Anonymous wrote:Travel sports is a family decision. Who cares what other people do??
Anonymous wrote:Completely disagree. Sports can show you how to be part of a team, how to work together, push through during difficult times. They have value for everyone. Help develop who you are. FWIW, I was a kid who got eliminated from
Their travel team but then tried a different sport. Still had so much personal growth
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:While I have always admired highly athletic kids and wish them the best, I am just so glad that mine never fell into that category. The commitment required for travel sports sounds exhausting, and many of the parents seem insufferable. And for what? The vast majority of the kids end up putting the sport largely behind them, more often than not before college. I just don't get the appeal.
The parents like it. They like watching. They like hanging with the other parents. They often were athletic themselves and sometimes, not always, they perceive that it has a lot of social cache for themselves and their child.
I had a daughter who played a D3 sport in college. The group of parents for her travel team in high school was a whole scene. Lots of going out and drinking together. I let my husband partake and stayed home. But they enjoy it.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:While I have always admired highly athletic kids and wish them the best, I am just so glad that mine never fell into that category. The commitment required for travel sports sounds exhausting, and many of the parents seem insufferable. And for what? The vast majority of the kids end up putting the sport largely behind them, more often than not before college. I just don't get the appeal.
I don’t understand why people care so much about what other kids do. But I’ll bite..our kids enjoyed travel sports because they loved their sport, got frustrated in rec when kids missed games and practice at the drop of a hat, liked the competitive nature and overall higher skill and commitment levels in travel. None of them had any interest or desire to play in college. But they made great friends, stayed fit, and had great time management skills which served them well in high school and college.
Why isn’t the same disdain shown to non athletic extracurriculars? It gets old.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:I see some parents are comparing travel sports to other non-sport extracurriculars. Can someone share what non-sport extracurricular activities cost as much as travel sports, requires as much time from the parents, and puts as much stress on kids' bodies?
I have a kid who did children’s theater for years and a kid who did travel soccer and theater was a lot worse. Parents were nastier, rehearsal schedules much more intense than the travel soccer, and the parent volunteer stagehand requirements were far more than anything I saw in travel soccer. Cost was about equivalent.
Anonymous wrote:I see some parents are comparing travel sports to other non-sport extracurriculars. Can someone share what non-sport extracurricular activities cost as much as travel sports, requires as much time from the parents, and puts as much stress on kids' bodies?
Anonymous wrote:I’ll agree to this only if you also agree that no kids should do children’s theater or music unless they have a chance of being in Hollywood movies, Broadway, or a major symphony.
Personally I might seriously consider this tradeoff if it spares me the pain of yet one more youth theater performance.
Anonymous wrote:B team, baby! More local travel, fewer crazy parents. Still a good experience for many kids. Some of them will grow into wonderful high school and college athletes; some will tap out in 7th grade. It's all fine. Whatever each family decides.
Anonymous wrote:my DD is 13 and has played travel soccer since 8. She has always been athletic and even tried a lower level travel team for one year during covid and got frustrated with the skill, lack of commitment and the coaching so we went back to the higher level team. She has great friends, they have fun together, they all enjoy the game and it is great exercise. Yes- its a big time commitment and it is expensive but the happiness and fun makes it worth it. Plus- she has an outlet that isn't school related. She has gotten great opportunities to travel to places we might not necessarily have gone, will go to Europe next summer and she has recently become interested in playing in college. It might open some doors!
Anonymous wrote:Don’t travel sports start way before you can tell if they have that kind of potential?