87_Was_Long_Ago said:
TarponChaser said:
AggByMarriage said:
Yes absolutely. Parents do it for academic, social, and athletic reasons.
Malcom Gladwell wrote about age and athletic performance in his book "Outliers". He observed that most of the kids that were in elite youth hockey were born in January. The selection process in Canada (his home country) was based on birth year not birth day. Kids born in January of 20xx are for all purposes 1 year older than kids born in December of same year.
He pointed out most professional hockey players in Canada are born in January and February.
I'm familiar with Gladwell's study and while people frequently point to it, I think it's correlation and not causality. The holding kids back or what part of the year they're born in might be impactful at the margins but if you're a stud you're a stud and you'll advance regardless.
(not to derail changing this to hockey, but it's right in my wheelhouse and relevant)
One thing that Gladwell's study didn't address thoroughly enough is the ripple effect that started much earlier
Players born in Jan-Mar had a bigger advantage in elite hockey tryouts ages 8-9-10, so they made better teams with better coaches and teammates, and played against better competition. Very well proven statistically, and carries through all the way to college and junior hockey.
Hockey is also unusual that elite players will usually play a year or two of junior hockey as 18-19-20 year olds *after* high school or prep careers, so vast majority of college hockey players are 21-25 years old.
A USA Hockey official told us years ago the average age of a D1 freshman was just under 21, and it's very accurate. Mine turned 21 early in his freshman year, and almost all his freshman teammates were the same.
Which is why seeing a kid like Macklin Celebrini dominate for Boston College at 17 years old was insane.
I don't know enough about hockey (which is to say I know you play on ice with skates, a hard rubber disk, and sticks but that's about it) to compare but I've already witnessed it in baseball, football, basketball, and girls volleyball where a lot of these kids who, for lack of a better term, have gamed the age classification system to be older than their competitive peers so that they're a year or more older than kids in their same class get passed up.
I agree there's a lot to be said for getting on better teams with better coaches and teammates but all that assumes the kid who is older and more mature: 1) puts in the work on fundamentals; 2) has the genetic capacity to be bigger/faster/stronger/quicker when fully mature. As for facing better competition, that's somewhat on the kid and their team and who they decide to play.
My point being if that kid born January-March or whatever timeframe is deemed most advantageous has a dad who's 5'9" and a mom who's 5'2", it doesn't really matter if the kid is 5'6" at 11 and destroying all the other kids. Odds are that kid is going to be 5'9" and unless they can run a 4.3 40 in football or a 6.3 60 in baseball the likelihood they will have a future in either sport is extremely low.
I'll admit a bias because my boys are the youngest ones in their respective classes but I've seen it with my oldest where a bunch of kids he played with from 8-12 were better than him, so even though he played on high-level teams he was at the bottom of the roster. But he's blown past almost all those kids- the others are still fundamentally skilled but so is he only now he's much bigger, stronger, faster, and more explosive than them because he's now 6'1" 180# and hasn't had his growth spurt yet while a lot of those kids are topped out at 5'9".