Anonymous wrote:McLean is the closest to Yorktown, which has year round swimming team.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Back in the day Burke Racqet and Swim had a good swim team based out of their pool. (robinson/Lake Braddock area) But, there was a problem with the coach and they renamed the program (or gor a new program) - they had some Olympic swimmer train from there in the 90s, but yeah, now maryland is better.
Swimming is more competitive here than football. More people swim year round on swim teams than other sports.
I second the comment that college acceptance is what the kids train for here.
"Problem with the coach" is like saying Josh Duggar has a problem with his sisters!
Anonymous wrote:Back in the day Burke Racqet and Swim had a good swim team based out of their pool. (robinson/Lake Braddock area) But, there was a problem with the coach and they renamed the program (or gor a new program) - they had some Olympic swimmer train from there in the 90s, but yeah, now maryland is better.
Swimming is more competitive here than football. More people swim year round on swim teams than other sports.
I second the comment that college acceptance is what the kids train for here.
Anonymous wrote:Back in the day Burke Racqet and Swim had a good swim team based out of their pool. (robinson/Lake Braddock area) But, there was a problem with the coach and they renamed the program (or gor a new program) - they had some Olympic swimmer train from there in the 90s, but yeah, now maryland is better.
Swimming is more competitive here than football. More people swim year round on swim teams than other sports.
I second the comment that college acceptance is what the kids train for here.
Anonymous wrote:Some more color on the original post, our child participated in both swimming and football however decided a few months ago to focus just on swimming. He's very tall for 7th grade, was the qb for his youth football team, over 6', but given all of the studies on concussions we convinced him to stop playing football this year.
Is northern Virginia like the south where football dominates the high school culture both athletically and socially or is northern Virginia high school sports more diversified?
Anonymous wrote:We are moving to Virginia from southern California. We have a child that is a year round swimmer entering 8th grade.
I would like to get any opinions on how swimming is viewed as a high school sport in northern Virginia? Is it a respected sport or is it considered a minor sport with minimal interest?
The high school pyramids we are looking at are Robinson, McLean, Lake Braddock and maybe Chantilly. Is any one of these schools have a particularly good or bad for swimmers?
Thanks in advance for any feedback.