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Sports General Discussion
Reply to "Did playing multiple sports for as long as possible work for your kids?"
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[quote=Anonymous][quote=Anonymous][quote=Anonymous][quote=Anonymous][quote=Anonymous][quote=Anonymous][quote=Anonymous][quote=Anonymous]What’s your goal?[/quote] To reach their potential in sport. [/quote] That's too wishy-washy. [b]If you don't care at all about college recruitment, then play three sports. [/b] Some incredible athletes like Patrick Mahomes could have gone pro in either football or baseball...most professional or even college athletes had to specialize. I don't think you will ever hear of a top professional soccer player ever seriously playing another sport. The Dominican Republic has the most per capita players in the MLB, and those kids don't do anything else.[/quote] That's wrong. I have two kids who played three sports, one each season. Both ended up playing D1 in one sport, one of them after only having started to play it as a sophomore. If you're trying to develop your athlete's general skill, they can excel at most any sport. Of course you can't take up ice hockey as a 16 yr old, but you can switch from hockey to lacrosse or football or whatever.[/quote] Must be a joke sport [/quote] No, dude. The intense craziness is to get mediocre athletes to be good at a particular sport. I say this who has one mediocre athlete who is very driven and has become great at his preferred sport. But he’ll never be as good as the gifted athletes who don’t need all the intense training to be great. Those are the Pat Mahomes, Caitlyn Clark, LeBron athletes, and it’s not most of our children. Athletic ability can be learned but we all have a ceiling and a floor. For most average athletes, it’s probably better to play multiple sports at a lower level, and save your money and time. They’re never going pro.[/quote] 100% accurate. Elite athletes (think major D1 revenue sports) are able to play 3 sports with ease. They are that much more physically gifted than the average athlete. Most kids aren’t able to do so and need to specialize in order to make a varsity roster. This being said, No kid should specialize until 8th or 9th grade. Kids that specialize young often peak prior to HS because their sport specific skills are more developed. Athletes that didn’t specialize young fall behind on sport specific skills but often develop stronger physical and mental athletic talent. Then around HS they begin to close the gap on sport specific skills and in turn become much more successful HS athletes because their other talents are further along. Parents struggle to realize that their child is much more likely to be average than special athletically. The best way for an average athlete to compete is to be a tremendous competitor. That is best developed by competing in all types of activities. Both those you excel at and those that challenge you.[/quote] Messi played nothing but soccer since 5…is your claim that he isn’t an elite athlete? You never hear of great multi-sport soccer players. Juan Soto did nothing but play baseball since a child…again, is he not an elite athlete? Honestly, almost no international superstars were multi-sport athletes because that’s not how things work internationally. Perhaps the difference is those athletes receive professional instruction, training and nutrition at very young ages which keep them healthy. So…there really isn’t one answer to the question.[/quote]
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