Anonymous wrote:You sound exhausting.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:We knew a boy that was the opposite. Parents redshirted him and he was almost two years older than my son. He was a star player thru middle school. Top recruit for High School. Got to HS and was nothing special. But he had so much confidence from being the star player for 8 years.
Irrelevant. Redshirting doesn’t affect club sports, which she’s clearly talking about.
How wouldnt it affect club sports?
My kid plays club lacrosse, and her team is based on graduation year. She was born in 2008 and plays on a 2026 team. There are other girls who were born from late summer of 2006 through fall of 2008 all playing on 2026 team.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:We knew a boy that was the opposite. Parents redshirted him and he was almost two years older than my son. He was a star player thru middle school. Top recruit for High School. Got to HS and was nothing special. But he had so much confidence from being the star player for 8 years.
Irrelevant. Redshirting doesn’t affect club sports, which she’s clearly talking about.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:This makes a huge difference for swimmers. Consider this:
A 13 year old with a summer birthday is swimming against kids who are a month or less into the age of 11. In most cases, the 13 year old has an adult’s body. You can see when the kids line up. Same with making cuts for certain meets. Some kids can make those cuts weeks or days before aging out of that group and others would have to make that cut days into the new age. For example:
A kid who is 12 years and 11 months old will almost always more make the cut over a kid who is 11 years and 2 weeks old. Of course there are exceptions, but they are fairly rare.
My kid has a bad birthday for lots of swim cuts.
They don’t have a bad birthday they have competitive parents. My swim kid will be the slowest at any age group. So what.
Anonymous wrote:This makes a huge difference for swimmers. Consider this:
A 13 year old with a summer birthday is swimming against kids who are a month or less into the age of 11. In most cases, the 13 year old has an adult’s body. You can see when the kids line up. Same with making cuts for certain meets. Some kids can make those cuts weeks or days before aging out of that group and others would have to make that cut days into the new age. For example:
A kid who is 12 years and 11 months old will almost always more make the cut over a kid who is 11 years and 2 weeks old. Of course there are exceptions, but they are fairly rare.
My kid has a bad birthday for lots of swim cuts.
Anonymous wrote:We knew a boy that was the opposite. Parents redshirted him and he was almost two years older than my son. He was a star player thru middle school. Top recruit for High School. Got to HS and was nothing special. But he had so much confidence from being the star player for 8 years.
Anonymous wrote:My child has a terrible birthday. Worst day possible. It actually forced them to try harder to keep up with peers, and now my child is ranked nationally at that sport.