- May 17, 2023
- 1
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After addressing issues we have with the gym our daughter trains at we wanted to reach out and ask other parents what a good gym looks like.
Our daughter trains at a gym in the southeastern United States where there are only three competitive gyms within an hour drive of us. The gym she is at has two coaches for all the girls: one coach who is the primary trainer and most motivated coach works with all the girls at some point during the week but primarily focuses on Gold, Silver and Bronze and another who in our opinion is disinterested with coaching based on his own engagement with the girls and lack of overall feedback provided works with the Optionals.
Recently we have lost several Optionals and the feedback they have provided on their reasoning is that after going to guest practice at other gyms in their hometowns or where they vacationed they felt really behind and a lack of quality training overall. Conditioning was also an issue where outside gyms seemed to be more focused on training programs or systems to ensure everyone was in the shape they needed to be in.
Our daughter trains full time, five days a week and private lessons every so often. We are planning on moving to the Midwest in about a year or so and know the opportunities for her will open up more then compared to what they are now. It hasn’t been a question I’ve ever asked or heard asked to this point but felt it was something I should have done years ago.
Our daughters overall goal is to be an Olympic athlete and/or recruited to compete collegiately as many gymnasts dream of. With that in mind, how does her goal impact the quality a gym has for her?
What makes a good gym?
What makes a good coach?
Do you address nepotism in a gym setting if you feel as a parent it is negatively impacting gymnasts and even coaches?
What is a healthy training schedule?
How hard/tough are your coaches on the gymnasts in your gym?
Thank you for your insights and help. I greatly appreciate it.
Our daughter trains at a gym in the southeastern United States where there are only three competitive gyms within an hour drive of us. The gym she is at has two coaches for all the girls: one coach who is the primary trainer and most motivated coach works with all the girls at some point during the week but primarily focuses on Gold, Silver and Bronze and another who in our opinion is disinterested with coaching based on his own engagement with the girls and lack of overall feedback provided works with the Optionals.
Recently we have lost several Optionals and the feedback they have provided on their reasoning is that after going to guest practice at other gyms in their hometowns or where they vacationed they felt really behind and a lack of quality training overall. Conditioning was also an issue where outside gyms seemed to be more focused on training programs or systems to ensure everyone was in the shape they needed to be in.
Our daughter trains full time, five days a week and private lessons every so often. We are planning on moving to the Midwest in about a year or so and know the opportunities for her will open up more then compared to what they are now. It hasn’t been a question I’ve ever asked or heard asked to this point but felt it was something I should have done years ago.
Our daughters overall goal is to be an Olympic athlete and/or recruited to compete collegiately as many gymnasts dream of. With that in mind, how does her goal impact the quality a gym has for her?
What makes a good gym?
What makes a good coach?
Do you address nepotism in a gym setting if you feel as a parent it is negatively impacting gymnasts and even coaches?
What is a healthy training schedule?
How hard/tough are your coaches on the gymnasts in your gym?
Thank you for your insights and help. I greatly appreciate it.