Anonymous wrote:My 16 year old was a nationally ranked gymnast with 32 hours of practice a week and great college prospects. An annoying ankle soreness revealed a dramatic bone injury that required surgery and 6 months of rehab, during which the PT discovered a career ending hip cartilage injury we didn’t even know about.
Definitely don’t let your kid put all of their eggs in one basket. Life can change on a whim, and that is especially true for athletes.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:There are way fewer athletic opportunities in college that include scholarships than most people believe.
I know that op isn't looking for scholarships but this post is so true. There are so many sports where there are no scholarships and very few that are full rides.
Savvy rich families don't seem to waste their time with sports all the masses play. Field hockey, girls ice hockey, girls lacrosse, crew, water polo seem to have much more favorable odds, is that fair to say?
Anonymous wrote:My 16 year old was a nationally ranked gymnast with 32 hours of practice a week and great college prospects. An annoying ankle soreness revealed a dramatic bone injury that required surgery and 6 months of rehab, during which the PT discovered a career ending hip cartilage injury we didn’t even know about.
Definitely don’t let your kid put all of their eggs in one basket. Life can change on a whim, and that is especially true for athletes.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:DS was on this track, but burnt out completely by start of junior year and completely quit his sport. I would never have imagined it, given that he would argue to go back to the gym at 10:00 PM the summer of his freshmen year to get in another hour of practice (after multiple hours of team and individual practice during the day), but it happened. That really impacted college plans and caused some awkward conversations with college coaches who wanted to know why DS wasn't responding to them. It will make college applications interesting because his life was 24/7 this sport until this (his junior) year and then there's not a lot outside of school and volunteer work.
By "burnt out" you mean personal freedom (driving) and parties and hormones (dating/sex) because that's how probably 95% of teen sports obsessions end. My in-laws are 100% convinced their twin daughter are going to be recruited swimmers. They're 12yo. It's just delusional to put all your eggs in the athletic basket.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:There are way fewer athletic opportunities in college that include scholarships than most people believe.
I know that op isn't looking for scholarships but this post is so true. There are so many sports where there are no scholarships and very few that are full rides.
Anonymous wrote:DS was on this track, but burnt out completely by start of junior year and completely quit his sport. I would never have imagined it, given that he would argue to go back to the gym at 10:00 PM the summer of his freshmen year to get in another hour of practice (after multiple hours of team and individual practice during the day), but it happened. That really impacted college plans and caused some awkward conversations with college coaches who wanted to know why DS wasn't responding to them. It will make college applications interesting because his life was 24/7 this sport until this (his junior) year and then there's not a lot outside of school and volunteer work.
Anonymous wrote:There are way fewer athletic opportunities in college that include scholarships than most people believe.
Anonymous wrote:OP here. Thanks to all PPs for the helpful input. The goal is not a scholarship but to use athletic recruitment as the hook to get into an elite school.
Anonymous wrote:We have the opposite, a kid who is a two-sport varsity HS athlete who has no interest in competing at the next level. The good news, they have other interests that take up non-academic and sports time.