Anonymous wrote:[b]Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Welcome to 2023 when kids specialize at 6 and burn out at 12
Also a former D1 athlete and I agree completely. It takes a unique combination of talent and an inner drive that most kids just do not have. A lot has changed about youth sports, but I think that is a constant. A lot of parents think they can mold their child into a great athlete. Very few have the talent that makes all the time and money worth it, and even fewer are willing to put themselves through the day in and day out hard training in their teen years when there are so many other competing interests.
So True and Accurate!!! I might be guilty.....![]()
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Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Welcome to 2023 when kids specialize at 6 and burn out at 12
So true!
Puberty is a game changer. Most of these parents that are jumping on this bandwagon are doing it out of insecurity and fear of missing out. Most never played a sport competitively. I was a D1 athlete and I don’t push my kids; if they want to be competitive they need to push themselves.[b] Their “favorite” sport may even change after puberty as new skills and strengths emerge. Just keep your kid in as many things as he wants to do, so long as it fits with your schedule and it works for your family. Make sure he stays physically fit. Let him specialize later when HE TELLS YOU that he wants more lacrosse training and less of whatever. Personally, I loved basketball and baseball until I was about 11 years old. All the kids grew and I grew later. Turned out in soccer speed was more important than size and brute strength, so I developed more skill as a smaller quick player. Then, when I finally grew, I was very powerful. That was unexpected because until age 11 it was kind of a 3rd tier sport to me. I notice similar things in my kids. My 16 year old changed her sports at 11 years old and tried some sports that weren’t even on my radar screen. My 13 year old, I thought would be a runner, but has decided to focus on swimming. My youngest is 7 and does a variety of things. Right now she thinks ballet is everything (eeewww, I don’t know why, but we just support what she wants). I fully expect her to change her mind like the others did in a few years.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:I was picking up my son from a baseball training facility last week, and I was gobsmacked to see a dad show up with his what appeared to be kindergarten kid. The kid was tiny. T-ball tiny.
At $130+ an hour I truly don’t get it.
The place was full of 5’7 dads and their equally tiny kids. Sports marketing has clearly tapped into something absolutely genius.
Where did this all start is this the Tiger Woods just do it phenomenon? Setting aside that Tiger was a physical beast. As are most successful athletes. We’ve lost our collective minds.
When the colleges stopped admitting students based on smarts everyone pivoted to sports as a way to get in the door. The irony is now admissions are even less equitable when wealthy kids are receiving private coaching at age seven. It’s madness.
Anonymous wrote:Welcome to 2023 when kids specialize at 6 and burn out at 12
Anonymous wrote:I was picking up my son from a baseball training facility last week, and I was gobsmacked to see a dad show up with his what appeared to be kindergarten kid. The kid was tiny. T-ball tiny.
At $130+ an hour I truly don’t get it.
The place was full of 5’7 dads and their equally tiny kids. Sports marketing has clearly tapped into something absolutely genius.
Where did this all start is this the Tiger Woods just do it phenomenon? Setting aside that Tiger was a physical beast. As are most successful athletes. We’ve lost our collective minds.
Anonymous wrote:I was picking up my son from a baseball training facility last week, and I was gobsmacked to see a dad show up with his what appeared to be kindergarten kid. The kid was tiny. T-ball tiny.
At $130+ an hour I truly don’t get it.
The place was full of 5’7 dads and their equally tiny kids. Sports marketing has clearly tapped into something absolutely genius.
Where did this all start is this the Tiger Woods just do it phenomenon? Setting aside that Tiger was a physical beast. As are most successful athletes. We’ve lost our collective minds.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:I hired a (less-expensive) trainer/basketball coach for my son at age 10 only for a limited time to teach him proper shooting form...THAT was a great investment at the time because since then he shoots properly so doesn't have to unlearn bad shooting form. He's 12 now and I still haven't hired him a trainer but at his level, I may consider it now. I do pay for general summer camps and occasional group training sessions (apx $50/hour).
This, and the baseball PP above, are examples that make sense, and are reasonable. I can see 8-10+ year-olds getting 1-1 instruction to work on a sport-specific technique. For what you describe for your son, private coaching doesn't seem to be a need at all.
Anonymous wrote:I hired a (less-expensive) trainer/basketball coach for my son at age 10 only for a limited time to teach him proper shooting form...THAT was a great investment at the time because since then he shoots properly so doesn't have to unlearn bad shooting form. He's 12 now and I still haven't hired him a trainer but at his level, I may consider it now. I do pay for general summer camps and occasional group training sessions (apx $50/hour).