Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:FWIW, our high school track coach told us not to let our youngest start a formal running program until 9th grade, and suggested to keep her active playing other sports that build athleticism and if she still wants to run in 9th grade, we'll go from there. He said a lot of kids (with an emphasis on girls) on the jr olympic circuit burnout young, and he prefers to take a 9th grader and start them on shorter distances and build from there so they have a long career including college running.
That’s interesting. Thanks for sharing that perspective.
Sure. Our two older boys both run/ran successfully enough in high school to get recruited to good D1 programs at schools they likely wouldn't have been admitted to but for running. Neither peaked in high school before their senior year. Both played soccer until 9th grade.
Anonymous wrote:There are youth running coaches, and USATF and AAU have youth running competitions. At 9, I wouldn’t push too much but some of the local track youth meets and cross country meets can be a good way to find a team or youth coach.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:FWIW, our high school track coach told us not to let our youngest start a formal running program until 9th grade, and suggested to keep her active playing other sports that build athleticism and if she still wants to run in 9th grade, we'll go from there. He said a lot of kids (with an emphasis on girls) on the jr olympic circuit burnout young, and he prefers to take a 9th grader and start them on shorter distances and build from there so they have a long career including college running.
That’s interesting. Thanks for sharing that perspective.
Anonymous wrote:FWIW, our high school track coach told us not to let our youngest start a formal running program until 9th grade, and suggested to keep her active playing other sports that build athleticism and if she still wants to run in 9th grade, we'll go from there. He said a lot of kids (with an emphasis on girls) on the jr olympic circuit burnout young, and he prefers to take a 9th grader and start them on shorter distances and build from there so they have a long career including college running.