Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:We had a tour guide at a t10 college who said she ran track or maybe it was cross country for a year at the college. Then quit. She made it sound like the sport was fighting in a bloody war and she had to quit. It was so over the top. Congrats on scheming into the t10 as a student-athlete sweetie.
You have no idea. For college XCTF, you’re required to compete in all three full-fledged seasons: cross-country, indoor track & outdoor track. You have to run 50+ miles per week year-round to stay in shape with a few week-long breaks throughout the year. It is mentally & physically exhausting.
Sounds easier than swimming.
It’s harder.
They both are easy
No athleticism involved just be skinny
Lol
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Love of the sport, camaraderie, being with equally driven and competitive people who share your interests and maintain similar schedules? So many reasons and no, most don’t think it’s a stepping stone into professional sports. Some people also perform best in a highly scheduled, intense environment.
I know elementary kids who spend every waking hour at tournaments - how on earth can that be "healthy"? It seems some parents are living vicariously.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:We had a tour guide at a t10 college who said she ran track or maybe it was cross country for a year at the college. Then quit. She made it sound like the sport was fighting in a bloody war and she had to quit. It was so over the top. Congrats on scheming into the t10 as a student-athlete sweetie.
You have no idea. For college XCTF, you’re required to compete in all three full-fledged seasons: cross-country, indoor track & outdoor track. You have to run 50+ miles per week year-round to stay in shape with a few week-long breaks throughout the year. It is mentally & physically exhausting.
Sounds easier than swimming.
It’s harder.
They both are easy
No athleticism involved just be skinny