Kids in sports

A mellow place for Bobcats to discuss topics free of political posturing

Moderators: rtb, kmax, SonomaCat

User avatar
catamaran
BobcatNation Hall of Famer
Posts: 3802
Joined: Tue Mar 01, 2005 1:31 pm

Post by catamaran » Fri Feb 24, 2006 4:37 pm

I coach midgets in Bozeman, and its a phenomenon all over. For some reason coaches who got good at sports by playing many different ones are now convinced that a kid should find one and stick to it. What they forget are all the ones that get burned out quickly without the variety


if you're keeping score, France gave us Burgundy wine, cigarettes, berets, B.O., brie and the Napoleon complex-Bill Simmons

Scrogger
BobcatNation Redshirt
Posts: 38
Joined: Fri Sep 23, 2005 12:03 pm

Post by Scrogger » Fri Feb 24, 2006 5:12 pm

I recently read a study (wish I could find it on the web) that stated that kids specializing in a single sport are more likely to sustain a serious injury compared to kids playing many different sports. Reason is that a single sport person only uses specific muscles, whereas multisport people use a variety of muscle groups.



User avatar
MSUCATS
BobcatNation Team Captain
Posts: 493
Joined: Tue Nov 15, 2005 10:28 am

Post by MSUCATS » Sat Feb 25, 2006 10:01 am

All kids should be involved in some type of extra curricular activity, more than one is better. If a child is involved in several activities, once they are older they can decide what they'd like to pursue rather than have the parents choose, and try to live through their child. Make sure they stay involved in at least one activity throughout highschool, that way they're going to be more well-rounded (they have better time management, higher grades, more friends, an activity to keep them inshape, etc...)

If you wanted your son(s) to play football, why not have them play football in the fall, wrestle in the winter, and have them play on a spring soccer league or club (it's usually a traveling team once they are over 12 or something like that).

Soccer is a great way for kids to release built up energy, especially those who are on 'hyper-active' mode.

With wrestling, my only suggestion to you is to make sure you start talking with your son(s) about the weight issue and make sure they know the proper way to lose weight. My brother wrestled, and when he was in high school, my mom told the coach that she wanted to be notified if he was going to be 'cutting' weight. She wanted to make sure that it wasn't going to be an unhealthy 'cut'.


BOBCATS 16- Griz 06

"Defeat is not the worst of failures. Not to have tried is the true failure."

Post Reply