Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Don’t most of the fast kids hit the following age group standards? My kid was always focused on the next age group up). My 11/12 year old has the 14 year old JO cuts and is a decently fast but nothing amazing.
Yes. My fast 10U has already hit the 11/12 JO cuts.
Um, no. That would be a truly exceptional 10U to do that. Take 100 Free. The 11-12 cut is 1:02.39. In all of PVS this year, five 10U boys have that time.
This, it’s no more than the top 5 10U in each event that already have made the 11-12 cut times.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Don’t most of the fast kids hit the following age group standards? My kid was always focused on the next age group up). My 11/12 year old has the 14 year old JO cuts and is a decently fast but nothing amazing.
Yes. My fast 10U has already hit the 11/12 JO cuts.
Um, no. That would be a truly exceptional 10U to do that. Take 100 Free. The 11-12 cut is 1:02.39. In all of PVS this year, five 10U boys have that time.
This, it’s no more than the top 5 10U in each event that already have made the 11-12 cut times.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Don’t most of the fast kids hit the following age group standards? My kid was always focused on the next age group up). My 11/12 year old has the 14 year old JO cuts and is a decently fast but nothing amazing.
Yes. My fast 10U has already hit the 11/12 JO cuts.
Um, no. That would be a truly exceptional 10U to do that. Take 100 Free. The 11-12 cut is 1:02.39. In all of PVS this year, five 10U boys have that time.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Don’t most of the fast kids hit the following age group standards? My kid was always focused on the next age group up). My 11/12 year old has the 14 year old JO cuts and is a decently fast but nothing amazing.
Yes. My fast 10U has already hit the 11/12 JO cuts.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Guys, we’re talking about kids swim. While it’s fun to make cut times for certain meets, and a bummer when the cutoffs don’t work in your favor, it’s… kids swim. As others have said, if they’re a true phenomenon, age cut offs don’t really matter anyway. There are plenty of 13 year olds making top 10 times in the 13/14 age group. If your kid was that good, they would too. Relax. By the time they’re in high school and any of this matters (even questionable that it does in high school) the cutoffs matter much less. In the meantime, the benefits your kid gets from swimming include learning to work hard, challenge themselves, and learn to deal with occasionally disappointment - whether that’s due to a bad race or I’ll timed birthday. Those are things you should be embracing rather than whining that the system is unfair for poor Johnny. - mom of two swimmers, one with a good birthday and one without
Eh, not necessarily. At divisionals (NVSL) this past summer, there was ONE 13 year old boy in the top 27 kids for the 50 free, and I know him; he was already 14 by this summer. (Even he didn't make the top 18, BUT the top seeded kid had a summer birthday and was well over 6'. He was 15, swimming against 14 year olds.) Please don't say that summer birthdays don't really matter. They absolutely do. What the age cut offs do for summer is allow summer birthday kids to hold the records, and to beat out other kids who are much younger.) Another example is the boy who broke the 11/12 year old 50 fly record this summer. He was 13, swimming down and that record will be very hard to break. He now will have through the summer of his 15th birthday to swim as a 13/14 year old.
Jesus NVSL parents, summer swim means jack in the grand scheme of a kid’s swim career. It’s rec league summer swim, unclench and take a deep breath. The year round club swim rules, yeah those matter more, and the current structure is as fair as it’s going to get.
Someone tried to explain summer swim to me and it sounds so contrived. Truly, no one outside the dc area cares at all about age cutoffs in summer swim and whether the records are held by kids who are actually older than the age groups. It’s like bragging about winning your country club putt putt competition.
The thing about the DC area is that the culture is parents competing about kid achievements. That's why summer swim birthdays matter and there are 3 million posts about TJ. We judge each other by what kids accomplish. Or maybe we are just judging ourselves. It's a weird slightly toxic mindset that pervades the area.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Don’t most of the fast kids hit the following age group standards? My kid was always focused on the next age group up). My 11/12 year old has the 14 year old JO cuts and is a decently fast but nothing amazing.
This may be true for girls, since the time standards don’t get that match faster past 11-12. Not true for boys.
Anonymous wrote:Don’t most of the fast kids hit the following age group standards? My kid was always focused on the next age group up). My 11/12 year old has the 14 year old JO cuts and is a decently fast but nothing amazing.
Anonymous wrote:Don’t most of the fast kids hit the following age group standards? My kid was always focused on the next age group up). My 11/12 year old has the 14 year old JO cuts and is a decently fast but nothing amazing.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Guys, we’re talking about kids swim. While it’s fun to make cut times for certain meets, and a bummer when the cutoffs don’t work in your favor, it’s… kids swim. As others have said, if they’re a true phenomenon, age cut offs don’t really matter anyway. There are plenty of 13 year olds making top 10 times in the 13/14 age group. If your kid was that good, they would too. Relax. By the time they’re in high school and any of this matters (even questionable that it does in high school) the cutoffs matter much less. In the meantime, the benefits your kid gets from swimming include learning to work hard, challenge themselves, and learn to deal with occasionally disappointment - whether that’s due to a bad race or I’ll timed birthday. Those are things you should be embracing rather than whining that the system is unfair for poor Johnny. - mom of two swimmers, one with a good birthday and one without
Eh, not necessarily. At divisionals (NVSL) this past summer, there was ONE 13 year old boy in the top 27 kids for the 50 free, and I know him; he was already 14 by this summer. (Even he didn't make the top 18, BUT the top seeded kid had a summer birthday and was well over 6'. He was 15, swimming against 14 year olds.) Please don't say that summer birthdays don't really matter. They absolutely do. What the age cut offs do for summer is allow summer birthday kids to hold the records, and to beat out other kids who are much younger.) Another example is the boy who broke the 11/12 year old 50 fly record this summer. He was 13, swimming down and that record will be very hard to break. He now will have through the summer of his 15th birthday to swim as a 13/14 year old.
Because they all swim club, where your age is listed in the results.
How do you know how old these kids are?
Not true. You only know their age at a meet.
You lose all credibility when you start singling out specific children online.
For all you know, they have August birthdays unless you personally know them.
DP, there are swim rank sites that tell you the club kids’ age year and month.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Guys, we’re talking about kids swim. While it’s fun to make cut times for certain meets, and a bummer when the cutoffs don’t work in your favor, it’s… kids swim. As others have said, if they’re a true phenomenon, age cut offs don’t really matter anyway. There are plenty of 13 year olds making top 10 times in the 13/14 age group. If your kid was that good, they would too. Relax. By the time they’re in high school and any of this matters (even questionable that it does in high school) the cutoffs matter much less. In the meantime, the benefits your kid gets from swimming include learning to work hard, challenge themselves, and learn to deal with occasionally disappointment - whether that’s due to a bad race or I’ll timed birthday. Those are things you should be embracing rather than whining that the system is unfair for poor Johnny. - mom of two swimmers, one with a good birthday and one without
Eh, not necessarily. At divisionals (NVSL) this past summer, there was ONE 13 year old boy in the top 27 kids for the 50 free, and I know him; he was already 14 by this summer. (Even he didn't make the top 18, BUT the top seeded kid had a summer birthday and was well over 6'. He was 15, swimming against 14 year olds.) Please don't say that summer birthdays don't really matter. They absolutely do. What the age cut offs do for summer is allow summer birthday kids to hold the records, and to beat out other kids who are much younger.) Another example is the boy who broke the 11/12 year old 50 fly record this summer. He was 13, swimming down and that record will be very hard to break. He now will have through the summer of his 15th birthday to swim as a 13/14 year old.
Because they all swim club, where your age is listed in the results.
How do you know how old these kids are?
Not true. You only know their age at a meet.
You lose all credibility when you start singling out specific children online.
For all you know, they have August birthdays unless you personally know them.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Guys, we’re talking about kids swim. While it’s fun to make cut times for certain meets, and a bummer when the cutoffs don’t work in your favor, it’s… kids swim. As others have said, if they’re a true phenomenon, age cut offs don’t really matter anyway. There are plenty of 13 year olds making top 10 times in the 13/14 age group. If your kid was that good, they would too. Relax. By the time they’re in high school and any of this matters (even questionable that it does in high school) the cutoffs matter much less. In the meantime, the benefits your kid gets from swimming include learning to work hard, challenge themselves, and learn to deal with occasionally disappointment - whether that’s due to a bad race or I’ll timed birthday. Those are things you should be embracing rather than whining that the system is unfair for poor Johnny. - mom of two swimmers, one with a good birthday and one without
Eh, not necessarily. At divisionals (NVSL) this past summer, there was ONE 13 year old boy in the top 27 kids for the 50 free, and I know him; he was already 14 by this summer. (Even he didn't make the top 18, BUT the top seeded kid had a summer birthday and was well over 6'. He was 15, swimming against 14 year olds.) Please don't say that summer birthdays don't really matter. They absolutely do. What the age cut offs do for summer is allow summer birthday kids to hold the records, and to beat out other kids who are much younger.) Another example is the boy who broke the 11/12 year old 50 fly record this summer. He was 13, swimming down and that record will be very hard to break. He now will have through the summer of his 15th birthday to swim as a 13/14 year old.
Because they all swim club, where your age is listed in the results.
How do you know how old these kids are?
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Don’t most of the fast kids hit the following age group standards? My kid was always focused on the next age group up). My 11/12 year old has the 14 year old JO cuts and is a decently fast but nothing amazing.
Yes. My fast 10U has already hit the 11/12 JO cuts.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Don’t most of the fast kids hit the following age group standards? My kid was always focused on the next age group up). My 11/12 year old has the 14 year old JO cuts and is a decently fast but nothing amazing.
Yes. My fast 10U has already hit the 11/12 JO cuts.
Anonymous wrote:Don’t most of the fast kids hit the following age group standards? My kid was always focused on the next age group up). My 11/12 year old has the 14 year old JO cuts and is a decently fast but nothing amazing.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Guys, we’re talking about kids swim. While it’s fun to make cut times for certain meets, and a bummer when the cutoffs don’t work in your favor, it’s… kids swim. As others have said, if they’re a true phenomenon, age cut offs don’t really matter anyway. There are plenty of 13 year olds making top 10 times in the 13/14 age group. If your kid was that good, they would too. Relax. By the time they’re in high school and any of this matters (even questionable that it does in high school) the cutoffs matter much less. In the meantime, the benefits your kid gets from swimming include learning to work hard, challenge themselves, and learn to deal with occasionally disappointment - whether that’s due to a bad race or I’ll timed birthday. Those are things you should be embracing rather than whining that the system is unfair for poor Johnny. - mom of two swimmers, one with a good birthday and one without
Eh, not necessarily. At divisionals (NVSL) this past summer, there was ONE 13 year old boy in the top 27 kids for the 50 free, and I know him; he was already 14 by this summer. (Even he didn't make the top 18, BUT the top seeded kid had a summer birthday and was well over 6'. He was 15, swimming against 14 year olds.) Please don't say that summer birthdays don't really matter. They absolutely do. What the age cut offs do for summer is allow summer birthday kids to hold the records, and to beat out other kids who are much younger.) Another example is the boy who broke the 11/12 year old 50 fly record this summer. He was 13, swimming down and that record will be very hard to break. He now will have through the summer of his 15th birthday to swim as a 13/14 year old.
Because they all swim club, where your age is listed in the results.
How do you know how old these kids are?