SAFE is what counts. J/k, that there is brutal and unfortuante.I've had 4 concussions and 1 depressed skull fracture with sub dural and arachnoid bleed. None from football. 3 from horse incidents1 from syncope
The depressed skull fracture which almost killed me was from slow pitch softball.Of course the shortstop that threw the ball to first and impacted my head had a great arm "but I was safe"
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Everyone has to make up their own mind about what they or their kids can or will do.
GBR
I am amazed at how young some parents start having their kids play tackle football. Starting at age 7 or 8 (or even 9 or 10) really doesn't develop them to play when they are in high school. Those kids aren't learning any fundamentals or skills that can be carried forward to older ages.
I have a 6 year old son, and I won't let him play tackle football until at least the junior high level, and maybe later. Starting "late" won't hurt him any if he decides to play football in high school. If he is a good enough athlete, I am sure the coach will find a spot for him. In all honesty, my kid isn't going to play sports in college. I would rather he have a functional brain and body that he can use throughout his entire life.
Here is a pretty interesting article. Yes, it's from Deadspin, but it is relevant to this topic. http://deadspin.com/...roundtable-2012
Exactly, we had several who only went out their SR year because they were SRs. In a small town, anyone who went out likely played a position. Most of these guys had absolutely no business being on the football field.I am amazed at how young some parents start having their kids play tackle football. Starting at age 7 or 8 (or even 9 or 10) really doesn't develop them to play when they are in high school. Those kids aren't learning any fundamentals or skills that can be carried forward to older ages.
I have a 6 year old son, and I won't let him play tackle football until at least the junior high level, and maybe later. Starting "late" won't hurt him any if he decides to play football in high school. If he is a good enough athlete, I am sure the coach will find a spot for him. In all honesty, my kid isn't going to play sports in college. I would rather he have a functional brain and body that he can use throughout his entire life.
Here is a pretty interesting article. Yes, it's from Deadspin, but it is relevant to this topic. http://deadspin.com/...roundtable-2012
I disagree a good dose of fundamentals starting at about 10 will help a lot of kids be better fb players in HS. Sure natural athletes don't need to start as early and they will pick it up easily, but a good program that keeps it simple and repedative can be very good.
Should a 10 year old no the differene between cover 1, 2 and 3 and know the difference between a combo block, g block and zone blocking? No, but a good dose of indi fundies will do wonders. I used to get kids in 9th grade that I literally thought had never even watch at football game before.
I'd always bang my ribs on the rim. They'd be black and blue by the end of the season. :bounceMe, however, only a broken middle finger in an attempt to dunk a basketball in HS. Apparently I needed more work on coordiating hands & eyes.
Agreed, and I don't think anyone has said otherwise, have they?Everyone has to make up their own mind about what they or their kids can or will do.
As a youth football coach...I respectfully disagree.I am amazed at how young some parents start having their kids play tackle football. Starting at age 7 or 8 (or even 9 or 10) really doesn't develop them to play when they are in high school. Those kids aren't learning any fundamentals or skills that can be carried forward to older ages.