Follow along with the video below to see how to install our site as a web app on your home screen.
Note: This feature may not be available in some browsers.
Yeah...... but they do it with a higher level of originality, difficulty, and execute the "move" with remarkably clean lines.
It's true!! My very skilled 3 year old male gymnast ALWAYS has to try BOTH nostrils before getting a good booger. Then it goes right to the couch. He misses the carpet "dismount" every time!
Thank you everyone for your advice. We talked with our DD last night and told her we will let her train this summer with the elite girls and evaluate in Sept to confirm if she enjoyed it. We told her that if she wants to continue down this path we will give her one full year to really go for it and then have another sit down to reconfirm she is still on board with the process. She was beyond thrilled. Our biggest goal is to make sure she understands that if she decides she wants to just go to elvel 10 we are happy either way.
I guess my advice would be that if you truly think that even if she made the National team and was getting assignments but then a yr or two down the road , decided she wanted to do JO level 10 , and you BOTH would be ok with that , then go for it but if their would even be a shred of resentment, I would avoid it like the plague...
It looks like you are in Texas. Texas state law mandates that the kids can do alternative schedules. The top teams at Texas Dreams and Woga, for instance, have perhaps 75% of their kids in public or modified school. The only glitch is for kids on national team because the absence rule is somewhat inflexible. Even with kids on national team, I can think of some in public school who attend a modified schedule through a local school + TXVA. At age 10, there is no reason why you should have to pick between homeschool and public school unless your coaches have challenging gym schedules that other gyms do not.
There are many gyms in Texas that "train elite." If your gym consistently (year after year, multiple children) has elites at Classic and Visa, then it's a great time to try out the new training group this summer. I think many talented kids reach Level 10 by the time they are 13 and there are many 10 year old Level 8s. Three of the kids going to JO nationals this year from region 3 are barely 11 years old. The Level 8 AA Champion for Jr. A with a near 39 is 9 or barely 10. The place most children are ahead is beam and the place they are most behind is bars. If you have a bar worker, then particularly go for it. In the end, the point is to have a great coach who knows how to build elite routines compositionally and keep the execution as high as the start value. If they can do that, and want your child to train in that group, there is no harm trying it out. If it doesn't work, then you can always switch back to a different schedule.
As for injuries, watch the elbows. Younger gymnasts that start training repulsion (like a pogo stick) vaults, beam dismounts and beam skills with great power are at high risk for OTD in their elbows. It tends to strike those age 10-12 years old. Also, make sure your gym has resi landings for tumbling and trains tumbling on all surfaces. Those softer surfaces will save her back in the future.
Banned for so many reasons.I am not a mom but I am an elite age 10