Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:It’s funny because even when it was called JOs no one thought it was a path to the actual Olympics. It was just a meet with cut times at the end of the winter season. Everyone knew the actual super fast kids were going to Zones and NAG camps when younger and Jr/Sr Nationals and Trials as they got older. Maybe parents could trick other non swim parents into thinking JOs was a big deal?
You sound like a jerk. Ps - plenty of kids who don’t make zones and NAG camps make national cuts when they’re older. Puberty happens and some kids really begin to excel after they grow.
Omg ya’ll are reading way too much into it. I never said kids who aren’t super fast as age groupers can’t be fast later, or that super fast age groupers never slow down or flame out. I was one of the late bloomers myself. I just remember silly parents being like “my kid made the JUNiOR OLYMPICS” when all of us swimmers understood where that meet falls in the grand scheme of things. It’s a great goal to set and achieve cuts but so many steps away from actual Olympics. That’s all I meant.
Why so defensive though? Your kids will learn a ton of great life lessons from swimming regardless if they make the Olympics or if (formerly known as) JOs is the highest meet they ever make.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:It’s funny because even when it was called JOs no one thought it was a path to the actual Olympics. It was just a meet with cut times at the end of the winter season. Everyone knew the actual super fast kids were going to Zones and NAG camps when younger and Jr/Sr Nationals and Trials as they got older. Maybe parents could trick other non swim parents into thinking JOs was a big deal?
You sound like a jerk. Ps - plenty of kids who don’t make zones and NAG camps make national cuts when they’re older. Puberty happens and some kids really begin to excel after they grow.
Omg ya’ll are reading way too much into it. I never said kids who aren’t super fast as age groupers can’t be fast later, or that super fast age groupers never slow down or flame out. I was one of the late bloomers myself. I just remember silly parents being like “my kid made the JUNiOR OLYMPICS” when all of us swimmers understood where that meet falls in the grand scheme of things. It’s a great goal to set and achieve cuts but so many steps away from actual Olympics. That’s all I meant.
Why so defensive though? Your kids will learn a ton of great life lessons from swimming regardless if they make the Olympics or if (formerly known as) JOs is the highest meet they ever make.
Anonymous wrote:They got rid of it because they felt it was inaccurate portraying the meet as a stepping stone to the actual Olympics, when they know IMX is the meet that truly is
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:It’s funny because even when it was called JOs no one thought it was a path to the actual Olympics. It was just a meet with cut times at the end of the winter season. Everyone knew the actual super fast kids were going to Zones and NAG camps when younger and Jr/Sr Nationals and Trials as they got older. Maybe parents could trick other non swim parents into thinking JOs was a big deal?
You sound like a jerk. Ps - plenty of kids who don’t make zones and NAG camps make national cuts when they’re older. Puberty happens and some kids really begin to excel after they grow.
Anonymous wrote:It’s funny because even when it was called JOs no one thought it was a path to the actual Olympics. It was just a meet with cut times at the end of the winter season. Everyone knew the actual super fast kids were going to Zones and NAG camps when younger and Jr/Sr Nationals and Trials as they got older. Maybe parents could trick other non swim parents into thinking JOs was a big deal?
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:It’s funny because even when it was called JOs no one thought it was a path to the actual Olympics. It was just a meet with cut times at the end of the winter season. Everyone knew the actual super fast kids were going to Zones and NAG camps when younger and Jr/Sr Nationals and Trials as they got older. Maybe parents could trick other non swim parents into thinking JOs was a big deal?
You sound like a jerk. Ps - plenty of kids who don’t make zones and NAG camps make national cuts when they’re older. Puberty happens and some kids really begin to excel after they grow.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:It’s funny because even when it was called JOs no one thought it was a path to the actual Olympics. It was just a meet with cut times at the end of the winter season. Everyone knew the actual super fast kids were going to Zones and NAG camps when younger and Jr/Sr Nationals and Trials as they got older. Maybe parents could trick other non swim parents into thinking JOs was a big deal?
You sound like a jerk. Ps - plenty of kids who don’t make zones and NAG camps make national cuts when they’re older. Puberty happens and some kids really begin to excel after they grow.
Anonymous wrote:It’s funny because even when it was called JOs no one thought it was a path to the actual Olympics. It was just a meet with cut times at the end of the winter season. Everyone knew the actual super fast kids were going to Zones and NAG camps when younger and Jr/Sr Nationals and Trials as they got older. Maybe parents could trick other non swim parents into thinking JOs was a big deal?