As a parent, coach and sports physical therapist, this is a topic I am both passionate about and often confronted with. I remember growing up in a small town where I played a different sport every season. No one played year round soccer, baseball or AAU basketball – it was not even an option for those around me.
Now, I live and work in a competitive sports-minded environment where I see 13 y/o baseball pitchers with elbow and shoulder pain, 13 y/o female soccer players with ACL reconstructions, and too many adolescents suffering from overuse injuries like anterior knee pain and tendonitis. I witness coaches teaching 10 and 11 year olds to throw curve balls, hear athletes tell stories about how they are strongly encouraged or pressured to play only one sport if they want to excel and make a team, and parents who are pushing their kids hard at an early age in pursuit of college scholarships.
Is it all worth it? In a short answer – NO. In a recent article in the May/June 2013 issue of Sports Health, Jayanthi et al. performed a comprehensive search of PubMed and OVID from 1990-2011, gathering articles discussing sports specialization, expert athletes, or elite versus novice athletes including original research articles, consensus opinions, and position statements.
Click here to read the abstract
My own personal bias and opinion is that we should encourage youth to participate in multiple sports/activities and not pursue one sport or activity until they reach high school. I believe there is so much to be gained in terms of coordination, neuromuscular training, recovery and building general athleticism that gets lost with early specialization. However, I see many young athletes swept into early development programs and travel/AAU teams that naturally discourages or eliminates time/opportunities for other activities.
With that said, I will readily acknowledge that certain sports/activities (gymnastics and playing an musical instrument for example) do require an early commitment in terms of practice and skill mastery if one is to reach elite status. So, what should we as health and fitness professionals be telling our clients? How intensely do they need to train and at what age is it okay to focus on one sport?
I think we need to know what the evidence we have says and how we can best use knowledge to make meaningful change in society. In addition, we need to evaluate the mental and physical injuries that are occurring with the choice to specialize at a very young age. Consider that participation at age 6 and under has increased from 9 to 12% from 1997 to 2008.
So, for us to make a difference we need to investigate and scrutinize how we coach and train young athletes and become an advocate for their long term health as well as short term success.
Here are the key bullet points from the article I referenced above:
- Coaches are the most influential in beginning intense training and the decision to specialize
- Less than 1% of athletes 6-17 years old achieve elite status in basketball, soccer, baseball, softball or football
- Early diversification is more likely to lead to success based on multiple studies and may lead to more enjoyment, fewer injuries and longer participation
- Early diversification is more likely to lead to success based on multiple studies and may lead to more enjoyment, fewer injuries and longer participation
- Data currently suggests enjoyment of sport and intrinsic motivation predicts attainment
- Exposure is the most important risk factor for injury and there is a significantly increased risk for injury when participating > 16 hours/week
- Cumulative match exposure also carries a significant injury risk
- Prospective 10 year analysis of 481 youth baseball pitchers reveals a 3.5x increased risk for injury when pitching more than 100 innings per year
What about burnout? Consider the following:
- Swimmers who specialized early spent less time on the National team and retired sooner
- Minor league hockey players (boys) who dropped out started earlier and spent more time in off-ice training than those who continued to compete
- One retrospective review revealed that 1 out of 5 elite athletes reported injury as the reason for quitting
- In the end, the authors conclude that some specialization is necessary to attain elite skill, but the exclusion of other activities should be delayed until late adolescence.
To foster diversification, we must do a few things in sports medicine:
- Educate parents, coaches and athletes on the injury risk and facts about the impact of early specialization
- Promote the benefits of diversification in terms of joy, diminished stress to excel, athletic development and physical recovery
- Remind everyone involved not to take sports too seriously as only a very select few will move on to elite status, and instead encourage them to enjoy competing, learn to be a good teammate and reap the other rewards in sports (discipline, sportsmanship, learning to overcome adversity, working hard to achieve a goal, etc) that last well beyond a trophy presentation or game
I was just asked a few days ago by the parent of a 9 year old baseball player if I thought it was good for him to play multiple sports since he is pretty good in baseball. I encouraged this mother to have him do as many sports as he can for the next several years. Why put so much pressure on kids and expose them to increased injury risk? Every family and athlete needs to make their own personal decision, but for those who do opt for early specialization, I want to make sure I can help educate them on cross training, rest and recovery to minimize the risk for burnout and injury.