Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Don't have your kid play for a club that has an owner with the emotional maturity of a 4 year old (e.g., Madlax, Pride)
I make a comment about your kid getting cut from the program, and my comment gets deleted? Sounds like I’m right.
Anonymous wrote:Don't have your kid play for a club that has an owner with the emotional maturity of a 4 year old (e.g., Madlax, Pride)
Anonymous wrote:I can’t believe looking at the practice and tournament schedule of some of these club teams that kids really do play other sports and do non-sport stuff. If they do, they either don’t get much sleep, get no downtime or don’t need to study to keep up their grades.
I’m sure they encourage other sports. That’s the reasonable thing to say and parents eat it up. But I don’t really believe they mean it. They may want you to play a little of something else but nothing that will lure you away and nothing that conflicts.
We have friends who tell us their girls can totally do competitive gymnastics and competitive dance. It means every single day after school they are doing something for three plus hours in addition to all the training and competitions on weekends.
Sure, on a calendar you can fit it all in. But, really?
Anonymous wrote:I can’t believe looking at the practice and tournament schedule of some of these club teams that kids really do play other sports and do non-sport stuff. If they do, they either don’t get much sleep, get no downtime or don’t need to study to keep up their grades.
I’m sure they encourage other sports. That’s the reasonable thing to say and parents eat it up. But I don’t really believe they mean it. They may want you to play a little of something else but nothing that will lure you away and nothing that conflicts.
We have friends who tell us their girls can totally do competitive gymnastics and competitive dance. It means every single day after school they are doing something for three plus hours in addition to all the training and competitions on weekends.
Sure, on a calendar you can fit it all in. But, really?
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Our "lowly" "rec" team has excellent coaches and my kid is very good considering the limited time she dedicates to lax. Why on earth would she sacrifice all her time to go from being among the best players in her team/league to maybe being a contributor on some fancy sounding "travel team"?
Not to mention probably giving up the other 4 sports she plays?
It makes no sense.
All these "travel" sports force kids to give up way too much.
Not sure what to make of this post. Agree there are good rec coaches. True, travel sports can take up a lot of time. In the end there is room to play multiple sports. Just not likely kids can play multiple sports at a club level.
What threw me off was the troubling comment, "Why on earth would she sacrifice all her time to go from being among the best players in her team/league to maybe being a contributor on some fancy sounding 'travel team'?" The answer is simple -- to compete and challenge herself against better players, so she can continue to improve. Those "contributors" you referenced are called teammates and the best "teams" win, not the best individuals. These contributors push each other in a positive way to become better and confident individuals, teammates, and players.
Anonymous wrote:Our "lowly" "rec" team has excellent coaches and my kid is very good considering the limited time she dedicates to lax. Why on earth would she sacrifice all her time to go from being among the best players in her team/league to maybe being a contributor on some fancy sounding "travel team"?
Not to mention probably giving up the other 4 sports she plays?
It makes no sense.
All these "travel" sports force kids to give up way too much.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:This is correct - kids get much better playing w kids w good stick skills and hopefully preventing or fixing bad habits.Anonymous wrote:Don't agree with "don't play club until 7th or 8th grade". Most good players start playing club in 5th grade at the latest. You want your kid to play with and against them. If you stay with rec or lame travel teams, your kid won't get better. You also want better coaching sooner.
Have the "stick with rec league" people ever seen a rec league game? Get good coaching early.
Our "lowly" "rec" team has excellent coaches and my kid is very good considering the limited time she dedicates to lax. Why on earth would she sacrifice all her time to go from being among the best players in her team/league to maybe being a contributor on some fancy sounding "travel team"?
[Because she will get better playing with (and against) the better players, who play travel, than she will playing rec. And if she gets better, she will not be sidelined on a travel team. Sure, if all she wants to do is have time on the field, and doesn't want to put the time in to be good, rec is fine, but if she actually wants to be good at the game, travel is the way to go. And oh by the way, your rec coaches are not better than travel coaches.]
Not to mention probably giving up the other 4 sports she plays?
[My son and daughter play travel lacrosse AND play other sports as well. Try again. But hey, if it's not her priority to be good at lacrosse, so be it.]
It makes no sense.
[No sense to you, but it makes plenty of sense to kids who want to play with, and against, really good players.]
All these "travel" sports force kids to give up way too much.
[Nope. I know plenty of kids on travel teams who, like my kids, play other sports too. Indeed, the club encourages them to do this. At the youth level, they want the kids to play rec lacrosse as well as travel.]
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:This is correct - kids get much better playing w kids w good stick skills and hopefully preventing or fixing bad habits.Anonymous wrote:Don't agree with "don't play club until 7th or 8th grade". Most good players start playing club in 5th grade at the latest. You want your kid to play with and against them. If you stay with rec or lame travel teams, your kid won't get better. You also want better coaching sooner.
Have the "stick with rec league" people ever seen a rec league game? Get good coaching early.
Our "lowly" "rec" team has excellent coaches and my kid is very good considering the limited time she dedicates to lax. Why on earth would she sacrifice all her time to go from being among the best players in her team/league to maybe being a contributor on some fancy sounding "travel team"?
Not to mention probably giving up the other 4 sports she plays?
It makes no sense.
All these "travel" sports force kids to give up way too much.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:This is correct - kids get much better playing w kids w good stick skills and hopefully preventing or fixing bad habits.Anonymous wrote:Don't agree with "don't play club until 7th or 8th grade". Most good players start playing club in 5th grade at the latest. You want your kid to play with and against them. If you stay with rec or lame travel teams, your kid won't get better. You also want better coaching sooner.
Have the "stick with rec league" people ever seen a rec league game? Get good coaching early.