Virginia Golfer Mar / Apr 2019 | Page 36

Instruction A Roadmap For Your Junior Golfer Y our child is ready to pick up a golf club for the first time. Great! But where to start? What’s the best plan for optimizing your child’s experi- ence on the golf course and allow his or her love for the game grow naturally? Dr. Jean Cote, an internationally renowned sports science researcher dis- covered the three stages that children progress through on their way to becoming elite athletes in any sport. Following the roadmap below will help get your child on the right track, right from the beginning. IF YOUR CHILD IS 6-12 YEARS OLD These are called the ‘sampling years.’ This is not the time to specialize in one sport. 34 Exposing your child to a variety of sports will allow him or her to experience a vari- ety of skills that will serve them for life (balance, coordination, running, jumping, throwing to name a few). At this point, your child should be exposed to 6-8 dif- ferent sports and activities, and coaches should reinforce fundamentals, fitness and movement education. The emphasis at this age is on play and games. Don’t make it too serious, too early! IF YOUR CHILD IS 13-15 YEARS OLD These are the ‘specializing years.’ At this point, he or she has narrowed down what activities in which they want to participate. We hope golf is one of them! Ideally, you V I R G I N I A G O L F E R | M A R C H / A P R I L 2 0 1 9 will want to find sports in opposite seasons so they are continually engaged. If he or she plays golf in the spring and summer, maybe basketball in the fall and winter is a good choice. This is the time to begin specialized practice and to dedicate equal amounts of time to deliberate play and practice. If your child is serious about improving, consider a plan that features 72 holes or more per week for seven-plus months while spending about 15-20 hours per week on deliberate practice that will help improve on-course performance. At this point, they’re serious about golf; practice and play should facilitate that commitment. With structure comes measurement, and this is the time to begin to measure vsga.org by LEIGHANN ALBAUGH, M.ED., PGA