Sure and I have family members who had to drop their college sports since they weren't making the grades. Of course, it depends on the kid, but obviously less of a balancing act when you don't have to juggle both time commitments. |
Don't most clubs have practices for older kids fairly late, such that there would be no conflict? My boys both played for Alexandria, and by the time that they were in late middle school, their practices were during the evenings. Fairly late for the one that kept playing into high school (other one switched sports). |
I'm sure you will be a happier person when your kids move out. |
We'd do it again, but take a different/better path. If we had a bigger family with multiple soccer players we'd have guided soccer player 2 or 3 differently... We were dumb naïve parents. We never played or grew up with soccer so we didn't know any better. We'll pass our wisdom on to anyone who will listen now... but I'm sure that audience will be really small, LOL. |
Yes, but a bit differently. |
Great point. DS, who abruptly quit (posts above), is going to channel the competitive energy into another entirely different arena. Life lessons from competitive soccer will translate. |
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OP, thanks for this post. My DS is early in the travel journey and we're debating whether this is a good decision or not. We already plan so much time around his sports' schedule that I can't imagine what it'll be like heading to SC/NC for weekends, too. At present, the kids all do well academically so I'd like to focus on that. Even if DS is good enough to play D3, what's the point in that? He'd spend so much time in practice and games that he'd miss out on the academics of college.
I think our kids would gain just as much athleticism and love of team sports playing on a lower tier team with less commitment as playing travel. I'm planning to get out while we still can and spend that extra time and money on academics and family time. |
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Disappointment/regret only happens when you don’t get the result/outcome you were expecting, whether it was realistic or not in the first place.
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| I think listening to a kid and not just dismmising their thoughts and desires is important. But , ultimately it is up to the parents. For me, I'd say not to travel or high intensity sports, not just for the money, but for time. And not just mine, but our family's and my kids. I don't want them to lose their childhood. |
It's funny that this is so many people's attitudes. I was not a busy kid (teen). But, I also wasn't a trouble maker or a couch potato. |
How he spends his time in college is really up to him. While kids activities should not be indulged beyond the families financial or real logistical or time constraints but purposely holding a kid back from their potential only closes opportunities later. I don't know if your son can play D3, D2 or D1 and it may not even matter to him but it is best to let him drive his ambition within the boundaries of what your family can reasonably accommodate. |
What childhood do you think they are losing by playing team sports? |
| OP, once you knew he wasn't headed for a full D1 ride, why didn't you dial it back a bit? With my DS, I could tell pretty early on that while he loves soccer, he was/is more academically focused. So instead of chasing ECNL 'glory' (lol), we stayed at mid-level clubs with decent coaches and where his friends were. Also, saved quite a bit of money. Eight years in now and we have spent under $12k to your $30k. |
Travel and high competitive sports are quite the time suck. Usually there isn't time for much else. I've know kids who've done these sports. They say the same. |
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Around U11 was told at try out by a local ECNL club my kid needed to choose their club if she wanted to play in college. It wasnt why I had her in travel nor the ultimate pursuit so we opted for a different club and havent looked back.
She has played for a very competitive non ecnl club and is now in her last year. Great group of friends, life lessons that sports teaches, fitness beyond what any other option might offer and international travel that opened her eyes up to the world. She will choose a path in life that she wants. Youth travel soccer has done so much for her over the years it was money well spent. |