Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:So your kid sits out all those years everyone else is learning how to play the game right way, and now he wants to come back in.
Grow some backbone. Your kid mad his bed. Time to lie in it.
This attitude is prevalent in kids sports nowadays with type-A parents pushing their kids to specialize, play travel as 7 year olds. SAD.
Great athletes can and do switch sports. Case in point, my cousin played lacrosse for years then dropped it to try soccer when he was 11. He was a natural. Fast forward, he is playing Division One college soccer on a full scholarship!
That other poster is crazy. Even little league series folks were promoting the idea that kids should not specialize and should play more than two sports / play outside more. They even had PSAs about it.
NP here. Sort of off the subject, but I have a kid who is pretty decent at baseball and have been feeling the pressure to get him into travel. All of his close friends who love baseball are doing it and I hate feeling like he's being left behind. He does play basketball in winter and summer, so he's by no means specializing in baseball, and I recognize I need to shake off the pressure, but...it's there. He is not doing it and my husband definitely does not want him to do it. We have other commitments so logistically it wouldn't work. Rationally I know all this.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:So your kid sits out all those years everyone else is learning how to play the game right way, and now he wants to come back in.
Grow some backbone. Your kid mad his bed. Time to lie in it.
This attitude is prevalent in kids sports nowadays with type-A parents pushing their kids to specialize, play travel as 7 year olds. SAD.
Great athletes can and do switch sports. Case in point, my cousin played lacrosse for years then dropped it to try soccer when he was 11. He was a natural. Fast forward, he is playing Division One college soccer on a full scholarship!
That other poster is crazy. Even little league series folks were promoting the idea that kids should not specialize and should play more than two sports / play outside more. They even had PSAs about it.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:So your kid sits out all those years everyone else is learning how to play the game right way, and now he wants to come back in.
Grow some backbone. Your kid mad his bed. Time to lie in it.
This attitude is prevalent in kids sports nowadays with type-A parents pushing their kids to specialize, play travel as 7 year olds. SAD.
Great athletes can and do switch sports. Case in point, my cousin played lacrosse for years then dropped it to try soccer when he was 11. He was a natural. Fast forward, he is playing Division One college soccer on a full scholarship!
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:So your kid sits out all those years everyone else is learning how to play the game right way, and now he wants to come back in.
Grow some backbone. Your kid mad his bed. Time to lie in it.
NP: what? This is nonsense. My 10yo has a 12yo kid on his fall ball team (LL majors) who has never played organized baseball in his life, and he is very much welcome! If it is a rec league there is no reason the kid shouldn’t sign up. The kid I mentioned above is working hard and contributing to the team- they’ve only had 2 games so far and he’s gotten two hits (and struck out the rest of the time yes)- only plays RF for now but is working hard to improve. There is a place for everyone. While her kid is likely to be one of the weaker kids on a team (for now) that doesn’t mean he shouldn’t play and learn. If he works hard he can catch up surprisingly quickly (especially if he is athletic in general)- might even surpass some of the kids who’ve been playing for years. You can’t teach talent and that will become more and more obvious as the kids get older.
Anonymous wrote:So your kid sits out all those years everyone else is learning how to play the game right way, and now he wants to come back in.
Grow some backbone. Your kid mad his bed. Time to lie in it.
Anonymous wrote:So your kid sits out all those years everyone else is learning how to play the game right way, and now he wants to come back in.
Grow some backbone. Your kid mad his bed. Time to lie in it.
Anonymous wrote:Thanks so much for the response. He’s doing other things for the fall so we were thinking about the spring but I think he’s aged out of Little League by that time. I’m looking for a low key fun league for 13 year olds.