- Jun 2, 2012
- 45
- 39
Hi. My almost 9 yo dd is a level 3 but is moving to level 4 next month. Our gym only competes AAU. It is the only gym for hours in any direction so if dd wants to continue in the sport, it will have to be where she is now. We have been to a few meets this last year and I have come away feeling a bit confused, especially since the AAU website has very little info. I have lots of questions, but my biggest concern is wondering what sort of a future dd has in the sport. I know by national standards, she is already pretty old for a level 4. But even at her age, I am wondering that happens if she stays involved for a few years. There seems to be very few girls competing past level 5 at the meets we are going to. I assume that is because those gyms compete USAG for the higher levels. But since our gym does not, what becomes of girls past that level? We have a handful of level 7s and a few that are called "modified optionals," which I do not fully understand. They tend to be the only girls competing in their levels at the meets we go to. So, I wonder, what is the point? Why go to a meet to have no competition? And I don't see that any of them have a chance of even advancing to a higher level as the girls only spend a maximum of 6 hours in the gym each week. Some have been level 7 for years now.
I am not really sure what kind of advice I am looking for. My dd LOVES the sport and I love that she loves it but I am already dreading what happens when she is "stuck" at a point with no competition and no way to advance in skill. I am wondering if I am missing something. The meets involve a great deal of car travel as there are no other gyms anywhere close by so my dd's involvement in the sport is expensive and time-consuming for the whole family (stuff we did not really think about before it was too late....). Why is there more than one type of league and why would a gym choose to be AAU rather than USAG? It just seems limiting to me.
I am not really sure what kind of advice I am looking for. My dd LOVES the sport and I love that she loves it but I am already dreading what happens when she is "stuck" at a point with no competition and no way to advance in skill. I am wondering if I am missing something. The meets involve a great deal of car travel as there are no other gyms anywhere close by so my dd's involvement in the sport is expensive and time-consuming for the whole family (stuff we did not really think about before it was too late....). Why is there more than one type of league and why would a gym choose to be AAU rather than USAG? It just seems limiting to me.