Anonymous wrote:I ran in high school in the 70's. Very informal - just sign up and run on the team. My twin was even better than I was. We had talent, but our significant accomplishment was to avoid drinking and pot. Sounds silly, but in practice it works.
Ran a 9:20 2 mile as a 9th grader and a 4:06 mile in 12th grade. No formal programs, no getting a jump by spending money - just consistent modest training without too much mileage. My mother was a poor single mother, so no fancy stuff in our lives. Have to be willing to really put it out there in racing - some really intense speed in practice but not high volume. Can't race your workouts. The ability to put one's self out there in a race really matters, as obvious as it sounds (girls should read Lauren Fleshman's book, a multiple All American from Stanford). Most at the high school level don't benefit in the long run from high school mileage.
My brother and I were state champions and won a few of the national championship races after the season. The next year my younger teammate earned this honor. We all went to competitive Power 4 schools on scholarship. My younger teammate (a 4:08 mile guy) didn't run his 9th grade year but played football. He was a good football player and kudos to our state champion football coach for persuading him to run after seeing him complete a 4:40 mile in high top Converse shoes in 9th grade during a football time trial.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Top 5 in the State
That’s interesting but a lot of kids don’t run XC or track until high school. Plus puberty comes into effect. If they stay on the top 5 as a sophomore- then recruiting gets serious. And depending on the state- national rankings are important.
If this is track- run at new balance nationals to have good competition.
Anonymous wrote:Top 5 in the State
Anonymous wrote:OP here. We were told by the "recruiter", who wants to be paid around $5k up front, that we are already "behind", we need to get on it, that coaches are already looking at the Class of 2029. They promise to provide meal plans, nutrition advice, sports psychology, and virtual coaching....
I am skeptical for a number of reasons. The age seems young, what do kids who can't afford this amount of money do to get college scholarships, so many things can change between 8th grade to first year of college, and so forth.