- Feb 28, 2024
- 12
- 2
My daughter (10) is on pre-team level 3 and is loving it. The coach of her pre-team is good, but she has not made teaching roundoff back handsprings a priority for the girls. Up until a few weeks ago, none of them could do them unspotted, even on the tumble track.
My daughter has been doing hers for months on tumble track at open gyms, and a few weeks ago at open gym, a coach that was there spotted her on the floor and she can now do hers unspotted on the floor easily. She is still working on improving her form (bent knees and legs apart) but is getting frustrated because her coach is still not letting her do them unspotted at practice.
I am trying to trust the process and that there is a reason that she is approaching it this way, but then last week a team coach (who coaches the competitive level 3s and higher) subbed in for my daughter's practice, and after spotting my daughter for one on the tumble track, she allowed her to do it unspotted on the TT and a few times on the floor. And then last night at practice, her regular coach allowed a couple of the girls do theirs on the floor unspotted, but not my daughter (and one of the girls who did hers I have not previously seen do a solid one on the TT).
Their team has one more 'fun meet' this season and my daughter really wants to be able to do the skill in her routine and not be spotted and get the 'deduction' for having the spot. I've even taken her to a few private lessons at a local cheerleading gym to work only on the skill for an hour one-on-one (specifically to work on improving her form so that it is a really solid nice RBHS) (her coach will not let any of our pre-team girls schedule privates with her).
I (and my daughter) would like to talk to her coach to ask if she can do hers unspotted, but I don't know if it is worth bringing up or just waiting it out a couple of months until she goes through evaluations to get placed on team.
My initial thought was to approach it with her coach in more of a "I'd like to understand your thought process on why you are not having her do hers unspotted, when another coach was letting her." but I don't want to leave a bad impression and have that potentially impact my daughter's evaluations for team.
Any thoughts or feedback that I should consider?
My daughter has been doing hers for months on tumble track at open gyms, and a few weeks ago at open gym, a coach that was there spotted her on the floor and she can now do hers unspotted on the floor easily. She is still working on improving her form (bent knees and legs apart) but is getting frustrated because her coach is still not letting her do them unspotted at practice.
I am trying to trust the process and that there is a reason that she is approaching it this way, but then last week a team coach (who coaches the competitive level 3s and higher) subbed in for my daughter's practice, and after spotting my daughter for one on the tumble track, she allowed her to do it unspotted on the TT and a few times on the floor. And then last night at practice, her regular coach allowed a couple of the girls do theirs on the floor unspotted, but not my daughter (and one of the girls who did hers I have not previously seen do a solid one on the TT).
Their team has one more 'fun meet' this season and my daughter really wants to be able to do the skill in her routine and not be spotted and get the 'deduction' for having the spot. I've even taken her to a few private lessons at a local cheerleading gym to work only on the skill for an hour one-on-one (specifically to work on improving her form so that it is a really solid nice RBHS) (her coach will not let any of our pre-team girls schedule privates with her).
I (and my daughter) would like to talk to her coach to ask if she can do hers unspotted, but I don't know if it is worth bringing up or just waiting it out a couple of months until she goes through evaluations to get placed on team.
My initial thought was to approach it with her coach in more of a "I'd like to understand your thought process on why you are not having her do hers unspotted, when another coach was letting her." but I don't want to leave a bad impression and have that potentially impact my daughter's evaluations for team.
Any thoughts or feedback that I should consider?