| I will mention wrestling to him. That sport never crossed my mind. I wonder if they even have wrestling for little boys. I'll see what Google says. |
My boys (ages 7 and 10) wrestled last year. I agree with PPs that it's a great sport but it was difficult for me to watch. After one meet, I never went to another. It was difficult for me to watch kids strive to physically dominate one another. But, it's a sport where size doesn't matter. It's all about technique. In the beginning, yeah, size can make a difference but if a kid practices and develops techniques, he'll win every time no matter his size. It's also a great sport for conditioning. If you google your city and wrestling club, you'll probaby get hits. There are a lot of clubs. |
Where r u? My son wrestles in HS, weight class 106. |
Just to add... Kids wrestle other kids "in their weight class" which is why size does not matter. |
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My 8 YO is 50 pounds on a good day. He is not aggressive. I have found that sticking with a sport and practicing has payed dividends.
We play lacrosse and he is by far the smallest child out there - but his coach was awesome. The coach is the type that sees that point of excellence and calls it out and puts a huge smile on the kid so that he can't wait to go back for the next game. This experience was at Bethesda LAX - madlax clinic was a totally different experience. My son also loves baseball - which they are suppose to break by birthday not grade. |
| My 7.5 year old son is 44 lbs and 47 inches tall. He takes Karate and does swimming, but enjoys playing soccer in the after school activities. Couldn't he just love something where he is competitive with just himself? |
OP, is it truly his lack of height? Maybe he's not on the right team/league. There are plenty of short kids who do fine at these sports. The best players on my kid's middle school basketball team is really short. At 8 a kid might be frustrated at their lack of skill compared to their teammates. Has he tried a skills clinic in the sports that he likes? |
Totally silly in the context of an 8-year-old, I know, but height is an advantage in swimming. Weight can be too. All things equal a 6-4 guy is reaching the wall before a 5-2 guy. |
+1 -- the best guy on my high school b-ball team, which was AAAA and vey competitive, was barely 5-1. But he was fast and could shoot from anywhere. |
Agree with this. We have some fabulous players on DS' soccer team that are really short. They're fast and great at handling the ball. Don't rule it out! |
| Another vote for wrestling. Good scholarships, and the best coaches we had were the wrestling coaches. For some reason, and I think other wrestling parents will agree, the coaches you get in wrestling are excellent. It's a hidden gem in the athletic department, and being short - NOT A PROBLEM. |
| For recreational leagues, swimming is probably good, but as you get older into HS, size can start to influence performance significantly (As a short former swimmer who swam through HS but the taller, broad/developed shouldered boys and girls were the standouts) |
For a rower. OP's DS would likely be a coxswain (the small person who steers and calls out the strokes) |
| I agree with gymnastics or tumbling and trampoline. Wrestling is another great suggestion. You could also try some less traditional sports - fencing or archery maybe? Or how about speed skating? And if competition isn't that important, how about parkour? |
I'm a 5'2" DH. How about fencing? I captained a Div I team in college - small target made me hard to hit. Also, if he's left handed it's a big bonus. Some other Ideas - Judo or Brazilian Ju-Juitsu. Basically grappling martial arts where he can learn wrestling without having to deal with extreme weight cutting. Maybe also archery, curling, table tennis, equestrian, shooting, cycling, or skating |