Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Why are you switching teams if the currently relationship between your swimmer and coach is positive?
Oftentimes a talented swimmer needs a bigger club so they can attend the harder meets and have a better group of swimmers their age. It has nothing to do with the coaching.
Or a swimmer hits a plateau and a new coach and new perspective could be the push the swimmer needs.
This is NCAP propaganda. You can swim fast at any club if your coaching is good and your athlete works hard. “Better meets” only matter if you are super elite
NP, this is actually just true, not propaganda from the bigger clubs. Having a training cohort of other fast swimmers is important not only so swimmers can continue to train with the appropriate age group and not feel like they need to swim up to be challenged, but so they are training to the best of their ability rather than down to the ability of the swimmers around them.
+1
There are clubs and there are elite clubs. There is a difference. Not total propaganda, but some of it is.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Why are you switching teams if the currently relationship between your swimmer and coach is positive?
Oftentimes a talented swimmer needs a bigger club so they can attend the harder meets and have a better group of swimmers their age. It has nothing to do with the coaching.
Or a swimmer hits a plateau and a new coach and new perspective could be the push the swimmer needs.
This is NCAP propaganda. You can swim fast at any club if your coaching is good and your athlete works hard. “Better meets” only matter if you are super elite
NP, this is actually just true, not propaganda from the bigger clubs. Having a training cohort of other fast swimmers is important not only so swimmers can continue to train with the appropriate age group and not feel like they need to swim up to be challenged, but so they are training to the best of their ability rather than down to the ability of the swimmers around them.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Why are you switching teams if the currently relationship between your swimmer and coach is positive?
Oftentimes a talented swimmer needs a bigger club so they can attend the harder meets and have a better group of swimmers their age. It has nothing to do with the coaching.
Or a swimmer hits a plateau and a new coach and new perspective could be the push the swimmer needs.
This is NCAP propaganda. You can swim fast at any club if your coaching is good and your athlete works hard. “Better meets” only matter if you are super elite
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Why are you switching teams if the currently relationship between your swimmer and coach is positive?
Oftentimes a talented swimmer needs a bigger club so they can attend the harder meets and have a better group of swimmers their age. It has nothing to do with the coaching.
Or a swimmer hits a plateau and a new coach and new perspective could be the push the swimmer needs.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:
We are debating moving for the aging up and not fond of the new coach for the group.
I would recommend leaving if you don’t like the coach. My kid swims 7 times a week and honestly spends more hours with his coach than us. This person has significant influence over your kid. One club had a senior coach that was a nice guy but very lazy and did not hold the swimmers accountable. Not great traits.
Anonymous wrote:
We are debating moving for the aging up and not fond of the new coach for the group.
Anonymous wrote:
We are debating moving for the aging up and not fond of the new coach for the group.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Why are you switching teams if the currently relationship between your swimmer and coach is positive?
Oftentimes a talented swimmer needs a bigger club so they can attend the harder meets and have a better group of swimmers their age. It has nothing to do with the coaching.
Or a swimmer hits a plateau and a new coach and new perspective could be the push the swimmer needs.
Pools and practice times can be a factor. A closer pool when you are going every day.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Why are you switching teams if the currently relationship between your swimmer and coach is positive?
Oftentimes a talented swimmer needs a bigger club so they can attend the harder meets and have a better group of swimmers their age. It has nothing to do with the coaching.
Or a swimmer hits a plateau and a new coach and new perspective could be the push the swimmer needs.
Anonymous wrote:Why are you switching teams if the currently relationship between your swimmer and coach is positive?