The News Herald (Willoughby, OH)
State rep. introduces bill for student athletes
State Reps. Joe Miller, DAmherst, and Adam Miller, D-Columbus, introduced legislation Dec. 23 that would prohibit high school athletic coaches from requiring student athletes to participate solely in their sport to the exclusion of all other sports and extracurricular activities, according to a news release.
“Our policies should always put the best interest of the student first — not the coach,” Miller said in the release. “Extracurricular programs like sports are to help develop the whole student, to give them a chance to experience different challenges in different environments.
“If a student athlete can’t make a team on her or his merit, that is one thing. But a blanket policy prohibiting student athletes from participating in more than one extracurricular program — even in a different season — is a disservice to the student athlete.”
High school sports continue to become more and more like what college sports were decades ago, the release said.
More competition, bigger stadiums, more pressure on the athlete, and even games on television.
This in turn has led some high school coaches to change traditional methods in order to put their teams in the best competitive standing, the release said.
One of these new practices is called specialization.
That is, an athlete focuses on one sport exclusively year round as a prerequisite to participation.
“Sports specialization prioritizes short-term results over the long-term success of our student athletes,” Miller said in the release. “Young people need the space to discover new interests and step outside of their comfort zone.
“When it comes time to take the next step in their educational, athletic or professional career, that diverse range of experiences will unlock new opportunities and empower them to meet new challenges.”
Specialization also can keep students from participating in other, non athletic co-curricular clubs and activities.
Numerous studies have shown that sports specialization leads to more injuries and keeps student athletes from experiencing different teams, clubs and activities, hindering their ability to tap into the full high school education experience, according to the release.
The bill would not mandate a coach to keep a student athlete who cannot make the team on his or her ability; it simply prohibits coaches from having a blanket policy of one sport to the exclusivity of all other activities.
After introduction, the bill awaits a number and assignment to a House committee, where it will be eligible for public hearings, the release said.