Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:OP here. In the two+ months since I started this thread, DD has decided there is no way she could manage the fall HS sport along with her club sport schedule in the fall. She is going to try out for a winter HS sport, but knows she is unlikely to make the team. The missing out on social stuff due to her sport is something she has been doing for years already and something she fully expects to continue through high school and college.
That makes me sad about the state of sports! I know things are different than when we were in HS, but sports were such an integral part of my HS experience, and definitely one I want my kids to have. They like sports, so it’s not like I’m forcing them, but it seems like if they are really good, they might just play club to try to play that particular sport in college, but then, if they’re not good enough, they won’t even make the HS team. Is my type of experience dead?, where a decent athlete could play a role from the freshman team to making JV as a soph/junior and then Varsity as a junior or senior and knowing that your senior year is it, so you have to go for it and win that state championship with all your friends!?
Anonymous wrote:OP here. In the two+ months since I started this thread, DD has decided there is no way she could manage the fall HS sport along with her club sport schedule in the fall. She is going to try out for a winter HS sport, but knows she is unlikely to make the team. The missing out on social stuff due to her sport is something she has been doing for years already and something she fully expects to continue through high school and college.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:As long as she’s reasonably organized with decent grades, it’s totally fine.
It is doable but it is a lot. And your kid will miss out on a lot of social stuff. And yes, they'll be tired, prone to injury, etc. Doesn't mean they'll get injured or grades will suffer or all of the things. But all of the athletes that I know that did this have been injured due to overuse and/or playing injuries. Including mine. We backed off a bit and stopped shooting for D1 (which DC had a D1 offer but likely could have had more D1 options). DC ended up going to a high performing D3 team and is really happy with the decision (vs. others in the position who have been injured many times, are not playing, etc.)
My 2 cents.
Anonymous wrote:As long as she’s reasonably organized with decent grades, it’s totally fine.
Anonymous wrote:DD is in 8th grade. She plays a "spring" sport but her club team is really in season spring, summer, and fall, and then trains in the winter. Next year, in HS, she would like to play a fall sport (minimal cuts as I understand it) as well as her primary sport in the spring. Travel team will be on hold during the spring HS season but not during the fall. I am confident she could handle a winter sport, but the only one she plays/is interested in is not a team she is likely to make at our high school (even with a freshman, JV, and V team). Is this doable? I am thinking probably not if she wants to get good grades with all honors courses.
Anonymous wrote:What is the HS sport? When DD started playing for the school, I was surprised how her practiced times changed and were sometimes right after school but sometimes late at night. It would have been impossible to balance with a club sport in the same season because of the rotating practices. Check on that and see if they will be consistent.
The other thing that changed is how she still loved her sport but did get sad when she had to miss the occasional social event. This was a big change from middle school to when she was 15. In middle school she could have played 24/7. In HS she still wanted to train hard with intensity but doing the schedule you described wouldn’t have worked. She occasionally wanted to do some social stuff.