Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:We left when my swimmer was in 9th grade, his old team did not have committed swimmers and the head coach was not very engaged. They were horrible when we left and my child never spoke to them on deck.
Similar situation. Another HS swimmer. Left club we were at since 8 years old. Coach was committed, but fellow swimmers not as committed. Club and old coach won’t speak to DC.
My swimmer is now in college and it seems very silly now, but at the time I was really pissed at how immature the coaches were to a child.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:We left when my swimmer was in 9th grade, his old team did not have committed swimmers and the head coach was not very engaged. They were horrible when we left and my child never spoke to them on deck.
Similar situation. Another HS swimmer. Left club we were at since 8 years old. Coach was committed, but fellow swimmers not as committed. Club and old coach won’t speak to DC.
Anonymous wrote:To get away from toxic coach
Anonymous wrote:It’s disappointing to hear about so many petty and immature coaches. I expect this more from dance studios and gymnastics gyms from what I have heard from a few friends, but not from swim. Switching clubs is common and shouldn’t cause so much drama. And switching USA swimming clubs is a snap compared to the ordeal of switching soccer clubs in my state after the start of the season. It required writing a letter to the state youth soccer association, letters from both coaches to the state youth soccer association, etc. And even then, everyone was an adult and gave my kid high fives when we saw them at games. We have had a few swimmers come from other teams and some leave for other teams, and it always stays amicable.
OP, hope the coaches are normal about it, but if they aren’t, then you know you made the right decision.