Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:My DS swims competitively year round. Every one of his friends from his club team also swims for their HS team. They all go to their club practice and show up at their HS practice once a week - more for the social aspect and not the actual practice. They will miss a HS meet for a championship meet (NCAP Invite for example has always conflicted with a HS dual meet and the club swimmers skip the HS meet in favor of NCAP Invite.) One of my son's HS teammates was the VA State Champ in her event. It was a huge deal for her to compete in HS order to qualify for the state meet and win the state championship. Also, HS teams keep records. If your son is really good, he might be able to break a HS record. And HS swimming is fun!
There is visability you will not receive at nationals which you will have as a state meet champion for college scholarships.
Good God no.
No one cares about state champs.
We saw at least 2 PVS swimmers in A finals at nationals this week. Phoebe Bacon and Tori Huske will get any D1 college scholarship they want even if they never attend another HS meet.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:My DS swims competitively year round. Every one of his friends from his club team also swims for their HS team. They all go to their club practice and show up at their HS practice once a week - more for the social aspect and not the actual practice. They will miss a HS meet for a championship meet (NCAP Invite for example has always conflicted with a HS dual meet and the club swimmers skip the HS meet in favor of NCAP Invite.) One of my son's HS teammates was the VA State Champ in her event. It was a huge deal for her to compete in HS order to qualify for the state meet and win the state championship. Also, HS teams keep records. If your son is really good, he might be able to break a HS record. And HS swimming is fun!
There is visability you will not receive at nationals which you will have as a state meet champion for college scholarships.
Anonymous wrote:My DS swims competitively year round. Every one of his friends from his club team also swims for their HS team. They all go to their club practice and show up at their HS practice once a week - more for the social aspect and not the actual practice. They will miss a HS meet for a championship meet (NCAP Invite for example has always conflicted with a HS dual meet and the club swimmers skip the HS meet in favor of NCAP Invite.) One of my son's HS teammates was the VA State Champ in her event. It was a huge deal for her to compete in HS order to qualify for the state meet and win the state championship. Also, HS teams keep records. If your son is really good, he might be able to break a HS record. And HS swimming is fun!
Anonymous wrote:To my shame, I have no idea about high school swim teams and why one needs to enroll into them, as we are on year-round swim team doing USA swimming official meets.
Lets say, a swimmer has time cuts for his desired college team at 16-18 already from PVS championships/sectionals. Does he need to compete at METROS or apply for "scholar athlete" designation, or colleges only look at your time cuts?
Anonymous wrote:NP. I think it is really fun to be on a HS sports team (I was on one myself) but it seems we have differing world views on that point.
Anonymous wrote:He is in the middle school, so it's more of a practical, going forward question. Our private school swim team is pretty slow comparing to his best times. He is much younger, but already faster than their fastest 16 y.o. (by a huge margin, would lap on hundreds). He was asking if he had to attend the workouts with his school team if he was to join, and how his workouts would look like with such speed discrepancy. Kids in year-round swimming are worked to the limit, and he can't afford slow workouts before school. He badly needs sleep.
What does it give in practical terms to participate in meets for your HS, but not doing any workouts with them? He can socialize with his classmates anyway, outside pool.