Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anyone can be on the soccer team, but only the country club kids do the tennis.
Not true
The better tennis teams are packed with kids that have probably spent $10-$20K on tennis before 9th grade.
How would that much be spent?
You can very easily spend that when you consider private lessons are $100-$200 an hour, group sessions at $50-$75 and tournament travel. My guess is the elite juniors easily spend in the $40K- $50K range per year
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anyone can be on the soccer team, but only the country club kids do the tennis.
Not true
The better tennis teams are packed with kids that have probably spent $10-$20K on tennis before 9th grade.
How would that much be spent?
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anyone can be on the soccer team, but only the country club kids do the tennis.
Not true
The better tennis teams are packed with kids that have probably spent $10-$20K on tennis before 9th grade.
Anonymous wrote:We’re from the DMV and tennis is popular. And very very expensive. Your child can do it for fun and make the tennis team depending on the school, but will not get far because there are kids training and competing 6-7 days per week, all year long. We travel to Florida for training multiple times per year, and aren’t the only ones who do that. Plus the better tournaments are NOT in the DMV most of the time, you have to travel once your child reaches a certain level.
Anonymous wrote:If he doesn't know how to play a sport already, he can find success in football, wrestling, xc, track without years of prior training.
Golf and tennis he might not make the team - the other kids have been getting private lessons since they were toddlers.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:The experience is fun but it's not like the rest of the school comes out to watch you. You do it because you enjoy it and you enjoy the kids you do the sport with. More limited social experience. A couple of gathering during the season. Maybe a gift exchange if in the winter.
No one watches you in golf, and very few students watch tennis.
That is true for most sports: it is mostly the parents who come and watch the games. The only exception might be if the team is really good, but different sports will attract different crowds. A really good team in an unpopular sport will not attract the crowds who show up for a mediocre team in a popular sport.
Students go to football and basketball games because they are social events.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:The experience is fun but it's not like the rest of the school comes out to watch you. You do it because you enjoy it and you enjoy the kids you do the sport with. More limited social experience. A couple of gathering during the season. Maybe a gift exchange if in the winter.
No one watches you in golf, and very few students watch tennis.
That is true for most sports: it is mostly the parents who come and watch the games. The only exception might be if the team is really good, but different sports will attract different crowds. A really good team in an unpopular sport will not attract the crowds who show up for a mediocre team in a popular sport.
Anonymous wrote:One of my kids plays football, and it is great because he brings his gear to school and all; they practice at school, so I just pick him up after. It's been great for him socially as well. I had a very negative outlook about it, but he's yet to be injured, and our school's group of kids and parents are great. Football has been much easier than driving another kid around for a niche sport.
Anonymous wrote:Yes and this is why my talented tennis son wants to do football even though he will never start. I want to support him but I also feel like it’s a poor choice.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:The experience is fun but it's not like the rest of the school comes out to watch you. You do it because you enjoy it and you enjoy the kids you do the sport with. More limited social experience. A couple of gathering during the season. Maybe a gift exchange if in the winter.
No one watches you in golf, and very few students watch tennis.
This is a good point as well as the PPs. Nobody's watching or socializing around the sports. So just pick one you like and your circle will be made up of that. That's fine.
It's not like the 80s when you were cool on the football team and your GF wore your jersey and they all wore big class rings with football on them! And when pep rallies were cool! (Pep rallies haven't been cool since the 1990s)