pressure
How much should he climb to throw the ball into the basket, hit his hand, or run fast?
In many ways, high school sports has become a high-profile game that puts tremendous pressure on student athletes. You can start the league a little bit with more enthusiastic parents than the enthusiastic and inspiring coaches who dream about the lightness of the Senior League, but it doesn’t always end there. Student-athletes don’t want to hold back from their parents, teammates, school, or high-profile sports and their city.
These pressures come at a time when the confidence and image of most high school students is coming into question. Children and teens want to be able to see the potential their parents see. They also want to lighten the burden of college teaching. Receiving an athletic scholarship will achieve both goals.
According to the Sports Scholarships Guide, only one in 50 high school athletes receive sports scholarships. Take into account stress exerted in addition to school work, other activities and social life; This kind of mentality can sap the fun of sports. Instead of creating this stressful entertainment, shouldn’t we be using high school sports to promote the good guys?
Physical hazards
To succeed in current high school sports, students must participate in a sports team and club throughout the year.
When athletes engage in a sport every day, year-round, they run the risk of developing damaging joints, muscle tears, or stress fractures due to the constant repetitive movements. Despite these risks, coaches continue to warn students that they risk aligning themselves and all of the college’s hopes through multiple sports.
Ironically, multiple sports can help athletes get in shape, develop multiple muscle groups, and prevent fatigue in the sport of their choice.
Detavius Mason agrees with his article in the Guilford Center for Orthopedics and Sports Medicine entitled “The Age of the Tool: One Sport Versus Multiple Sports.”
Mason wrote, “Kobe Bryant, Roger Federer, Tom Brady, LeBron James, and Alex Rodriguez.” Kobe and Federer were footballers, Brady played baseball, LeBron played soccer, and A Rod played basketball, soccer and soccer.
Get out of the way
Sports in high school can also create “mass thinking” that excludes non-minors.
Well, not all kids are sports stars. Did you mean that they don’t like the game and want to be part of the team? Does this mean that they have to lose the physical and social benefits of organized sport? Although some children continue to be involved as managers or fans, well-organized entertainment options are rare.
Solution
My goal is not to ban sports in high school, but to return to sports for its original purpose: to have fun. If we can change the public’s perception of these sports: allowing children to play a variety of sports, focusing on entertainment rather than bullying competitors, and creating a unified playground for all potential athletes – high school students can go out and play.
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