Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Once you get beyond rec league, your sports through high school are a time and money suck, neither of which you will ever get back.
Truth. Also, parents push kids into sports for their own ego. It's not really what kids want.
Anonymous wrote:Once you get beyond rec league, your sports through high school are a time and money suck, neither of which you will ever get back.
Anonymous wrote:Some kids just have natural skill and ability and love playing. You sign them up in the beginning because it is fun. You continue because they like it. My DS9 is one of those that has some natural skill and loves it. He plays baseball and soccer and is pretty good at both. I'm not thinking beyond him playing for as long as he can/wants to. It is all driven by him. I think there is value in being on a team and working together, supporting your teammates, etc.
We are also a skiing family. He is an expert skier. We sort of forced that onewhen he was little because we love to go skiing so much. We lucked out that he took to it and really loves it.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Baseball is not full and has no barrier to entry, you can be quite bad and still play. My kid played until 13 and then transitioned to rowing. The intense physical exercise is great for him. There are other sports than football, basketball, soccer, baseball
Um a glove bat and cleats plus uniform is pretty costly but then again you mentioned rowing so youre SD is skewed.
Anonymous wrote:Here is some advice from someone who has college graduate former sports kids. Sports are not worth it. My kids have permanent physical and mental injuries from sports that we paid thousands for. They would have learned more in school without sports, have less pain and we would have more money.
Anonymous wrote:Once you get beyond rec league, your sports through high school are a time and money suck, neither of which you will ever get back.
Anonymous wrote:Baseball is not full and has no barrier to entry, you can be quite bad and still play. My kid played until 13 and then transitioned to rowing. The intense physical exercise is great for him. There are other sports than football, basketball, soccer, baseball
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:And I hate it when parents of good or even great young athletes act like they are on the Olympic or pro path when they are decidedly not.
Unless your kid is the second coming of Peyton Manning, keeping him out of football because if CTE is a perfectly rational decision. If the point is he likes sports, he wants to be involved in sports and you want him to have the benefits of being involved in sports, baseball, basketball or any other sport is perfectly fine.
Huh? How would you know your kid was the second coming in a sport they've never played?
Anonymous wrote:And I hate it when parents of good or even great young athletes act like they are on the Olympic or pro path when they are decidedly not.
Unless your kid is the second coming of Peyton Manning, keeping him out of football because if CTE is a perfectly rational decision. If the point is he likes sports, he wants to be involved in sports and you want him to have the benefits of being involved in sports, baseball, basketball or any other sport is perfectly fine.