The Wide World of Youth Sports

This past February, the Winter Olympics in Milano Cortina held our attentions for three weeks straight, including our kids. Watching hours of slaloms and biathlon and speed skating, completely engrossed.

Both the Winter and Summer Olympic Games pique kidโ€™s interest in new sports. They are at an age where they think they can pick up these sports so easily and they want to try everything. What, like itโ€™s hard? We found ourselves Googling where the nearest luge center was.

But with the Winter Olympics particularly, the countries bringing home the most medals arenโ€™t always the biggest or richest. This year, Norway, the Netherlands, and Germany were in the top five medal count, along with the US and Italy the host country.

Are they just better at snow sports? Do they start their kids on the Olympic track early? Yes and no.

It raised a bigger question about youth sports around the world and how different countries develop young athletes. Turns out, different countries structure youth sports very differently and the contrasts are big enough that they shape kidsโ€™ experiences, family culture, and even national athletic success.

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Our Muddy Kids Review

Technically, this isnโ€™t a play date. I was so excited that I found a mud race that our kids could participate in. Unfortunately, it fell right on Maryโ€™s 10th wedding anniversary. Thatโ€™s fine, Iโ€™ll be a family activity review. Then the morning of the race, Z was sick with a fever. So the family outing became a Mom and Aeris day.

Muddy Kids is open to families and kids aged 5-17, so we were right at the minimum line. They also have a version called the Muddy Princess that is women only. Kids must have a parent to register, and a parent must race as well if their runner is under 16 years old.

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