By Jeff Wood, Sport Performance Specialist
Almost every day there are articles written or posted about early specialization in sport versus athletes participating in multiple sports. Personally, I am a proponent of playing multiple sports as a child and doing so well into the teen years because there is plenty of evidence that this helps athletes build their movement pattern bank account and become very athletic. Having said that, there will come a time in an athlete’s career when they will discover what they excel at the most, and they will need to make a decision to specialize in that sport or to keep being a solid multi-sport athlete.
The decision will come down to the following: do I want to excel at one sport or be good at many sports? This point in time will be different for every sport based on an athlete’s ideal age for peak performance. For example, a gymnast will need to specialize earlier because their peak performance age is typically earlier while endurance sport athletes tend to peak later.
There was a great stat that came out after the 2019 Super Bowl that polled all of the players in that game that said that approximately 95 per cent of the participants were at least two-sport athletes growing up. What is important to note here is that those athletes all specialized at some point and became great football players but not before reaping the athletic benefits of playing more than one sport for the majority of their developmental years.
For every coach or parent that says their athletes are great players because they specialized early, there are others that will say that their athletes became great players because they were multi-sport athletes first. There is no one best way to develop an athlete to elite levels in sport.
There are many ways to get to the highest levels in sport and some will have specialized early and some athletes would have played multiple sports to get there. We are not going to debate whose model is the best because there are examples of successful athletes at both ends of the spectrum and in all areas in between. What we will do is show the potential pros and cons of each and provide some guidelines on how to decide when the best time to specialize is.
The website, www.sportforlife.ca shows the Canadian Long Term Athlete Development model and its stages. There is a lot of great information on this site to help athletes and parents figure out what kinds of activities they should be looking for and when in the child’s development they should be doing them.
Let’s take a sport like hockey for example. We will compare two male hockey players. Athlete 1 is a 13-year-old and is 5’11” and weighs 165 lbs while Athlete 2 is also 13-years-old but is 5’1” tall and weighs 110 lbs. Athlete 1 has clearly hit puberty, gone through their major growth spurt, and is basically adult-sized while Athlete 2 hasn’t hit puberty or grown and is still basically a child. Both are the same age and skilled players but Athlete 1 will get far more attention paid to him and get far more opportunities to advance than Athlete 2.
The above scenario is pretty common across most sports regardless of gender. For females, they will hit PHV earlier than males but they will have the same situations arise. There will always be some athletes who grow and develop at an earlier age and achieve peak performance early, then there will be athletes who grow and develop later and peak at a later age, and finally the majority will follow the typical development model and fall somewhere in between that.