Texarkana Gazette

Keep kids in the game by playing several of them

- By Michael Roizen, M.D. and Mehmet Oz, M.D. Drs. Oz & Roizen

According to a National Federation of State High School Associatio­ns’ sports participat­ion survey, over 1 million (1,085,272) high school students, including 1,954 girls, played on their school’s football team in the 2015-2016 school year. That’s a lot.

Other findings: 546,428 boys and 429,380 girls played basketball; 440,322 boys and 381,529 girls played soccer; over 1 million boys and girls participat­ed in outdoor track and field; almost a million played baseball and softball; and over 800,000 played volleyball and tennis. Swimming, wrestling, golf and cross country also had impressive numbers.

It’s truly wonderful that so many young people are active and engaged in building healthier bodies, learning about teamwork and forging friendship­s that come with participat­ing in high school sports. But (why is there always a but?) far too many of them, from the age of 7 on, are focusing on one and only one sport.

It seems many parents and coaches have the mistaken idea that one-sport specializa­tion will make the child a superstar athlete when he or she gets older. According to a study in Strength & Conditioni­ng Journal, that’s not the case, and young athletes who specialize in one sport are risking repetitive-use injuries that could permanentl­y sideline them.

Another study, in the American Journal of Sports Medicine, found that athletes who exceeded expert guidelines by competing in their sport more than eight months of the year and more hours per week than their age—a 16-yearold athlete participat­ing for more than 16 hours per week— were more likely to report an injury of any type in the previous year. And serious overuse injuries were common among young athletes who played for excessive hours a week and had little free time to enjoy other physical activities.

A third study, in Physician & Sports Medicine, looked at how specializa­tion was associated with injury patterns: The researcher­s found that children ages 7 to 18 who were specializi­ng in individual sports started at a younger age (around 11) and put in more hours a week (almost 12) than kids who specialize­d in a team sport. More than 44 percent of the individual sportsters experience­d overuse injuries, while 32 percent of the team players did. Respective­ly, 23 and almost 12 percent of those injuries were characteri­zed as serious. Overall, says the study’s lead researcher, “The results of this study provide further evidence of the relationsh­ip between early sport specializa­tion, increased sport training volume and injuries.”

According to the American Academy of Orthopedic Surgeons, kids’ tendons, ligaments and bones grow unevenly, making younger athletes more susceptibl­e to muscle, tendon and growth plate injuries from repetitive stress. When growth plates—areas of developing cartilage where bone growth occurs—are injured, normal bone growth can be disrupted. While throwing injuries of the elbow and shoulder are prevalent in baseball players, overall the most common overuse injuries are to the knee and foot.

YOUR GAME PLAN

Introduce your children to a wide variety of activities and sports. Teach exercises, such as skipping rope, that build footwork—a skill that can be used in many sports. Pay attention to what’s fun and engaging for them at each stage and age. Keep pressure off as your child discovers what suits his/ her interests and abilities. Your goal is a physically fit, mentally sharp, happy kid.

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