My son couldn’t attend baseball workouts after school due to playing basketball. So twice a week he was up at 5am and at the gym door at 5:45 when the coach showed up. He worked out on his own in the garage a couple more days per week before school. He was in the gifted program. The long days had zero negative impact on his grades.
What it did do is make the college demands seem not so hard with baseball and majoring in Economics with a concentration in Quaritative Analytics.
My daughter said the time demands of law school was a piece of cake after softball and a STEM major.
RJM, I never argued that no kid could manage 5 am workouts. Clearly some do and thrive on it. It sounds as though your kids were great students and had a lot of self-discipline from an early age. But not every player on most HS baseball teams has what it takes to become an astronaut or a brain surgeon (and some who could don't show the requisite self-discipline at age 16 or 17). I'm all for pushing kids to perform at their best, but as a parent I'd be concerned if my son or daughter's HS team wanted them at school before dawn on a weekday on a regular basis. Maybe that schedule is unavoidable (which I acknowledged above might be the case sometimes), but I'd be concerned about athletics interfering with academics.
All it takes is not screwing around in study halls to lighten the load in the evening and going to bed at an appropriate time to get enough sleep.
You are operating from the assumption that you are dealing with a kid who is mature enough (and a good enough student) to understand this reasoning and act on it. Some kids won't figure that out, even with their parents on their cases. If working out at zero-dark hundred isn't necessary, why create the added degree of difficulty for those kids who might not handle it well? For that matter, why turn an A-minus into a B-plus because a kid is drowsy in class, if there is no need?
I say this as the parent of two kids who did very well academically while also playing multiple varsity sports. Could they have managed 5 a.m. workouts? Probably... But I wouldn't expect them to do that--or their coaches to schedule workouts then-- unless there was some specific reason it was necessary. Your answer was that your kid--who sounds like an unusually good student and very disciplined--chose to do that. I believe you, and I believe he benefited from it. But I don't think that's responsive to the point I'm making.
What happens when a kid gets to college ball and is expected to be working out before classes? His parents aren’t there to bug him to get up. His college coach will probably comment once about missing a workout before moving on to the next player.
College athletics and academics are a full time job. No one stands over the player’s shoulder telling him what to do. The only thing a college kid is told is “go home” if he’s not self disciplined enough to get everything done.
I would argue pre school high school practices are good for future college athletes. They get in the mode with supervision and a kick in the rear.
This can probably be repeated by many posters here..............
Oldest son was very happy that he learned how to workout and maintain a schedule in HS.
MWF weightlifting and T/Th running at 6:00am in the fall at his D1 school were not that much of a shock.
His schedule every fall semester:
6:00-7:30 Voluntary Workout
7:30-8:15 clean up / breakfast
8:00-12:00 classes
12:00-1:00 Lunch
1:30-3:00 Voluntary baseball "activity" (yoga / stretching / fielding) with positional captains
3:00-5:00 baseball team practice (only for 6 weeks)
5:00-6:00 Dinner
6:00-7:30 Study Hall (mandatory for Freshman or if you have a 2.5 or less). He continued this all 3 years as a way to stay ahead
And then spring gets here, and you get to play games, travel, and hopefully win (which all takes more time).
Could have graduated in this month, but is taking 6 hours of class in the spring to graduate with his class and obviously play ball (General Studies Major / Sociology Minor 3.6 GPA). Will start Sport Mgmt post grad work in the fall (and live at home???????????????????)
Don't anyone say that being a college athlete is not a FT job. I'd say that he is busy more of the day than I am, but I'd also say that the routine that he developed in HS made a lot of his success in the classroom and on the field possible.