Tuesday, December 9, 2008

What Are We Doing To Youth Sports?

When I was a kid growing up in Ann Arbor, Michigan. I spent the spring/summers playing baseball, the fall playing football, and the winters playing basketball.

During those glory days, we enjoyed a sport for that season and then moved to the next one. Things are different today and there is a new alarming trend in youth sports. The days of having a 10 game season (pick your sport) has turned into a 30-40 game season with off season work outs. Kids are worried if they don't focus on just one sport they won't make the varsity team in high school.

In a recent study by Michigan State, kids were asked "what they wanted to get out of playing sports" and the highest ranked answers were: having fun, playing with friends and doing an activity. I was surprised that winning ranked #10. Another youth sports study showed that 75 percent of kids will stop playing sports by the age of 15.

This report tells me that kids haven't changed, the adults have changed the system. We want kids to play a ton of games and to focus on one sport so they can become the next Tim Tebow or LeBron James. We want to over load them with games and work outs so they can be the best of the best. Another item from the MSU study stated that "75 percent of all parents think their (high school) child is good enough to get a college scholarship based on their athletic ability" Less then 1% of high school athletes will earn a college scholarship. That is a huge perception problem and one of the reason we have child obesity problem in this country and why kids are burning out before their 16th birthday.

So my question is, are we (the adults) ruining youth sports? Are we not letting kids be kids and putting too much pressure on these young men and women to take their games to the next level? The fact is, most kids will not earn a scholarship and even less will earn a living playing professional sports. It seems to me, kids want to play sports for fun and to bond with their peers, it's the adults who have the unrealistic expectations.

As the NFL says, "get out and play". Who cares what the sport is, just go out and play!

2 comments:

Anonymous said...

I went to a rather large school where there were 70-80 kids dressed for each HS football game. I found out early on (6th grade) that I wasn't going to see the field if I continued on my path so I went out for other sports (swimming, water polo, rugby) and I excelled at those. My father only asked that I never quit in mid-season when I changed sports.

Anonymous said...

Just like all other sports, it's about money. Why let kids just have fun and play pick-up games at playgrounds for free when you can make money off registration fees and especially teams uniforms, etc.?

On top of that, there is corruption: in the older groups in AYSO, for instance, teams are rigged with ringers and established coaches often pick their teams and leave the "leftovers" for rookie coaches. And I've personally seen refs call games when one of their own is on one of the teams -- the calls tend to favor one side.

Yeah, adults DO ruin sports.