Anonymous wrote:Does any of this depend at all on if your kid is actually playing? If they are the third string field goal kicker with almost no chance of actually getting in the game, are you as likely to go?
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:My (non athlete) college student would hate if we visited her that often. She competes at a different activity and we only plan to attend if her team make the championships. Are athletes less independent than non athletes?
This is completely non responsive to the op, which asks specifically about sitting in the stands and watching a son play a dozen D1 football games at a very high level.
“Independence” is irrelevant. So are your daughter’s dance events
Op's decision making is what is low level. OP can to decide to go to the games or not. What DCUM thinks about it is irrelevant.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Clearly you don't have an athlete or you were one of the crappy parents who was MIA for their games.Anonymous wrote:Your kid going away to college is a great opportunity/time for you to pick up new hobbies, skills, or friendships!
It doesn't make someone a crappy parent to have their own lives once their kids go off to college. I would go to MAYBE one per semester.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:I am not AT ALL a sports person, but for a D1 national contender team, if we could easily afford it, I'd go to all the home games and to any easily accessible away games. Why not?
Big football games are not at all like swim meets or fencing. Sounds like parent attendance is the norm.
You can watch all the games on TV…it’s one of the few sports where you can actually watch without having to physically be there…while in fact you have to physically attend most swim or fencing meets if you want to watch your kid.
Yeah, but attending in person is a social event in a way that swim meets are not. There's a reason that these stadiums fill up with 50,000 people or whatever. The games -- the marching band, the mascot, the dance line, the tailgating, all of it -- are events beyond the game in a way that no other college activity is. I have deep reservations about the amount of time, attention, and money US universities commit to big sports, but I think it would be churlish not to enjoy the upside.
Obvious, if OP and her family don't find traveling to/ attending the games fun, OR if attending would be financially stressful / eat into other commitments (to work, younger children, weekend commitments like church, whatever) then I wouldn't attend all the games. But if it's fun, and doable, why not?
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:I am not AT ALL a sports person, but for a D1 national contender team, if we could easily afford it, I'd go to all the home games and to any easily accessible away games. Why not?
Big football games are not at all like swim meets or fencing. Sounds like parent attendance is the norm.
You can watch all the games on TV…it’s one of the few sports where you can actually watch without having to physically be there…while in fact you have to physically attend most swim or fencing meets if you want to watch your kid.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:My (non athlete) college student would hate if we visited her that often. She competes at a different activity and we only plan to attend if her team make the championships. Are athletes less independent than non athletes?
This is completely non responsive to the op, which asks specifically about sitting in the stands and watching a son play a dozen D1 football games at a very high level.
“Independence” is irrelevant. So are your daughter’s dance events
Anonymous wrote:I am not AT ALL a sports person, but for a D1 national contender team, if we could easily afford it, I'd go to all the home games and to any easily accessible away games. Why not?
Big football games are not at all like swim meets or fencing. Sounds like parent attendance is the norm.
Anonymous wrote:Clearly you don't have an athlete or you were one of the crappy parents who was MIA for their games.Anonymous wrote:Your kid going away to college is a great opportunity/time for you to pick up new hobbies, skills, or friendships!
Anonymous wrote:My (non athlete) college student would hate if we visited her that often. She competes at a different activity and we only plan to attend if her team make the championships. Are athletes less independent than non athletes?
Anonymous wrote:My kid may be doing a sport a plane ride away next year. I expect to be able to go to zero games