Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:My 6 year old barely made the big team this year after a year on pre-team. At our MCSL pool they just have to make it across confidently to be in 8U. Practices until school is out are 30 min. I will say he came out completely exhausted after the first practice yesterday. Like collapse tired.
We do have 6,7,8 year olds on pre team as well.
How is one 30 minute swim team practice getting him to collapse tired if he’s been in 30 minutes lessons?
Tell me you’ve never been to a swim team practice without telling me you’ve never been to a swim team practice. . .
But OP said 30 minutes, not even an hour. A 30 minute swim practice is exhausting? Please explain.
Mine is joining a pre team and all year he has been doing 1x-2x/week lessons each 25 minute lesson is laps over and over, with 1 break to tread water. This is considered swim lessons 1 level under being able to even try out for a team. Even the slowest kids are not stopping for breaks or to use the bathroom or anything. These are 6-7 year olds. The rec team (non competitive summer team) my kid is joining runs 1.5 hour practices. The more competitive club team runs 2.5 hour practices at this age.
All swim teams I’ve seen run for at least an hour. I would not have expected any realistic joiners to be absolutely exhausted after just 30 minutes. Lots of the kids I know who swim also do another sport.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:My 6 year old barely made the big team this year after a year on pre-team. At our MCSL pool they just have to make it across confidently to be in 8U. Practices until school is out are 30 min. I will say he came out completely exhausted after the first practice yesterday. Like collapse tired.
We do have 6,7,8 year olds on pre team as well.
How is one 30 minute swim team practice getting him to collapse tired if he’s been in 30 minutes lessons?
Tell me you’ve never been to a swim team practice without telling me you’ve never been to a swim team practice. . .
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:My 6 year old barely made the big team this year after a year on pre-team. At our MCSL pool they just have to make it across confidently to be in 8U. Practices until school is out are 30 min. I will say he came out completely exhausted after the first practice yesterday. Like collapse tired.
We do have 6,7,8 year olds on pre team as well.
How is one 30 minute swim team practice getting him to collapse tired if he’s been in 30 minutes lessons?
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:He swam across the pool width ways?
Or along the pool, like an entire lap?
He doesn't sound ready for swim team, doesn't matter what county you are in. So much of swim team is back and forth laps, the kids share lanes too, could be 3-6 kids in one lane. If your kid is struggling after one lap it messes the whole lane up.
DP. We are also an NVSL D1 team. Our only requirement to join the regular team is to get across one lap, any way you can, without touching the bottom. The 8U practice has a dedicated lane for brand new swimmers, with appropriate drills and volume of swimming appropriate for that level, with coaches in the water helping. This is how it all begins. This is summer swim. Everyone is welcome.
This would not work for a club swim team, but that’s not this.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:He swam across the pool width ways?
Or along the pool, like an entire lap?
He doesn't sound ready for swim team, doesn't matter what county you are in. So much of swim team is back and forth laps, the kids share lanes too, could be 3-6 kids in one lane. If your kid is struggling after one lap it messes the whole lane up.
DP. We are also an NVSL D1 team. Our only requirement to join the regular team is to get across one lap, any way you can, without touching the bottom. The 8U practice has a dedicated lane for brand new swimmers, with appropriate drills and volume of swimming appropriate for that level, with coaches in the water helping. This is how it all begins. This is summer swim. Everyone is welcome.
This would not work for a club swim team, but that’s not this.
Yes…but at 7 he would likely be separated from friends who made the team and be in the slow lane. He would struggle in a way they would not. It’s fine…as long as he is fine with it and won’t get discouraged, upset, unhappy, etc.
And the better solution is to not let him on at all and make him go to pre team practice with the 5 and 6 year olds? Our pre team doesn't even start until school's over.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:He swam across the pool width ways?
Or along the pool, like an entire lap?
He doesn't sound ready for swim team, doesn't matter what county you are in. So much of swim team is back and forth laps, the kids share lanes too, could be 3-6 kids in one lane. If your kid is struggling after one lap it messes the whole lane up.
DP. We are also an NVSL D1 team. Our only requirement to join the regular team is to get across one lap, any way you can, without touching the bottom. The 8U practice has a dedicated lane for brand new swimmers, with appropriate drills and volume of swimming appropriate for that level, with coaches in the water helping. This is how it all begins. This is summer swim. Everyone is welcome.
This would not work for a club swim team, but that’s not this.
Yes…but at 7 he would likely be separated from friends who made the team and be in the slow lane. He would struggle in a way they would not. It’s fine…as long as he is fine with it and won’t get discouraged, upset, unhappy, etc.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:He swam across the pool width ways?
Or along the pool, like an entire lap?
He doesn't sound ready for swim team, doesn't matter what county you are in. So much of swim team is back and forth laps, the kids share lanes too, could be 3-6 kids in one lane. If your kid is struggling after one lap it messes the whole lane up.
DP. We are also an NVSL D1 team. Our only requirement to join the regular team is to get across one lap, any way you can, without touching the bottom. The 8U practice has a dedicated lane for brand new swimmers, with appropriate drills and volume of swimming appropriate for that level, with coaches in the water helping. This is how it all begins. This is summer swim. Everyone is welcome.
This would not work for a club swim team, but that’s not this.
Anonymous wrote:He swam across the pool width ways?
Or along the pool, like an entire lap?
He doesn't sound ready for swim team, doesn't matter what county you are in. So much of swim team is back and forth laps, the kids share lanes too, could be 3-6 kids in one lane. If your kid is struggling after one lap it messes the whole lane up.