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<p>There's something electric about this time of year — when the summer heat settles over Southern California and the fields start filling with the country's most ambitious young players. You can feel it before the first whistle: the tension, the expectation, the sense that someone out there is about to announce themselves.</p>
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<p>Surf Cup has always been more than a tournament. It's a measuring stick. A spotlight. A place where rising prospects test their game against real competition and show whether their talent holds up when the pace gets faster and the margins get thinner. And this year, the boys' side feels different — deeper, sharper, hungrier. The U17 and younger brackets are stacked with players who aren't just trying to compete; they're trying to break through.</p>
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<p>Across San Diego, Orange County, and the Southwest, a new wave is forming — players with technical polish, tactical maturity, and the kind of competitive fire that doesn't wait for permission. These are kids who treat the field like a stage and the moment like an opportunity.</p>
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<p>And as Surf Cup approaches, a few names stand out — players whose profiles, habits, and on‑field presence make them worth seeking out. Players who might just shift the energy of a match the second they step into it.</p>
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<p>Here are the ones I'm most excited to watch.</p>
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<p>There's a certain type of center mid you only start to notice around the U17–U18 level — the ones who don't just play the game, they shape it. They see patterns before they form, they feel pressure before it arrives, and they move the ball in ways that make everything around them look cleaner, calmer, sharper. [player_tooltip player_id='382111' first='Quynn' last='Thibodeau'] is one of those kids.</p>
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<p>He plays the position with a maturity that doesn't match his age. There's a steadiness to him — a kind of quiet command — that you usually only see in older midfielders who've logged thousands of minutes in big environments. Quynn has that presence already, and Surf Cup is exactly the kind of stage where players like him reveal what they're really made of.</p>
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<p>What stands out first is his game intelligence. Quynn reads tempo like a seasoned six or eight: when to slow the match down, when to accelerate, when to break lines, when to recycle. He's not just connecting passes — he's solving problems, one possession at a time. That's the mark of elite center mids at the 17–18 level, and he's already tapping into that profile.</p>
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<p>Then there's his positional discipline. He doesn't drift. He doesn't chase. He moves with purpose, always arriving in the right pockets, always giving teammates an option, always closing the right spaces. It's the kind of midfield awareness that makes coaches trust him, and makes opponents uncomfortable.</p>
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<p>But the part that makes him exciting — the part that makes you want to watch him live — is the way he competes. Quynn has that internal engine, that “I'm in this play until it's over” mentality. He's not loud, but he's relentless. He works, he recovers, he presses, he tracks, and he does it with a consistency that hints at a much higher ceiling.</p>
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<p>Surf Cup is full of flashy attackers and big athletes. But every year, there's a midfielder who becomes the heartbeat of the tournament — the kid who controls games without needing the spotlight. Quynn has the tools to be that player.</p>
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<p>If you're walking the fields July 25–27, he's one of the names you circle.</p>
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<p>Not because he's already the finished product — but because he's the kind of center mid who makes you wonder what he'll look like in a year, or two, or five.</p>
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<p>Some attackers announce themselves with flair. Others with volume.</p>
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<p>Kingston Coit does it with intent.</p>
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<p>He's the kind of young winger who doesn't waste touches. Every movement has purpose, every decision has calculation behind it, and every time he squares up a defender, you can feel the tension shift. There's a directness to his game — a clarity — that makes him dangerous in ways you don't often see at his age.</p>
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<p>Kingston's 1v1 ability isn't just a skill; it's a pressure point. When he isolates a defender, the entire rhythm of the match changes. He doesn't dance or hesitate — he attacks space with conviction, using pace as both a weapon and a disguise. He's fast, but it's the timing of his speed that separates him. He knows exactly when to accelerate, when to glide, and when to explode past a shoulder.</p>
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<p>What makes him even more intriguing is his tactical maturity. Kingston sees the field like someone who's been studying the game for years. He recognizes defensive cues, understands how to manipulate spacing, and reads pressure in real time. That awareness allows him to create advantages before the ball even arrives. It's the kind of intelligence that usually shows up in older attackers, not rising 2029 prospects.</p>
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<p>And then there's his mentality — the part of his game that doesn't show up on highlight reels but defines who he is. Kingston competes with a steady, relentless edge. He doesn't linger on mistakes. He doesn't drift out of games. He resets instantly, hunts the next opportunity, and keeps applying pressure until something breaks. That “next‑play” mindset is rare, and it's the reason he stays dangerous from whistle to whistle.</p>
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<p>Kingston Coit is the type of winger who makes you want to watch him live — not just to see what he can do, but to see how he does it. There's something in his game that feels like it's still unfolding, still sharpening, still rising.</p>
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<p>Some players grab your attention with flash. Others with noise.</p>
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<p>[player_tooltip player_id='382116' first='Angel' last='Miranda'] does it with presence.</p>
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<p>He's the kind of left center back who changes the temperature of a game just by the way he positions himself. There's a steadiness in how he moves, a clarity in how he reads situations, that makes everything around him feel more organized. You don't notice him because he's dramatic — you notice him because he's right.</p>
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<p>Angel plays the position with a blend of patience and precision that's rare in younger defenders. He doesn't bite early. He doesn't get pulled into chaos. He waits, he studies, and then he chooses the exact moment to step in — and when he does, the play usually dies right there. It's the kind of defending that looks simple from the outside but takes real intelligence to execute.</p>
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<p>What makes him stand out is how clean he is. His tackles aren't desperate; they're calculated. His recoveries aren't frantic; they're controlled. His positioning isn't lucky; it's intentional. Angel defends like someone who understands that the first battle is won in the mind, not the feet.</p>
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<p>He is smooth, reliable, and purposeful. He doesn't just clear lines; he starts attacks. He finds midfielders in stride, hits switches with confidence, and plays with a composure that lets his team breathe. You can tell his teammates trust him. You can tell his coaches do too.</p>
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<p>But the part that makes him genuinely intriguing is his competitive temperament. Angel doesn't chase emotion — he channels it. He plays with a quiet edge, the kind that doesn't need to be loud to be felt. He's consistent, disciplined, and locked in from whistle to whistle. That's the profile of a defender who keeps rising as the level rises.</p>
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<p>[player_tooltip player_id='382116' first='Angel' last='Miranda'] is the type of center back you don't fully appreciate until you watch him closely — and once you do, you start to see all the little things he does that separate him from the pack.</p>
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<p>As the summer unfolds, these young players are stepping into a moment that feels bigger than a single weekend or a single tournament. They're part of a rising wave — athletes sharpening their identity, expanding their game, and showing early signs of what they might become. Whether you catch them at Surf Cup or see their names surface later in the year, each one brings something worth paying attention to. The future moves fast, and these are the players already pushing it forward.</p>
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There's something electric about this time of year — when the summer heat settles over Southern California and the fields start filling with the country's most ambitious young players. You can feel it before the first whistle: the tension, the expectation, the sense that someone out there is about to announce themselves.
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