Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:I wonder what this supposed backroom meeting of parents of kids with summer birthdays who also happen to do summer swim looked like. How was it arranged. Did someone start a Facebook group called "Parents of July and August Kiddos!" and then quietly blue pill its members until a coalition could be formed. Does everyone in the diabolical cabal also redshirt their kids and if so is that why every year someone on this website starts a thread titled "There's a 9 year old in my child's kindergarten class -- why."
So many questions and so little time. Someone should write a DaVinci Code style book on the conspiracy.
😂😂😂 Well, I’m from another state and June 1st was the summer league cut-off for every single summer league, even when I was little. And I’m old. Think: swimming summer league in 1970s and 1980s. So it must have been SOMETHING to write those letters and use long-distance charges to conspire with all the summer leagues around the U.S. to orchestrate this rule.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:If your child is a swimmer, there is always a birthday that isn’t as good.
Short Course Champs, PVS - March 20-ish
NCSAs - March 27-ish
Summer league all over the entire U.S.! - June 1st
Long Course Champs, PVS - July 20-ish
You know who has the worst birthday? Late Feb and early March birthdays. They get screwed for short course champs & NCSAs, and aren’t that much older at Long Course Champs.
If your child summer swims and plays travel baseball, a May birthday may stink for summer league but is awesome for travel ball.
FWIW, my child has an October birthday and is 9. And my child likely made All-Stars in two events today.
Not surprising. Fall birthday kids do well in summer swim.
Anonymous wrote:When did summer swim parents get so whiny?
Anonymous wrote:That won't work for summer swim. Need a consistent age up date or it would be an automation nightmare
Anonymous wrote:I have a June 2nd birthday kid and I still agree with OP. Winter swimming (which all my kids do) you age up the day of your birthday. I had this happen to a friend where they literally aged up the second day of a meet. They swam day 1 of the two day meet as a 10 year old and day 2 as an 11 year old. It should absolutely be the same for summer swim.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:I have a question in the opposite direction, about HS seniors and college freshmen super seniors. If a kid will turn 19 during the last days of HS senior year, I assume that means their last season of summer swim has to be the season after their junior year of HS, not the year of their HS graduation?
Nope. 19 after June 1 = 18 for summer swim. That’s also why you see some college swimmers come back to NVSL after their freshman year in college. One was a league record breaker this summer.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:My kid is an end of May birthday. It is what it is. The cutoff has to be somewhere.
The cutoff should be Aug 1. The kids will be swimming their correct age.
Anonymous wrote:I wonder what this supposed backroom meeting of parents of kids with summer birthdays who also happen to do summer swim looked like. How was it arranged. Did someone start a Facebook group called "Parents of July and August Kiddos!" and then quietly blue pill its members until a coalition could be formed. Does everyone in the diabolical cabal also redshirt their kids and if so is that why every year someone on this website starts a thread titled "There's a 9 year old in my child's kindergarten class -- why."
So many questions and so little time. Someone should write a DaVinci Code style book on the conspiracy.