Elite Academy: Expanding the Player Pathway at HPFC

Elite Academy: Expanding the Player Pathway at HPFC
Last week, Highline Premier FC begins its transition into the Elite Academy League (EA), adding a national competition platform within our 11v11 boys pathway.
Following recent tryouts, our first EA teams have been formed. Beginning Fall 2026, selected 11v11 teams will compete in Elite Academy as their primary league competition, while other teams across the club will continue participating in RCL and WPL based on developmental fit.
Our approach remains consistent: place players in leagues and environments that help them grow with the goal being meaningful challenge, strong coaching, and the right level of competition at the right time in a player’s journey.
Building the Right Environment
As players move into the 11v11 phase, the game demands more from them. Matches become faster, decisions carry greater consequence, and development depends on facing opponents who stretch players technically, tactically, and mentally.
Elite Academy adds another layer to the pathway we have been building. It allows players ready for a higher competitive standard to remain connected to their club and community while experiencing broader competition opportunities.
This step reflects years of preparation. The move to Hudl video analysis, continued investment in coaching education, expanded training expectations, and improvements to match environments were all part of building a foundation capable of supporting a national platform. EA is not a shift in philosophy. It is an extension of work already underway over the last three years.
Travel and National Opportunities
Most EA league matches will remain regional against familiar Pacific Northwest opponents. Teams that qualify will have opportunities to participate in centralized national playoffs, which require travel, along with participation in national showcase events built into the EA game calendar.
In addition, through EA events and Capelli-supported platforms, players who choose to pursue collegiate soccer will have structured opportunities to be seen by college programs while continuing to develop within their home club environment.
Where This Fits Within the Club
Elite Academy will serve selected 11v11 boys teams whose development aligns with that level of competition. RCL and WPL continue to remain essential parts of our structure, ensuring every player has an appropriate competitive home.
On the girls side, the goal is the same but the steps are slightly different. Next season, our girls teams will continue competing within current league platforms. As participation and depth continue to grow, coaching leadership will evaluate future opportunities in platforms such as Girls Academy, Elite Academy, or other national pathways when they can be supported sustainably.
Under the leadership of Marissa Villegas, Alex Dixon, and our coaching staff, the focus remains on strengthening the girls program by growing participation, retaining players, and building continuity across age groups.
Looking Ahead
EA League play begins next fall, giving teams time to prepare for scheduling, travel expectations, and competition standards. Additional information will be shared directly with participating families as details are finalized.
Highline Premier FC continues to grow with intention. Every decision is guided by a simple principle: provide players with a challenging, supportive environment where they can improve, compete, and stay connected to the community that raised them in the game.
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