Anonymous wrote:Going back to rec. My son was on the fence about continuing with travel - its no longer fun for him - and the spring season was going to determine if he continued.
Anonymous wrote:We are considering it. Sometimes in our league the "good" rec teams are full of returning players and your dc gets stuck losing every game on a team of random kids with someone's random older cousin coaching, but hey, you get what you pay for.
Anonymous wrote:We are considering it. Sometimes in our league the "good" rec teams are full of returning players and your dc gets stuck losing every game on a team of random kids with someone's random older cousin coaching, but hey, you get what you pay for.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:My son’s travel team one year was a disaster. Coach insane (like needed professional help) and games a mishmash of his team and whatever kids they could find. Bad situation. So we switched to rec with his school buddies.
Positives: played with a smile, had fun, was best player in the entire league by a mile.
Negatives: was best player in the entire league without breaking a sweat.
We talked to another club with a friendly coach and started training with them a few days a week to stay sharp.
In end depends on your goals. If you want college level or beyond going to rec is kind of a temporary, only in case of emergencies and only if you supplement. If you just want kid to take a break and rediscover love of playing than maybe a good option.
Anonymous wrote:My son’s travel team one year was a disaster. Coach insane (like needed professional help) and games a mishmash of his team and whatever kids they could find. Bad situation. So we switched to rec with his school buddies.
Positives: played with a smile, had fun, was best player in the entire league by a mile.
Negatives: was best player in the entire league without breaking a sweat.
We talked to another club with a friendly coach and started training with them a few days a week to stay sharp.
In end depends on your goals. If you want college level or beyond going to rec is kind of a temporary, only in case of emergencies and only if you supplement. If you just want kid to take a break and rediscover love of playing than maybe a good option.
Anonymous wrote:My son’s travel team one year was a disaster. Coach insane (like needed professional help) and games a mishmash of his team and whatever kids they could find. Bad situation. So we switched to rec with his school buddies.
Positives: played with a smile, had fun, was best player in the entire league by a mile.
Negatives: was best player in the entire league without breaking a sweat.
We talked to another club with a friendly coach and started training with them a few days a week to stay sharp.
In end depends on your goals. If you want college level or beyond going to rec is kind of a temporary, only in case of emergencies and only if you supplement. If you just want kid to take a break and rediscover love of playing than maybe a good option.
Anonymous wrote:We can afford to lose the money for travel, but that doesn't mean it wouldn't hurt. It feels a lot less stressful to pay $100 for rec, take the year off and go back to travel next year. My girls have a lot of friends who play in our local rec league so I'm hoping that eases the sting of not being on 'their team' this year. Just us or anyone else?