Sasha
Proud Parent
- May 15, 2013
- 1,583
- 3,515
more than thespian ions
Autocorrect win of the day. I suppose we are a dramatic, high-charged bunch.
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more than thespian ions
The (good) coaches know what to look for, and I say "good" because with my personal experience, my DD was in beginner rec for what seemed like forever, for the longest time she had a coach who was a high schooler who clearly just had this as a part time job, once she went off to college, DD had a new coach who was also one of the team coaches, and almost immediately the new coach pulled me aside and told me that she thought DD was ready for pre-team (she even hinted that she wasn't sure why DD was still in beginner). If a gymnast catches a coaches eye, you'll know it, because they'll tell you.Thanks for all the replies. It's been very insightful. Her gym is very busy with full preschool classes 7 days a week so I guess I'm wondering what makes these kids stand out & invited up to the next class?
I would tell her "when you're 4 or 5"....in rec it is often separated by preschoolers and school age kids, she doesn't train with the school agers yet because she's not a school ager.Thanks I was thinking that attendance is important, we always ensure she never misses a class & is a couple of mins early. She works so hard on her class & listens intently, really loves it. She is very strong but as I said upthread she's stiff so I hope they don't discount her due to this. She trains beside a pretest of 4-5 year olds & is always asking when can she be training with them & I honestly can't answer
Yes I think that that is a big thing at the moment, the little girl Emma on Ellen being an example. I'm sure it's been discussed to death on here but really she was put at risk, her bh were scary. Will be interesting to see if she had a career. Konnor McClain is another example however she is very good...
I know. I make a conscious effort to not make gym become too much of my child's identity. Adding another layer by marketing them in that way jsut seems a recipe for trouble in the future when they either quit progressing in gym or quit being so little and cute and popular- or both!I am also interested in what happens with all these "famous" preschool gymmies, both from YouTube and Instagram.
I am also interested in what happens with all these "famous" preschool gymmies, both from YouTube and Instagram.
Im sure it isn't identical for boys and girls, but probably somewhat similar. I think the physical things coaches liked about DS at ages 3.5-5 were:
he was very strong, both muscular and relatively lean for that age;
his upper body was very well developed for that age;
he had very good (though not outstanding) flexibility and range of motion;
he learned very quickly and has very good sense of where his body is in space (proprioception);
he is naturally athletic and "graceful" compared to many other boys;
he appears to be developing with average height and an outstanding strength to weight ratio;
and probably most importantly, he really truly would live at the gym if he could!
He's training L5 now so only a year into competition for boys, but he still loves it. Even the occasional bad day bums him out at first, but by the next day, the love is still there. He's tried several different sports (he is naturally blessed with boundless energy and athletic skill), but this is the only one he has truly, madly loved.