Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:^^I thought it was a great interview. I feel like the people who claim that it is always better to be a multi-sport athlete are often the same ones who tell you that "I love watching you play" is the only acceptable thing to say to a kid after a game. A lot people believe and repeat these things without giving much critical thought to their validity or relative importance in the scheme of things.
+1
Anonymous wrote:^^I thought it was a great interview. I feel like the people who claim that it is always better to be a multi-sport athlete are often the same ones who tell you that "I love watching you play" is the only acceptable thing to say to a kid after a game. A lot people believe and repeat these things without giving much critical thought to their validity or relative importance in the scheme of things.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Consider the source and the stream of revenue.
The source is a guy who specializes in fitness training and injury prevention at top clubs in Europe and who has a lot of coaching experience as well. His income stream depends on whether his training methods result in well-conditioning, successful athletes who avoid injury. Seems like a good person to weigh in on the matter. What about him do you find suspect?
1. He's not a doctor
2. He makes his living feeding soccer clubs players --- these clubs want their players focused on soccer.
I don't think most doctors have any kind of background that would help them in determining whether single-sport specialization vs multi-sport participation is more likely to enhance soccer talent. Orthopedists and certain other specialists would have insights as to which training regimens lead to or reduce injury. All the teams this guy and others like him work with would be consulting with the team doctors as well.
He seems to have worked primarily with soccer clubs in Europe (plus Australia and Russia). There is zero need for anyone to provide additional incentives for kids in those countries to focus on soccer. He is clearly right that the arguments for multi-sport participation in the U.S. and elsewhere tend to gloss over the fact that the vast majority of the world's top soccer players only ever played soccer growing up.
I personally think playing multiple sports is a fun way to spend your time as a kid, and I'd guess it can be helpful for developing talent for some sports. But I'm glad OP posted this, because I've always wondered why the multi-sport enthusiasts (who often seem to just quote American college coaches) overlook the reality of how soccer talent is developed in countries that have always produced large numbers of world-class soccer players.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Consider the source and the stream of revenue.
The source is a guy who specializes in fitness training and injury prevention at top clubs in Europe and who has a lot of coaching experience as well. His income stream depends on whether his training methods result in well-conditioning, successful athletes who avoid injury. Seems like a good person to weigh in on the matter. What about him do you find suspect?
1. He's not a doctor
2. He makes his living feeding soccer clubs players --- these clubs want their players focused on soccer.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Consider the source and the stream of revenue.
The source is a guy who specializes in fitness training and injury prevention at top clubs in Europe and who has a lot of coaching experience as well. His income stream depends on whether his training methods result in well-conditioning, successful athletes who avoid injury. Seems like a good person to weigh in on the matter. What about him do you find suspect?
Anonymous wrote:Consider the source and the stream of revenue.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:
This actually makes a ton of sense. I think people will hang onto the fact that he's saying that playing multiple sports at a high level is problem and not just playing multiple sports but I think he's 100% spot on when he says that the media only talks about the multiple sport athletes that make it but don't talk about all those that don't and that the media doesn't talk about all the single sport athletes that do excel.
And all the single sport athletes who do not make it.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:
This actually makes a ton of sense. I think people will hang onto the fact that he's saying that playing multiple sports at a high level is problem and not just playing multiple sports but I think he's 100% spot on when he says that the media only talks about the multiple sport athletes that make it but don't talk about all those that don't and that the media doesn't talk about all the single sport athletes that do excel.
And all the single sport athletes who do not make it.
Anonymous wrote:
This actually makes a ton of sense. I think people will hang onto the fact that he's saying that playing multiple sports at a high level is problem and not just playing multiple sports but I think he's 100% spot on when he says that the media only talks about the multiple sport athletes that make it but don't talk about all those that don't and that the media doesn't talk about all the single sport athletes that do excel.