Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Depends on the sport. Some, like certain baseball/softball programs, will require them to also do the house league. Kids definitely do multiple sports at that age -- say there's soccer 3x a week, they also do lacrosse on Sundays.
As for whether it's too much-- only you can answer that. Is your child begging to play the sport as much as they can, and are they in the backyard practicing by themselves? If so they're probably ready. If you are the one who heard about the league without them asking, maybe not.
Also, most travel leagues, especially at that age, don't actually "travel" much. You'll go outside your community but likely won't go more than 1.5 hours at any given time. Just for planning. Tell us the sport and we can give more guidance.
This is a good synopsis. My DS plays travel baseball and started in 8U (most of team was in 2nd grade). It was roughly 3x a week in the fall, and 5x a week in the spring, since players have to also play local little league.
In fall a few boys play a second sport, and in winter probably half the team plays basketball. There’s usually 1x a week indoor winter practice after a break in November-December.
Frequency of tournaments and distance traveled varies widely by club, and even by team. Right now we do 1-2 tournaments per season, and mostly local. I expect that to gradually increase in number and intensity over time.
I freely admit this is probably a stupid question. What, in this context, is a tournament? Do they spend a whole weekend playing a game each day for 3 days in a row? Or is it like 2 weeks of games 2-3x a week against different teams in a bracket?
Anonymous wrote:As others have said, it depends on the sport/league.
My kids started travel soccer in 3rd and 4th and no, it wasn’t too intense because as PP said, actual travel was minimal (1.5 hour drive maybe 3x per season for either games or tournaments). Practices 3x week, so still time for something like scouts. Some teammates did/do a second sport, but found it challenging and that’s more than I’m willing to deal with.
In our experience, pressure and travel didn’t start until middle school. And fwiw, expecting nothing from it beyond exercise, friendships and learning to work at something.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Depends on the sport. Some, like certain baseball/softball programs, will require them to also do the house league. Kids definitely do multiple sports at that age -- say there's soccer 3x a week, they also do lacrosse on Sundays.
As for whether it's too much-- only you can answer that. Is your child begging to play the sport as much as they can, and are they in the backyard practicing by themselves? If so they're probably ready. If you are the one who heard about the league without them asking, maybe not.
Also, most travel leagues, especially at that age, don't actually "travel" much. You'll go outside your community but likely won't go more than 1.5 hours at any given time. Just for planning. Tell us the sport and we can give more guidance.
This is a good synopsis. My DS plays travel baseball and started in 8U (most of team was in 2nd grade). It was roughly 3x a week in the fall, and 5x a week in the spring, since players have to also play local little league.
In fall a few boys play a second sport, and in winter probably half the team plays basketball. There’s usually 1x a week indoor winter practice after a break in November-December.
Frequency of tournaments and distance traveled varies widely by club, and even by team. Right now we do 1-2 tournaments per season, and mostly local. I expect that to gradually increase in number and intensity over time.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Depends on the sport. Some, like certain baseball/softball programs, will require them to also do the house league. Kids definitely do multiple sports at that age -- say there's soccer 3x a week, they also do lacrosse on Sundays.
As for whether it's too much-- only you can answer that. Is your child begging to play the sport as much as they can, and are they in the backyard practicing by themselves? If so they're probably ready. If you are the one who heard about the league without them asking, maybe not.
Also, most travel leagues, especially at that age, don't actually "travel" much. You'll go outside your community but likely won't go more than 1.5 hours at any given time. Just for planning. Tell us the sport and we can give more guidance.
This is a good synopsis. My DS plays travel baseball and started in 8U (most of team was in 2nd grade). It was roughly 3x a week in the fall, and 5x a week in the spring, since players have to also play local little league.
In fall a few boys play a second sport, and in winter probably half the team plays basketball. There’s usually 1x a week indoor winter practice after a break in November-December.
Frequency of tournaments and distance traveled varies widely by club, and even by team. Right now we do 1-2 tournaments per season, and mostly local. I expect that to gradually increase in number and intensity over time.
Anonymous wrote:Depends on the sport. Some, like certain baseball/softball programs, will require them to also do the house league. Kids definitely do multiple sports at that age -- say there's soccer 3x a week, they also do lacrosse on Sundays.
As for whether it's too much-- only you can answer that. Is your child begging to play the sport as much as they can, and are they in the backyard practicing by themselves? If so they're probably ready. If you are the one who heard about the league without them asking, maybe not.
Also, most travel leagues, especially at that age, don't actually "travel" much. You'll go outside your community but likely won't go more than 1.5 hours at any given time. Just for planning. Tell us the sport and we can give more guidance.