's ECNL and GA rosters. Roughly 35% of GA athletes list a Power Four D1 in their active target list — meaningfully lower than ECNL SoCal's 40% but materially higher than ECNL-RL's 10–15%. The most common gap at GA intake is athletes whose showcase film does not match their conference stat line — typically because GA Showcase reps are concentrated and conference reps are diffuse.
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