There aren't that many 19 year olds in HS so I'm not worried about it. |
I don’t get why you would hold your child back for sports. No football for one season, if deal. They can still train. |
It’s not my child. Football is a different beast. It’s about actual play time and games. Training in a vacuum isn’t going to be the same. I wouldn’t expect most people here to understand. But you realize football is a big deal to universities, right? This shouldn’t be new information. |
| Again, redshirted kids are starting to be frowned upon. Kids who go to school on time are seen as capable of handling life at appropriate ages. |
I think "appropriate ages" are changing despite the school's age cutoff rules. |
Yes, for parents who want to redshirt their kids. |
Any decent university is not going to expect a student to be held back for football. It’s sad that the parents priority is football and not academics. If they are good enough they’d be fine. |
Where are you? This isn’t the case in DC area. |
Decent academic universities and decent football universities are not really the same honestly. If the kid is really a top prospect, it’s not unusual for there to be “older” redshirting. I had a classmate back in the 90s who was considered a top prospect as early as middle school growing up. He did repeat 8th grade at a Catholic school and then went back to public school for 9th at a “better” HS football school in the area. Yes the whole thing is sort of shady, but he did go to a big football college on a full scholarship, was drafted into the NFL and played 5 seasons. If you have a top prospect you move heaven and earth for them. But the point is sports redshirting is pretty rare in the whole population but more common for the big recruited sports especially when you can figure out how to move (or “move”) and get your kid into a better HS football program, increasing their chances of being noticed by recruiters. |
Do you often argue about things you obviously have no clue about? It's obvious you don't know the first thing about football so probably best to just bow out. |
You think football over an education is more important? Makes zero sense. |
How was education negatively impacted for that kid? |
If you are holding a kid back for a sport(specially football) the kid is not a good prospect. The level of athleticism needed for a top 10 college football and the NFL is very elite. These elite athletes can and do complete and do very well against kids 2-3 years old. In football the school has freshmen, JV and varsity. There is absolutely no reason to hold a kid back for football. Seriously the kid was held back for other reason not football. Being held back for for sports is usually done for marginal players. |
LOL, no. You really don't know what you are talking about. Plenty of top athletes in various sports "reclass" in high school to get an extra year. |
PP, also adding that the lost COVID year is probably a bigger deal for football players than any other sport. Club football isn't really a thing. |