- Sep 11, 2012
- 28
- 8
Can someone help clear this up. Ive emailed USASF but waiting for a response. I have always heard prep teams were half year teams. Is this not the case? Can they be year round?
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Yes, prep teams can be full year. They just tend to be lower cost, less travel, etc with shorter routinesCan someone help clear this up. Ive emailed USASF but waiting for a response. I have always heard prep teams were half year teams. Is this not the case? Can they be year round?
so theres no regulations on them except routine time?Yes, prep teams can be full year. They just tend to be lower cost, less travel, etc with shorter routines
Athletes on a prep team can't crossover to a non-prep team at the same comp and they aren't allowed to do basket tosses at any level. Other than that there isn't much else.so theres no regulations on them except routine time?
It may be just me but there seems to be many more prep teams compared to when my CP started competing. It also seems to be that the mini and youth prep teams are likely to be full year in many gyms right now. My friend has a child on a prep team that is routinely frustrated by the competition as some of the teams are much more advanced than the non-prep counterparts. If I was a coach of the team I would be concerned that the difference in ability and competitveness may be off putting to new athletes and their families. I would think it would be a downer to consitently feel as though they have no chance against the other stacked teams. Winning isn't everything but if our first year we came in dead last every time I'm not sure we would have had as many return for the next season.There are several gyms in our area that register their full year teams in the prep division. Most of them do it because they are tiny and cannot be competitive in the Allstar division. There is one gym however that takes advantage of the fact that there is no rule against it and cleans up in the prep division. I feel like there should be more rules about how prep is handled.
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I know who you're talking about. The good gyms use prep teams as feeder programs, so they're coached by the same people who coach regular season teams. Good coaches = good teams.When CP was doing Prep, we went to one competition where the two big gyms in our area had a team in every division (sometimes multiple since they have 3 locations each). Pretty sure they took first in most of them. Kind of annoying to have no chance against those big gyms - but they tend to win in non-prep so we just figured it's to be expected.. I do know that they are true half-season since they don't have try-outs until November at least.
It may be just me but there seems to be many more prep teams compared to when my CP started competing. It also seems to be that the mini and youth prep teams are likely to be full year in many gyms right now. My friend has a child on a prep team that is routinely frustrated by the competition as some of the teams are much more advanced than the non-prep counterparts. If I was a coach of the team I would be concerned that the difference in ability and competitveness may be off putting to new athletes and their families. I would think it would be a downer to consitently feel as though they have no chance against the other stacked teams. Winning isn't everything but if our first year we came in dead last every time I'm not sure we would have had as many return for the next season.
This is CP's third year on a prep team and we're currently debating about if she will do prep or all star next year. With the new age grid and the way things have been handled at our program this year it really depends on the tryout packet.
All our prep teams except for one are full year. We usually have a half year S2 prep for girls who can't/don't want to do school and all star at the same time. Prep teams are a cheaper alternative, not just for beginners. There is always the discussion of families being proceed out on here, prep is one semi solution to that.
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Ha thank you yes I did, fixed it!I take it you mean priced out. Here it seems to be a mix of school cheerleaders and people who think full year allstar is too expensive & too time consuming. Most prep is half year here, starts in Nov. My CP was on full year before we moved, we moved late in the summer and she could not join a full year. I love half year prep! It's a third of the cost and so much more freedom. Looks like we will do another season of prep next year which will save $$$ for sure. :)
Prep was originally meant to be an intro to allstar I think, but a lot of gyms have teams that are far from beginners. It would be hard to make more rules for it? But I get that prep teams that are all new to cheer can think it's unfair sometimes?
(Question marks because I'm not sure what I think, just that it's an interesting discussion.)