|
My son played at the highest level in soccer and another sport.
He also played for his high school. Being a multi sport athlete never was a problem because neither coach was willing to give him up so they dealt with it. We made him choose a sport sophomore year of high school mostly because it was too much on me. So he played both his sports in high school and one of them nationally sophomore year until college. Middle school up through sophomore year he can he played both of his sports. |
Highest level of soccer as in being on a USYNT or a MLS club academy like Philadelphia Union etc? |
The answer doesnt really matter for this humble bragger. Of course if your kid is playing at the perceived highest level the high school team will make an exception. However, for the 99.9999% of the rest of us, let's focus there and minimize the DCUM pissing contest. |
Curious also. What two sports are we talking about? |
I competed "at the highest level" as a youth, and my coaches would have never let me do another (high-level sport). Coaches wanted complete control over my workout regime, nutrition, practice schedule etc. Another sport could have put me at risk for injury. I doubt their kid was really competing at the highest level in two sports. It doesn't make much sense (unless they are complementary, like football and a field event). |
What are you talking about. My 10 year old at a middle level club on a second team had 1 month of and have 3 practices a week through the rest of winter. The only good thing is outdoor should be cancelled the next week or 2 due to weather. Being a 2 sport athlete is already too much. |
Who's forcing them to do what you're calling too much? |
|
I've had 2 kids go through the ECNL/MLS Next process and both were multisport athletes until they got to their Junior year for recruitment purposes. The oldest was a soccer first athlete that played basketball in the winter. There's a small overlap, but manageable. The other played football and soccer which made Fall a very busy time of year. We did our best to keep all coaches informed and 99% of the time we prioritized soccer so club coaches never cared. AAU BBall coach was a bit less forgiving, the football coaches were all pretty cool with it. We did get the lecture how they needed to choose, blah blah blah. But we ignored them and let the kids decide.
One is playing college soccer now and the other just committed to play college football. What I have learned is that it american soccer coaches at the college level want athletes first, soccer players second. My son's college team doesn't have a player under 5'11" and they are all pure athletes. Ctr Backs have horrible footskills, but win 90% of the 50/50 balls because they are all huge. |
Of course no one is "forcing" them. But the expectation for non-elite lower level competitive teams are all year round now making it incredibly difficult to remain a multi sport athlete. |
+1 The all-year nature of every league around here is ridiculous. Futsal for soccer players in the winter, flag football in the winter, bball all year round, volleyball in the most random seasons that don’t fit neatly into any real season; it’s exhausting. My kids like and excel at multiple sports, and we will support that as long as possible, but I see why people drop out! |
Yes. 3 players are pro now. |
It was soccer and lacrosse. His college prospects were better for lacrosse and he had no delusion that he was going to be a professional anything. It’s not a brag, the kid just was born this way. It was quite difficult to raise when he was three years old and could run a 10k expecting me to run behind him. That’s an idiom. We did not have them running 10 K. |
| It’s really hard. I have a u10, doing competitive soccer and lax. Soccer 3-4x/week in fall and spring, lax 2x/week in spring. Really challenging to manage the schedule and volumn. Will have her to pick one by u13. |
|
Multiple sports is doable some key factors for my son are:
Ability to play at high level in all 3 Private school practice at 3pm baseball at 8PM on weekends. Coaches allowing some absence. Soccer club basketball school and baseball club. Soccer is fallback if he doesn’t get drafted by MLB. Basketball was always just for fun but after we have watched Pat Spencer all things are possible! |
This line was very helpful and seems to be consistent with what I see across the highest level of sports (college, professional, etc): "What I have learned is that it american soccer coaches at the college level want athletes first, soccer players second." Thanks for sharing your experience! |