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A post on X shared a recent study found that 20% of parents believe their child can be an NCAA Division I athlete while 10% believe their child can be either a pro athlete or an Olympian... (The Spun)
Filed Under: General Sports
Originally published on TigerDroppings.com
24 Comments
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TigerScorpion3 days
The definition of a professional, is someone that gets paid to do a certain task. So, it’s not far fetched to say, you could be a professional athlete and not even at the the D1 level.
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ljhog5 days
When my oldest son was playing youth sports there was a kid everyone he's gonna be a pro. Turns out they were right. It was Quentin Jammer. He's from an athletic family. Half brother is Quandre Diggs and his cousin is Cam Ward.
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Tigerlaff5 days
And no one can find the "study." Hmmm.
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wesman215 days
The world we live in gang.
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Westbank1115 days
Anybody named Jayden, Kayden etc, especially in Louisiana, thinks their kids will be starting shortstop for LSU at a very minimal.
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It’s awesome to encourage your kid to be great and aim for the stars, but it seems a lot of these parents will blame society coaches, and everybody else after their kid doesn’t become an Olympian
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Muahahaha5 days
This is why kids get burned out in sports, parents who live vicariously through their children and force them to do things they don't want to do. It's the complete opposite of what they actually want. I see it all too often.
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Muahahaha5 days
This is why kids get burned out in sports, parents who live vicariously through their children and force them to do things they don't want to do. It's the complete opposite of what they actually want. I see it all too often.
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Bige115 days
As someone who played D1, has a kid in a major d1 program now, and had another going to play, let me say that the journey is the goal. Make it fun. Ages 6-12 fun should be the goal, teach them skills and don’t make it about performance at all. 12-15 work. Get into a routine, introduce weights, create a regimen. Age 15+ it’s time to compete.

In my experience observing people do the exact opposite.

And fwiw pro level is an entirely different level people just don’t understand.
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Dee_oh_Dee5 days
Somebody is gonna win. Might as well be you.
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20% general pop
100% travel ballers
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kbartj6 days
Half of the ones that might "make it" are so burned out by the time it happens, they don't even want to. Too much pressure, not enough time away from the sport. It's crazy out there.

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back9Tiger6 days
Just follow any travel ball team and Timmy is the next pro star...guaranteed.
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My concrete finisher said lil Jose gonna sign with the Mexican Football League in 15yrs. He had me confused, and then explained the Cartel will eventually start one with all their money. I said “dafuq!”
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I think those numbers are low for Louisiana.
Judging by some of the parents that I know in baseball and softball.
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DoubleDown6 days
Man, it's these travel ball clubs for ALL Sports that have these kids and parents gaslighting themselves. Meanwhile to the tune of 1-5k a year.
Had those parents just put that in savings, college or whatever could be paid for for 1 kid in a decade.
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Hangit6 days
How many of these people have them running stadiums 3 days a week and lifting 5 days a week. Then wind sprints on weekend mornings? Not starting them at 4-5 years old is planning to fail.
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tokenBoiler6 days
Well, remember that video games are a sport now at D-1 colleges, and breakdancing is in the Olympics.
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Shaq4prez6 days
Oh no, people blindly believe in their children. Lets all freak out on the internet
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whodatfan6 days
This. Everyone here looking at the extreme side of things and hating. Yeah, of course there are those ridiculous parents that are ate up and excessive to a negative effect on the kid. But most parents are supportive and non intrusive to that effect. We wouldn't have all these professional athletes if parents didn't support and believe in their children.
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I’m so glad my parents believed in my dream that I could strike it rich with the lottery. Thanks mom and dad! I’m sure I will move out the basement by the time I hit 50.
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TooFyeToFly6 days
I used to blame Gen X parents for this type of thing, but Millennial parents are doing the exact same thing.
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