Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:You can’t just pick up a sport in high school usually. You need to play from a young age, but there the schools don’t really fund this pipeline. It’s just weird that schools do fund sports at the high school level when you can’t start in high school [img]
Every high school in this area has sports that don't cut. If you want to start in a competitive sport like basketball, you will need to have started earlier, but it's not true at all that you can't start a sport in high school.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Why on earth would we subsidize youth sports?!? How about medications, mental health services, teacher’s salaries, better public transportation, food security, and the list goes on.
Get a grip, OP.
Then high schools should stop funding sports
I agree, but this is the world we live in. I don't want anything more to go to sports. The rest has to go to health, food aid, safety, etc. Life-sustaining things for the community. I couldn't care less about sports teams. They're not essential.
The Fine Arts aren't essential either. Let's cut all art and music programs too
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Why on earth would we subsidize youth sports?!? How about medications, mental health services, teacher’s salaries, better public transportation, food security, and the list goes on.
Get a grip, OP.
Then high schools should stop funding sports
I agree, but this is the world we live in. I don't want anything more to go to sports. The rest has to go to health, food aid, safety, etc. Life-sustaining things for the community. I couldn't care less about sports teams. They're not essential.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:You can’t just pick up a sport in high school usually. You need to play from a young age, but there the schools don’t really fund this pipeline. It’s just weird that schools do fund sports at the high school level when you can’t start in high school [img]
Anonymous wrote:
Every high school in this area has sports that don't cut. If you want to start in a competitive sport like basketball, you will need to have started earlier, but it's not true at all that you can't start a sport in high school.
I tend to agree that schools should do more for physical development. I feel that I have to do it so that my kids can be in tip top physical shape. If they graduate from high school and aren't in the best shape of their lives. I have failed. That is the way I feel about it. If they don't make the team, they'll be signed up at LA fitness or some gym.
Though I will say. Basketball is so competitive because it so accessible. In other words, it's so competitive because so many people play. EG Plenty of people have access to teams and courts and what not. It's not like some exclusive thing like club swimming or show riding. Even travel basketball isn't that expensive compared to some athletic programs.
Want your kid to make the basketball team? Spend all summer rebounding for them at the local park, just shoot thousands of shots per day. Literally, you have the tools available. It's a low-cost thing.
Having schools provide subsidize these, will just make the basketball more competitive. Which is fine but doesn't sound like what the OP is wanting.
Personally, I feel the big schools should be required to have multiple basketball teams. If you have six hundred kids in your graduating class, you should have three basketball teams. <- That is the solution to the problem.
Us parents at smaller schools make fun of the big public athletic departments.
Just shooting basketballs in the park isn’t enough to pass freshman tryouts
It certainly is.
Here’s my experience with this:
I’m a dad who was fortunate enough to be able to take time off work whenever my kid needed someone to rebound for him, drive him to the gym, drive to a tournament, etc. We were also able to pay a man who played basketball professionally for 10 years and coached professional for another 10 to train my kid from an early age. By freshman year of high school, my kid was (because of the trainer and because he is a nice, humble kid with a great jump shot and a surprising vertical) regularly training with a group of HS senior D1 commits and occasionally invited to runs with current college players and some current international pros.
The summer before freshman year, we used to see an acquaintance of DS’s at the park every day working out at the same time my kid was. The acquaintance had played on his MS team, was headed to the same high school as my DS and hoped to make the freshman team at tryouts. DS had been working out with the HS team since March of his 8th grade year and had been promised a spot on the team at that time.
One day, DS invited the other boy to work out with us, and they played one on one afterward. After my kid got up 20 baskets to zero, they quit playing. Note that this was a tall kid who played for his MS team and worked out on his own pretty diligently every single day.
The kid ended up not even trying out. He saw a coach in the gym the week before tryouts and asked the coach to watch him work out and suggest what he should work on. The coach basically told him he had zero chance of making the team and not to bother. Yes, that’s awful and represents everything wrong with the system. It’s also reality.
This is the lamest vicarious humble brag I have read in quite some time. Have you considered getting a life?
It takes a special kind of moron to hear bragging in the statement “my kid succeeded in sports because we have money.” Bless your heart.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:You can’t just pick up a sport in high school usually. You need to play from a young age, but there the schools don’t really fund this pipeline. It’s just weird that schools do fund sports at the high school level when you can’t start in high school [img]
Anonymous wrote:
Every high school in this area has sports that don't cut. If you want to start in a competitive sport like basketball, you will need to have started earlier, but it's not true at all that you can't start a sport in high school.
I tend to agree that schools should do more for physical development. I feel that I have to do it so that my kids can be in tip top physical shape. If they graduate from high school and aren't in the best shape of their lives. I have failed. That is the way I feel about it. If they don't make the team, they'll be signed up at LA fitness or some gym.
Though I will say. Basketball is so competitive because it so accessible. In other words, it's so competitive because so many people play. EG Plenty of people have access to teams and courts and what not. It's not like some exclusive thing like club swimming or show riding. Even travel basketball isn't that expensive compared to some athletic programs.
Want your kid to make the basketball team? Spend all summer rebounding for them at the local park, just shoot thousands of shots per day. Literally, you have the tools available. It's a low-cost thing.
Having schools provide subsidize these, will just make the basketball more competitive. Which is fine but doesn't sound like what the OP is wanting.
Personally, I feel the big schools should be required to have multiple basketball teams. If you have six hundred kids in your graduating class, you should have three basketball teams. <- That is the solution to the problem.
Us parents at smaller schools make fun of the big public athletic departments.
Just shooting basketballs in the park isn’t enough to pass freshman tryouts
It certainly is.
Here’s my experience with this:
I’m a dad who was fortunate enough to be able to take time off work whenever my kid needed someone to rebound for him, drive him to the gym, drive to a tournament, etc. We were also able to pay a man who played basketball professionally for 10 years and coached professional for another 10 to train my kid from an early age. By freshman year of high school, my kid was (because of the trainer and because he is a nice, humble kid with a great jump shot and a surprising vertical) regularly training with a group of HS senior D1 commits and occasionally invited to runs with current college players and some current international pros.
The summer before freshman year, we used to see an acquaintance of DS’s at the park every day working out at the same time my kid was. The acquaintance had played on his MS team, was headed to the same high school as my DS and hoped to make the freshman team at tryouts. DS had been working out with the HS team since March of his 8th grade year and had been promised a spot on the team at that time.
One day, DS invited the other boy to work out with us, and they played one on one afterward. After my kid got up 20 baskets to zero, they quit playing. Note that this was a tall kid who played for his MS team and worked out on his own pretty diligently every single day.
The kid ended up not even trying out. He saw a coach in the gym the week before tryouts and asked the coach to watch him work out and suggest what he should work on. The coach basically told him he had zero chance of making the team and not to bother. Yes, that’s awful and represents everything wrong with the system. It’s also reality.
This is the lamest vicarious humble brag I have read in quite some time. Have you considered getting a life?
Anonymous wrote:My God, it's the youth sports troll again. They're OBSESSED.
You are not entitled to a sports team, OP. For exercise, you can go out and run around your neighborhood.
Anonymous wrote:High school sports teams should be chosen by a lottery not skills set.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:You can’t just pick up a sport in high school usually. You need to play from a young age, but there the schools don’t really fund this pipeline. It’s just weird that schools do fund sports at the high school level when you can’t start in high school [img]
Anonymous wrote:
Every high school in this area has sports that don't cut. If you want to start in a competitive sport like basketball, you will need to have started earlier, but it's not true at all that you can't start a sport in high school.
I tend to agree that schools should do more for physical development. I feel that I have to do it so that my kids can be in tip top physical shape. If they graduate from high school and aren't in the best shape of their lives. I have failed. That is the way I feel about it. If they don't make the team, they'll be signed up at LA fitness or some gym.
Though I will say. Basketball is so competitive because it so accessible. In other words, it's so competitive because so many people play. EG Plenty of people have access to teams and courts and what not. It's not like some exclusive thing like club swimming or show riding. Even travel basketball isn't that expensive compared to some athletic programs.
Want your kid to make the basketball team? Spend all summer rebounding for them at the local park, just shoot thousands of shots per day. Literally, you have the tools available. It's a low-cost thing.
Having schools provide subsidize these, will just make the basketball more competitive. Which is fine but doesn't sound like what the OP is wanting.
Personally, I feel the big schools should be required to have multiple basketball teams. If you have six hundred kids in your graduating class, you should have three basketball teams. <- That is the solution to the problem.
Us parents at smaller schools make fun of the big public athletic departments.
Just shooting basketballs in the park isn’t enough to pass freshman tryouts
It certainly is.
Here’s my experience with this:
I’m a dad who was fortunate enough to be able to take time off work whenever my kid needed someone to rebound for him, drive him to the gym, drive to a tournament, etc. We were also able to pay a man who played basketball professionally for 10 years and coached professional for another 10 to train my kid from an early age. By freshman year of high school, my kid was (because of the trainer and because he is a nice, humble kid with a great jump shot and a surprising vertical) regularly training with a group of HS senior D1 commits and occasionally invited to runs with current college players and some current international pros.
The summer before freshman year, we used to see an acquaintance of DS’s at the park every day working out at the same time my kid was. The acquaintance had played on his MS team, was headed to the same high school as my DS and hoped to make the freshman team at tryouts. DS had been working out with the HS team since March of his 8th grade year and had been promised a spot on the team at that time.
One day, DS invited the other boy to work out with us, and they played one on one afterward. After my kid got up 20 baskets to zero, they quit playing. Note that this was a tall kid who played for his MS team and worked out on his own pretty diligently every single day.
The kid ended up not even trying out. He saw a coach in the gym the week before tryouts and asked the coach to watch him work out and suggest what he should work on. The coach basically told him he had zero chance of making the team and not to bother. Yes, that’s awful and represents everything wrong with the system. It’s also reality.
Anonymous wrote:Why on earth would we subsidize youth sports?!? How about medications, mental health services, teacher’s salaries, better public transportation, food security, and the list goes on.
Get a grip, OP.