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Reply to "How hard is it to get into AAU from rec?"
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[quote=Anonymous][quote=Anonymous][quote=Anonymous][quote=Anonymous][quote=Anonymous]OP, I’d recommend spending six months or a year doing individual training with a good coach. My kid went from being the worst player on a rec team that always lost in 6th grade to being a starter on a very good AAU team and bench player and reliable scorer on a high school team whose starters all played D1 mid major or higher ball. AAU games did little to help that progression. What helped was (hard, uncomfortable) skills and conditioning training and playing 3 on 3 with college players. [/quote] This. It amazes me how many parents fall into the travel racket. [b]People it’s pay to play[/b]. You get to spend a lot of money to have your family calendar tied up by driving a long ways to practices and games that are often scheduled last minute. Join a rec team for fun play[b] and do skills training[/b] if kid really wants to improve. Spending lots of time in the car driving to tournaments does not make you a better player. Playing constant pickup during the time you could have spent driving, combined with skills training will make a better player. [/quote] pot, meet kettle. Just wondering, what gyms does a 6th grade girl go to for pick up games? [/quote] Right? I can’t believe people will advocate six months of intensive *private coaching* for their young kids and then turn around and criticize parents who put their kids in travel. At least the travel kids get to have fun with their teammates.[/quote] My kid's team plays three seasons and costs about $800 when you combine spring, fall and winter. Private training costs $100 a session. If you're going to talk about spending a lot of money, don't advocate private training [/quote]
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