Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Does he notice the age difference or have you pointed it out? If you have been pointing it out, I would stop.
Also, he's only 6. I am more concerned that he needs to "shine" and isn't just playing to have fun. 6 year olds are all over the place in terms of development and development comes in spurts.
Major +1 to all of this
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:All of you ppl writing about sports being by age not grade, it is irrelevant to the OP and many others whose kids have sports by grade. Where I live the ONLY sport that is by birth year is travel soccer. Everything else is by grade, including school sports.
Where are you located? My kids have played baseball in 3 different states and we always have to produce a birth certificate so they can play because it is absolutely by age, never grade.
Anonymous wrote:Does he notice the age difference or have you pointed it out? If you have been pointing it out, I would stop.
Also, he's only 6. I am more concerned that he needs to "shine" and isn't just playing to have fun. 6 year olds are all over the place in terms of development and development comes in spurts.
Anonymous wrote:All of you ppl writing about sports being by age not grade, it is irrelevant to the OP and many others whose kids have sports by grade. Where I live the ONLY sport that is by birth year is travel soccer. Everything else is by grade, including school sports.
Anonymous wrote:All of you ppl writing about sports being by age not grade, it is irrelevant to the OP and many others whose kids have sports by grade. Where I live the ONLY sport that is by birth year is travel soccer. Everything else is by grade, including school sports.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:So he can't stand out unless he's the absolute oldest? A really athletic kid should be able to hang with kids a year older. Many kids play up in sports an age level if they are really good. But, he's 7, it doesn't sound like you are accurately assessing him at this point.
As I said, he’s the youngest kid to make it so he has been keeping up with kids a full year older, but if you take two kids playing a competitive team you have to try out for, it’s likely the older kid has an advantage. A year makes a big difference at this age.
Do you want him to be the best team on a team of kids a year younger? What does that prove? Or do you want him to have to stretch to keep up? He doesn't need to "shine" he just needs to do his best and keep developing.