Director of Student Activities, essentially the Athletic Director at a public HS, but they handle other activities as well. Sports teams fall under the DSA. |
What are Green Days? |
These days many of the individual sports have very intense training regimens. It sort of sucks, but the problem is that you have to build in recovery times. If they are doing something else, then their muscles aren't recovering for the next training set to get maximum results. That is the basic thinking. |
| For basketball, it is essential for coaches to know you prior to tryouts (for boys). Recommendation is to make as many green days as permissible with xc. |
| Most coaches would be okay with your child missing practice to do practice for another sport of equal or greater physical intensity. I think the attitude would be different if you were missing XC practice due to conflict with an arts or academic activity. |
I don't think it actually works that way. Let me explain. Individual sports often have a few very important meets throughout the year. They have a training regimen that leads to the best times at those events. Maybe early in the season, but when you get near the meets. They do things like taper and what not, suppose your kid goes to a preseason basketball tryout. It totally messes up the taper... I don't agree with the way these personal best sports work, where they continually train, but it isn't continual training, they have cycles, tapers and what not so year round training isn't as bad as it seems it isn't 100 percent year round, but they also don't leave any room for other types of physical activity. They take resting seriously. I think it's good to get some of this style of training for basketball, but basketball training probably doesn't help cross country. |
+1. And at the least, go meet the coach, tell him the situation, your bball history etc. So many kids try out, he will get lost and if he hasn’t been to Green Day’s, unlikely to make the team. |
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If your kid is a star in sport A but wants to half ass it (and be pretty useful) in sports B & C while still training for sport A a considerable amount of the time, most (but not all) coaches will work with you.
For example: Sport A: Swimmer. Among top few athletes at the school, scores at county/conference, state and/or METROS qualifier. Sport B: Track and Field or maybe XC. Athlete can clearly help the team. Lets say its a guy who can run a sub 18 5k or a 4:40 mile off little running practice. Or a girl that runs sub 21 on little XC training and goes to the pool most days.. If they're going to help and be better than all the coaches other options, why not have them? The coaches job is to win. Take what you can get. Near guarantee if you were a star in sport B and told the swim coach, "hey, I have AAA times but I can only come to meets since I play Bball"...swim coach would send a limo on meet days... |