Anonymous wrote:Definitely not my thing. I have always wondered why people do this and spend money on it. Seems like such a waste, more for the parents entertainment than for the kids. I guess if your child really likes the sport then ok, but still I have a hard time believing that many children are really that into that particular sport. I would rather be at home with the whole family, just hanging out.
Anonymous wrote:Definitely not my thing. I have always wondered why people do this and spend money on it. Seems like such a waste, more for the parents entertainment than for the kids. I guess if your child really likes the sport then ok, but still I have a hard time believing that many children are really that into that particular sport. I would rather be at home with the whole family, just hanging out.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Every time I'm in a hotel in a random city -- think Tulsa or Raleigh or Cincinnati -- I run into hordes of preteens/teens and some parents in town for a sports tournament. Just talking to some of these people they're often in town from cities all across the country for a national tournament. Did you do this kind of travel sport yourself or with your kids? I know everyone here always says it's terrible -- very costly; on the road all the time; no family life etc. But I don't know -- something about it looks appealing. If you play on the same team thru middle and high school, you are traveling with the same kids for almost 7 yrs. I'd imagine those are some tight friendships amongst the kids and the parents. Plus the family is together and frankly who else are you hanging out with in Tulsa? And what are you really missing out on on the weekends in Reston or Burke?
Why are people so down on travel sports? Is it just about cost? I imagine it's thousands of dollars per yr but then everyone posting here always brags about "only" making 300k, so is it that big of a sacrifice to spend 15k on a travel sport?
The teams are constantly changing. Player are dropped, new players added, etc. The cost is ridiculous. And the outcomes are marginal. Would you do all of that for a DIII scholarship? This should not be something that you want for your life or your kid unless you kid truly is a standout athlete.
These families wouldn't do it if it were a true hardship for them.
I played on a club team that traveled a lot. Yes, it cost my parents money and we spent summers traveling. For me, it ended up paying for college (DI - to PP, DIII don't offer athletic scholarships). But most importantly, the things I learned from playing team sports and from playing at an advanced level have served me very well in life. I can't overstate how much it gave me. My mom was friends with teammate's moms so hanging out with them wasn't so painful for her. And once I could drive myself to practices, it was much better.

Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Every time I'm in a hotel in a random city -- think Tulsa or Raleigh or Cincinnati -- I run into hordes of preteens/teens and some parents in town for a sports tournament. Just talking to some of these people they're often in town from cities all across the country for a national tournament. Did you do this kind of travel sport yourself or with your kids? I know everyone here always says it's terrible -- very costly; on the road all the time; no family life etc. But I don't know -- something about it looks appealing. If you play on the same team thru middle and high school, you are traveling with the same kids for almost 7 yrs. I'd imagine those are some tight friendships amongst the kids and the parents. Plus the family is together and frankly who else are you hanging out with in Tulsa? And what are you really missing out on on the weekends in Reston or Burke?
Why are people so down on travel sports? Is it just about cost? I imagine it's thousands of dollars per yr but then everyone posting here always brags about "only" making 300k, so is it that big of a sacrifice to spend 15k on a travel sport?
The teams are constantly changing. Player are dropped, new players added, etc. The cost is ridiculous. And the outcomes are marginal. Would you do all of that for a DIII scholarship? This should not be something that you want for your life or your kid unless you kid truly is a standout athlete.
Anonymous wrote:we are a travel hockey family. I have absolutely no hope or expectation that my child will play in college. There comes a point in hockey where you have just outgrown a rec/house team and you don't really have a choice but to play travel if you want to progress and continue to grow with the sport. The amount of time and money is a little nutty. Well, the money is really nutty. And I can't stand some of the other parents. But, my kid loves hockey. We aren't living vicariously through him because none of us ever played it. We are on our 7th year of travel. Some kids are the same. Some aren't. Played for a variety of coaches. He wants to play in high school. We do it because he loves it. And to be honest, those tournaments are where a lot of close bonds among the team are formed.
Anonymous wrote:I loved it, but ideas a girl in the 80s.
The first team I landed on stayed together from 4th-11th grade. We won multiple VA State champs, Regionals, etc. we did not have open tryouts. The roster changed very little.
My boys play and they've had a constantly different team and many different coaches in the 2-3 years they've played.
I don't like the business it has become or how gigantic some of the clubs have gotten.
The heart is missing. It's a $ game now.
Anonymous wrote:I loved it, but ideas a girl in the 80s.
The first team I landed on stayed together from 4th-11th grade. We won multiple VA State champs, Regionals, etc. we did not have open tryouts. The roster changed very little.
My boys play and they've had a constantly different team and many different coaches in the 2-3 years they've played.
I don't like the business it has become or how gigantic some of the clubs have gotten.
The heart is missing. It's a $ game now.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:I always think this when the little league world series is televised in August-Sept. It's kids who are the best on their local little league teams who form an all star team and that team plays all over the state, all over the district, regions, and then forms the national team that goes to Williamsport Pa. I don't think kids are getting added/dropped; often the announcers will say how the kids have been together since age 8-9 and are playing on the national stage at age 12-13. I always think those friendships must be so tight for those boys and for their parents. I realize only 1 team will make it to Pa. and it's unlikely to be yours, but it would be so fun to play all around the state, region, district, as far as they could get. And I imagine the kids have a ball staying in one hotel after the next.
Bc it's a family friendly telecast, the announcers always get into the kids' personal history, and I think the challenge is if you have a job or a professional life requiring your constant presence. Seems like for many kids on the team -- their dads own their own business (a large enough one w employees who'll manage it when he's out of town 2-3 days/wk all summer) and moms are SAHMs. Can't imagine how it'd work if the parents were doctors or lawyers or had any kind of job where they worked for others -- it'd be hard to say you just aren't available for much of the summer bc you're following your 12 yr olds baseball team to rural Pa.
Williamsport reminds me of the idyllic boys of summer experience every year. Damn -- I would take 3 months off work to drive the team around if my DS were to get on an all star team that was on that road.