As far as I'm aware, no soccer league has 8u either. |
This the parents are obnoxious pigs |
I was under the distinct impression teams like this were becoming increasingly popular: https://www.sycva.com/pretravelacademy. The only kids I knew in 2nd grade who were playing travel were playing soccer. |
The link didn't work. Our club has teams starting with 2018s. The 2018s practice twice a week for 3/4 of the year. They play 3v3 games with each other at the beginning and end of practices and very few games outside the club. The cost is more than a rec league, but we are getting paid coaches and more field time. The emphasis is on fun. The price for our family is a nonfactor, and the drive is no worse than the rec league, so signing up a 2018-born kid with the club program over rec was a no-brainer. I don't care if DC is still playing soccer a few years from now, as DC is having fun and developing an athletic base to serve DC in future sports if soccer doesn't stick. Also, hockey is a sport that requires a lot of travel at a young age because we lack the depth here to play competitive hockey without any travel. |
the younger kids play with the u9s. most clubs have younger than 8 playing with the u9s. |
Nothing that costs under $3k a year is a status symbol for crying out loud. Its less than $300/month. I paid that much for preschool "ballet" classes. |
You made my point that kids who want to be there go to practices and try hard at each game. One of them played on their own. So? |
I hated the snacks after rec games. My kid played for 30 minutes, they don't need a bag of chips and juice box. We left rec sports because the coaching was often subpar, and in the case of my daughter, she was advanced and needed to play with others more advanced. That said, we have had a couple of good rec coaches. But its really hit and miss. |
It absolutely is in this area. You're sticking your head in the sand. |
I know it’s changed in terms of how many kids want to make the teams. I know about past and current GPAs. Besides the Ivy leagues who play against each other there’s no lacrosse or hockey or basketball or football team where the team players all have 4.0 GPAs. Not even close. The D1 athletes must have a 2.3 GPA for admission to the school. Recruiters will make sure the top athletes get that 2.3 GPA. |
For a second grader I think you are definitely right. General physical fitness, skill acquisition (throwing/catching, swimming, biking), and socializing are what’s important until fifth grade. |
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My fifth grader has a couple of teammates who started playing travel soccer in second grade. They played a year up because the leagues start at U9. You can’t really tell now who started playing that early. One of the kids is still a strong player, but a couple of others don’t seem to have stayed on their trajectory. They were bigger and/or more skilled at first but now other kids are catching up to their skills, or their size is working against them (the big kid at 7 can end up borderline overweight at 10 and lacking endurance for longer games).
I’m not sure it’s worth spending the extra money just for kids to end up in the same place by late elementary. |
Just wait until middle school none of the elementary school training will matter |
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What I find fascinating about talking to so many parents about these travel sports leagues is that almost every one of them says "but he/she loves it" after describing a weekend of spending 16 hours in the car driving 500 miles between three cities for tournaments, eating crap fast food and sleeping in budget motels.
Are the parents trying to tell me that their kid loves that crazy schedule, or are they trying to convince themselves that their kid isn't going to burn out at age thirteen and never want to kick a soccer ball again? |
By middle school I can see there being different levels but younger than that is ridiculous. |