Anonymous wrote:We quit soccer when our son couldn't play with his classmates. Great Falls Reston soccer would not allow DS to play with his classmates in first grade because he was born in 2012 and they were born in 2011. They were all 6 at the time, none of them were going to have a birthday during the season, and they were in the same first grade class. This was the rec teams not the pre-travel group. DS decided to add a second season of baseball because he really liked baseball and could play with his friends.
I get that there needs to be age brackets and the like but the cut offs at such a young age, without any opportunity for allowing some movement, is a bit ridiculous.
There are a number of sports that are available at an early age. Baseball and softball are available starting as early as 4 (blastball or t ball). Flag football starts early, heck I know kids playing Pee Wee tackle football at 6. Lacrosse and the like are all available.
I do think that kids drop out off sports that they are playing for fun and exercise when they start moving to 2 practices a week or 2 games a week and the time commitment starts to increase.
The pressure to play travel ball in a fair number of sports is crazy. As more kid leave for travel teams at an earlier age, there are fewer kids to play rec ball and rec ball becomes less fun.
We wanted DS to continue with soccer but the idea that he cannot play with his friends was a killer.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:My vote is it's because the crazy parents push soccer too hard too fast too much. Kids at age 9 and 10 are practicing two times sometimes three per week, and traveling every weekend. They just want to hang out with her friends...
3 times per week and then weekend games is standard for travel. Many more are putting their kid into training the other days. The trend is more, more, more...for FOMO. Some Clubs also enter many more tournaments at the young ages than others which means missing holiday weekends and friend's parties, etc. The majority of those soccer kids I've seen quit in middle school. Many pick up track/cross country or something else in HS.
Anonymous wrote:My vote is it's because the crazy parents push soccer too hard too fast too much. Kids at age 9 and 10 are practicing two times sometimes three per week, and traveling every weekend. They just want to hang out with her friends...
Anonymous wrote:This doesn't seem to account for how kids jump around sports. My kids did organized gymnastics, swimming, baseball, soccer, fencing, etc. For most, they would show an early drop out date, but they are in high school and have never spent a year in no sport at all.
