COPA Talent ID Day: Girls High Performers
Objective Performance. Earned Invitations. Raising the Standard in the Women’s Game.
Talent is everywhere. But none more so than in Northern California right now. The COPA Score was taken by more 800 eligible female players since July 2025, and unlocked this opportunity for more than 100 players to impress. They also showcased where the level of play has got to in the girls game. The COPA Talent ID Day brought talented players, objective data and scouts from US Youth National Teams, regional talent programs and top NCAA schools together.
To earn their spot at this unique showcase, players completed The COPA Score — a standardized, objective assessment measuring technical, physical, cognitive, and maturation markers. They then review their COPA Score Dashboard to benchmark themselves against peers and aspiring levels of play, from elite youth environments to NCAA and professional pathways. Players reassess every few months, using measurable data to guide improvement.
This Talent ID Day was the next step in that journey.
The event was free to attend, and every player earned her invitation anonymously through objective COPA Score benchmarks. No club bias. No reputation. Skeletal age insights ensured late developers with long-term upside were included. In today’s rapidly growing women’s game — where standards continue to rise — that clarity matters.
The next COPA Talent ID Day is already scheduled for July 22nd, 2026, and we expect thousands of players to assess between now and then as this pathway continues to expand.
COPA STC Announces Summer Talent ID Day — July 22nd, 2026
If you’re wondering how to earn your spot, the pathway is simple:
- Complete a COPA Score at COPA STC by July 2nd (register early as the schedule fills up!)
- Review your results in your COPA Score dashboard and benchmark your performance.
- Excel relative to your age grouping for the event — and invitations follow.
Below are the selected standout performers across the U18, U15, and U13 groups who translated strong COPA Score profiles into impactful match play on February 15th. It is important to note than many more players were identified as high potential and strong performers on the day – selecting just 5 per age group was difficult!
U18 Girls – High Performers
Francesca Da Marto (2011 | 2030)
COPA Score: 88
San Juan SC | Midfielder
Francesca’s elite COPA Score results reflects strength across all domains, particularly technically.
Her ability to scan, process, receive cleanly, and dictate tempo translated seamlessly from data to match play. Calm and intelligent, she demonstrated maturity beyond her class year. Her trajectory in a strong San Juan SC environment is promising.
Everleigh Porter (2010 | 2028)
COPA Score: 89
De Anza Force | Midfielder
Everleigh controlled midfield with composure and confidence.
She handled pressure from behind, retained possession consistently, and showed positional flexibility — stepping into central defense when needed. Her COPA profile places her among the very top performers in Stress Tolerance, even when benchmarked against Division I committed athletes.
With balanced metrics across domains and years still ahead of her, she is an exciting 2028 prospect.
Keira Stegall (2009 | 2027)
COPA Score: 90
Davis Legacy | Center Forward
Keira combines advanced technical ability with deception and confidence in attacking spaces.
Her 90 COPA Score aligned directly with her on-field impact — scoring goals, creating separation from defender, and consistently being a threat. She was one of the most dangerous forwards on the day.
Sasha Landsdorf (2011 | 2029)
COPA Score: 96
De Anza Force | Central Midfielder
Sasha recorded the highest COPA Score of the entire U18 group, of players who have assessed since July 2025.
Her 96 is backed by elite physical, technical, and cognitive metrics. She showed bravery in possession, composure under pressure, and
attacking intent when opportunities arose. Multiple scouts identified her as a standout.
Developing in a top-tier De Anza environment, her upside remains significant.
Lila Campbell (2010 | 2028)
COPA Score: 85
Santa Rosa United | Defender
Lila brings strong physical presence supported by high technical output.
Primarily operating centrally in defense, she also stepped confidently into midfield when needed. Composed in possession and disciplined defensively, she continues to trend upward as a 2028 prospect.
U15 Girls – High Performers
Kyra Joh (2011 | 2030)
COPA Score: 69
Silicon Valley SA
Kyra’s profile is particularly strong physically, supported by balanced metrics across domains.
Confident on and off the ball, she showed consistency throughout the day. With key developmental years ahead, her long-term trajectory is promising.
Olivia Holbrook (2012 | 2030)
COPA Score: 84
Mustang SC | Winger
Olivia’s 84 reflects strong technical proficiency and impressive stress tolerance.
Creative and direct, she generated consistent attacking opportunities. Developing within Mustang SC’s strong environment, she represents the next wave of high-level wide players.
Aria Flores (2012 | 2030)
COPA Score: 93
Cal Odyssey SC
Aria recorded the strongest COPA Score in the U15 group, of players who assessed since July 2025. In fact many of her results rival elite
Division 1 players. An exceptional feat at her age, highlighting some serious potential.
She’s athletic, versatile, and confident across positions, she consistently impacted the game and demonstrated maturity beyond her years.Her speed of play and close control was a standout.
Sereen Papp (2012 | 2031)
COPA Score: 87
San Francisco Elite Academy
A current Youth National Team player, Sereen has embraced the COPA Score as part of her development — reassessing regularly and tracking objective progress.
Her physical output and stress tolerance stand out, and skeletal age testing suggests significant vertical growth still ahead — an exciting combination moving forward.
Addison Moayedi (2012 | 2030)
COPA Score: 89
Mustang SC | Center Forward
Addison’s COPA Score metrics is supported by strong performance across all domains, particularly stress tolerance. This score is up there with the very top players we’ve observed.
Operating centrally, she processed information quickly, stretched the field, and scored multiple goals. Her ability to manage cognitive load in attacking spaces made her highly effective.
U13 Girls– High Performers
Samantha Gonzalez (2014)
COPA Score: 55
Pleasanton Rage | Central Midfielder
Samantha’s technical profile — especially her Cube Rating — stood out.
In the 8v8 format, she showed comfort receiving in tight spaces, both back-to-goal and forward-facing. Calm and tidy in possession, she connected play effectively.
Ruby Skaggs (2013)
COPA Score: 80
AC Marin
One of the strongest U13 scores of the day, Ruby’s profile is backed by strong physical output and stress tolerance.
Considered a later developer with growth ahead, she showed confidence escaping pressure and impressive speed when the field opened up.
Melody Yu (2014)
COPA Score: 65
Bay Area Surf | Central Midfielder
Melody’s profile reflects strong technical proficiency and high stress tolerance.
A late developer with vertical growth still to come, she maintained possession well and contributed creatively in attacking moments.
Caitlin Wang (2013)
COPA Score: 75
1974 Newark | Center Defender
Caitlin’s 75 is supported by strong physical and stress tolerance metrics.
She demonstrated positional flexibility in the 8v8 format, quelled attacking threats defensively, and remained composed in possession. A promising defender developing in an exciting GA environment.
Mikayla Weinreich (2014)
COPA Score: 62
Bay Area Surf | Center Forward
Mikayla’s profile is supported by elite technical metrics.
She scored on the day, combined effectively with teammates, and remained a constant attacking threat. Another exciting forward with long-term potential.
Closing Reflection
The women’s game is accelerating.
Standards are rising. Pathways are expanding. Clubs are investing seriously in development — and the quality across all three age groups reflects that evolution.
The U13 group showed high long-term potential.
The U15 group demonstrated accelerating maturity.
The U18 group displayed refinement and readiness.
Players assess. They review. They improve. They reassess. When performance places them among the top in their age group, invitations follow.
As we prepare for July 22nd, 2026, we expect this pathway to continue expanding — more players assessing, more high potential players emerging, more scouts taking note.
Remove bias.
Measure and track performance.
Create meaningful opportunities.
The future of the women’s game continues to excite and this group of players at COPA’s Talent ID Day were a shining example of that.