• Home
  • >
  • Sports
  • >
  • Does talent translate to the next level

Does talent translate to the next level

By russellBUSH

 There has always been a discussion if you have great or good middle school teams that the consensus is that you will have great or good high school teams and the flip side of that of course, is that if you have bad middle school teams then you will have bad high school teams. I hate to burst a lot of bubbles but that thought is a bunch of bull. In the next several sentences I will explain my thoughts on why I don’t necessarily believe those statements are true.

 First of all, kids change from middle to high school. Some kids get bigger and then some that are big in middle school never grow and, in some cases,  kids outgrow the position they played in middle school. For example, one child might be a running back in middle school and end up being a lineman in high school. They may have excelled at the middle level because they were bigger and then everyone in high school catches up with them.

 It is also very difficult to keep kids together from the sixth grade through high school. If you can keep a core group of kids together all the way through to graduation and they were successful on the middle level then the chances of being successful in high school goes up dramatically. With that being said, however, it is almost impossible to keep all of them together. There are injuries or kids get tired of playing football and there are just too many variables to factor in at a public school.

 One variable a lot of people don’t think about is that when they get to high school then they go into the mix with kids that have already been there for a couple of years. In most schools’ kids play two years in middle school and then four years of high school and playing time is limited for newcomers. Chemistry here is important because the middle kids who are used to playing with each other are now in the mix with three-year players and that affects chemistry.

 One example I like to use is one of my nephews when he was in the eight grade saw his middle team go 2-5 which is not good but when he was a junior in high school the Mustangs won a state championship and his senior year they brought home a silver ball. So, his middle teams record didn’t account for a lot did it? My point is there are just too many things that can happen that create a change for the good or for the worse from middle to high school.

 I will say this, however, that although you can’t say that if your middle school is good or bad then that will be how it is with the high school, it is a good indicator of what will happen. I think the key is how many years you sustain success at the middle level. Currently the middle Mustangs are on a roll of several good years at the middle level and I believe that will translate to the high school. One year of success or failure at the middle level is not a true indicator.

 For more on Huntingdon sports, check out The Beating Around the Bush Podcast on Apple and Spotify.

Related Posts

The Carroll County News-Leader is a full-service, premium newspaper and news website serving Carroll County, Tennessee. We take advantage of today’s digital technology to deliver you the news that matters to you in ways that are only possible in this platform and in print.
Contact us: [email protected]

© Copyright 2024 

newsleaderonline.com, 84 Elks Lodge Rd. Huntingdon, TN