Anonymous wrote:
Anonymous wrote:I told my husband that he would be on the hook for all games for our kid on a travel team (bc the local option would have been plenty). He was up at 6am to get him to a game two counties away. I slept until 9am and will get another kid to their local game this afternoon.
After so many years of schlepping kids to sports every season, I’m starting to hate it. Every other weekend would be plenty. Better yet: one evening game during the week to keep the weekends free.
If I were queen of the world, I’d institute a 90 min running clock for baseball.
The one-hour running clock for indoor lax was awesome!
This is so enlightening. Will NOT be signing my kid up for baseball. Thank you for your wisdom.
-mom of littles
I actually think field sports have more reasonable hours than many others that depend on more limited venues.
For example:
ice hockey - ice time is harder to get than field time. I don't have kids in this sport, but have walked by plenty of early am games as a swim parent because often we are at facilities with both pools and ice sheets.
figure skating - see above
swimming - 7 am warmup for swim meets are common, as kids get older they may have practice before school (dealing with 530 am practice at the moment)
rowing - early morning practice, and early races. We dropped off a kid at the river today at 430 am.
many many more on this list.
I would guess that sports requiring ice time are the worst offenders since ice rinks are rarer than fields, gyms, pools, etc. At least in my neck of the woods.