Anonymous wrote:Per a very recent graduate that swam with Marlins and Makos: Makos does not let you join the senior group until you are in high school. Regardless of AAAA times and Olympic Trials cuts.
Anonymous wrote:Per a very recent graduate that swam with Marlins and Makos: Makos does not let you join the senior group until you are in high school. Regardless of AAAA times and Olympic Trials cuts.
Anonymous wrote:At age 10, swimming 2-3x/week is good so that he can have other priorities and do other sports…and not get burnt out. We like makos. From my research and from what I hear from families is that machine and ncap push swimming 5x/week at earlier age, do not encourage or support doing other sports, and they are very “big” teams (multi-site, larger number of swimmers) which we don’t want.
Anonymous wrote:At age 10, swimming 2-3x/week is good so that he can have other priorities and do other sports…and not get burnt out. We like makos. From my research and from what I hear from families is that machine and ncap push swimming 5x/week at earlier age, do not encourage or support doing other sports, and they are very “big” teams (multi-site, larger number of swimmers) which we don’t want.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:I would go with Machine so there’s room for growth if he turns into a great swimmer.
I wouldn’t start with Machine if he isn’t finishing top 3 in A meets as a 10 year old.
First he should see where he is offered a spot. My kids swim for Sea Devils and I imagine he’d be offered a spot in Age Group 2 or possibly AG3. But if you’re in South Run, the AG3 kids at Sea Devils are finishing top 3 at Divisionals/some NVSL all stars.
NP - why? My 9 and 7 year olds did their Gears program for the first time last year. They swam in all our A meets, Divisionals, and All-Star relays. Machine has training groups for different levels; they’ve been fantastic for my kids.
Mainly because OP says that Sea Devils is the most convenient location. Her kid is 10, she can always switch after a year or two.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:I would go with Machine so there’s room for growth if he turns into a great swimmer.
I wouldn’t start with Machine if he isn’t finishing top 3 in A meets as a 10 year old.
First he should see where he is offered a spot. My kids swim for Sea Devils and I imagine he’d be offered a spot in Age Group 2 or possibly AG3. But if you’re in South Run, the AG3 kids at Sea Devils are finishing top 3 at Divisionals/some NVSL all stars.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:10 year old starting winter swim does not need 3-4 or more practices a week. 2 or 3 are good.
Yes, they do.
Why? I’m here at the MCSL all star meet with a number of teenagers who did not start swimming 4+ times a week until 12 or 13 (one who just placed top 3). No need to go crazy in your first year of winter swim. Find a program that works for your family and see how they do with a 2-3 day/wk program. You potentially have 8 more years of this. No need to rush things.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:I would go with Machine so there’s room for growth if he turns into a great swimmer.
I wouldn’t start with Machine if he isn’t finishing top 3 in A meets as a 10 year old.
First he should see where he is offered a spot. My kids swim for Sea Devils and I imagine he’d be offered a spot in Age Group 2 or possibly AG3. But if you’re in South Run, the AG3 kids at Sea Devils are finishing top 3 at Divisionals/some NVSL all stars.
NP - why? My 9 and 7 year olds did their Gears program for the first time last year. They swam in all our A meets, Divisionals, and All-Star relays. Machine has training groups for different levels; they’ve been fantastic for my kids.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:
Adding on: the hardest change for summer league swimmers who start club is the endurance factor. Often the warm up is 200 free out of the gate. Last night, I watched my child’s club practice, which included all 8-12 swimmers since it was an optional practice. My child (age 9) started with 200 free, then swam two 200 IMs, then moved to a 500 free, then did some 100 kicks, then some breaststroke/fly kick drills, then ended with 50 sprints off the blocks. They did not use fins the whole practice, and the practice was only 1 hour.
It takes a few months for new club swimmers to build to this level of stamina, and some summer swimmers never learn to love it. My child loves practice; she’s go every day if she could, and the more yardage, the better for her; she loathes summer league practices because they are too easy. When I was little, however, I hated the endurance stuff of club swim and relished summer league sprints. Everyone is different.
Don’t let the crazies scare you off. When your child joins club swim, s/he will be placed in the appropriate group for his/her ability. If speed and/or capacity is built, the child will move up to a more appropriate group. For 9 year olds, 200 IMs and 500s in practice are: 1. Crazy, 2. Not the norm. And before you tell me that’s what the fast kids do- my 10 year old rarely- once a month-ish- did more than a 100 in practice- an occasional 200 free. Never a 200 IM, never a full 100 of stroke, never a 300, 400, or 500 in practice. And my child had A or better times in all 100s and 200 IM.
Anonymous wrote:
Adding on: the hardest change for summer league swimmers who start club is the endurance factor. Often the warm up is 200 free out of the gate. Last night, I watched my child’s club practice, which included all 8-12 swimmers since it was an optional practice. My child (age 9) started with 200 free, then swam two 200 IMs, then moved to a 500 free, then did some 100 kicks, then some breaststroke/fly kick drills, then ended with 50 sprints off the blocks. They did not use fins the whole practice, and the practice was only 1 hour.
It takes a few months for new club swimmers to build to this level of stamina, and some summer swimmers never learn to love it. My child loves practice; she’s go every day if she could, and the more yardage, the better for her; she loathes summer league practices because they are too easy. When I was little, however, I hated the endurance stuff of club swim and relished summer league sprints. Everyone is different.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:I would go with Machine so there’s room for growth if he turns into a great swimmer.
I wouldn’t start with Machine if he isn’t finishing top 3 in A meets as a 10 year old.
First he should see where he is offered a spot. My kids swim for Sea Devils and I imagine he’d be offered a spot in Age Group 2 or possibly AG3. But if you’re in South Run, the AG3 kids at Sea Devils are finishing top 3 at Divisionals/some NVSL all stars.