Anonymous wrote:Flag football
Maybe lacrosse
Somewhat agree on baseball but they probably need a season or so to get up to speed
Swimming possible but may need a season or so to get up to speed
Agree on track
Anonymous wrote:Track and field/x-country. My son struggled to find sport that he enjoyed until he tried this in 7th grade. Really great experience for him - ended up getting good enough to be recruited for D1.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:If he has a good arm he might enjoy and pick up baseball. My son played Rec for years, and every year there are kids who are new to the game. What you can do to prepare him his teach him the game itself - if he has game sense (where to run, where to throw, how to communicate) he’ll do well as he learns the physical skills. Teach him to hit off a tee.
My son refuses to start new sports others are already good at (soccer and lacrosse for him) but when cross country and track were offered in Middle School he jumped in and was off and running (so to speak).
Thanks -I didn't realize baseball had newbies like that. it will be interesting to see if my son would do track/cross country. He's tall and has stamina, but gets bored easily. But maybe having an internal world would make running more enjoyable? I like that anyone can just get into it...
Anonymous wrote:If he has a good arm he might enjoy and pick up baseball. My son played Rec for years, and every year there are kids who are new to the game. What you can do to prepare him his teach him the game itself - if he has game sense (where to run, where to throw, how to communicate) he’ll do well as he learns the physical skills. Teach him to hit off a tee.
My son refuses to start new sports others are already good at (soccer and lacrosse for him) but when cross country and track were offered in Middle School he jumped in and was off and running (so to speak).