"Transitions to a High School Track or Cross Country Program" |
| One of the greatest thrills for a high school coach is the prospect of working with a new season full of eager and talented athletes each year. Student-athletes with hopes and goals mix annually with the 'old guard' . . . juniors and seniors who can forge the excitement into the reality of what it takes to become a contributing member of a competitive team. The incoming athlete may have had some experience at a youth track level, perhaps even some success, but this new environment in high school offers challenges that every young athlete, whether recreational participant or JO Champion, needs to understand. |
| All through a track competitor's career, new levels of competition keep emerging, starting with youth cross country and track, perhaps followed by high school competition, and for a select few a college career exists. In rare cases, the level rises again as women and men qualify for national teams and compete on a world level. Regardless, each new level of competition requires an understanding of what makes it different from that which has gone before. |
| In youth track, Mom and Dad pack up the car and make a day or a weekend out of participation in a meet, perhaps regional or national in scope, but more often than not, a low-key event where participation is key and competition is a side-benefit. If you are lucky, you have a coach in your event who understands the training and competing concepts applicable to your age, and you mature physically and mentally into a well-rounded competitor. In other cases, a coach may have the dual role of parent, depending upon the local emphasis. Participation is key, learning is invaluable, and the fun of event exploration fuels the young athlete. |
| But now the obvious differences in programs has hit you! The local paper doesn't just feature the agate scores and marks of the local USATF Meet, but instead runs a story on the regional champion girl who broke 12 seconds in the 100m at the high school conference meet, or the boy who broke a school record in the shot put and discus in the same year. You look towards the next level . . . high school. This new arena seems to be where all of the athletes come out to test their skills, whether the product of a tremendous youth program or relatively inexperienced but possessing uncanny natural ability. You look at this new level and wonder how well you can compete . . . if your skills can hold up . . . and what new challenges await. You have a tremendous advantage, but also a liability. You have developed experience that will help you hold up under high school workouts, but you also have some pre-conceived notions of what to expect which can get in the way of your true enjoyment of the sport. |
| Hopefully, you are about to enter a program which will allow you to continue to develop to your fullest in a physical and competitive sense. Most high school programs have solidly trained and interested coaches who will allow you to excel, but their goals for you will change to a higher step, reflecting their understanding of newer and loftier opportunities to run, throw, and jump at performance levels you may have not yet dreamed of! So . . .what can you do to make this experience the best you can? Here is how you must adapt to your new coach and school: |
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| High school track and cross country will provide the most enjoyable competitive experiences you will ever have in the sport. Regardless of whether your career continues after this level, you will always look back to these days as the most fun times you ever had, and the best learning opportunity possible. A smooth transition from youth track and cross country to a more intense level of competition will help you to hit goals, make an impact, and continue to improve at a much faster rate. |
| Some athletes will fall by the wayside as this new level of competition presents challenges that seem too difficult, but understanding your new opportunities and responsibilities will help you mature into a competitor, a leader, and a valued asset on any high school team. |
| Good luck . . .train hard. |
| Jeff Arbogast Bingham 3/5/00 |
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