Sports Training - How Much is Too Much?

Provided by: Children's Hospital Boston
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Kids are starting sports earlier and training harder. Incentives to win are growing, sometimes literally; I've seen trophies almost bigger than the little athletes who've won them! With higher stakes come pressures to perform better by being fitter and more skilled. Usually, this is achieved through repetition, repetition, repetition.

In kids' sports programs, fitness and skill development have to be balanced with the need to avoid overtraining – which happens when the athlete is required to do too much physically, mentally, or both.

Parents need to be sensitive to changes in performance and attitude that suggest their kids are being pushed too hard. Such changes may be precursors of physical injury.

Signs of overtraining

  • Slower times in distance sports such as running, cycling, and swimming

  • Deterioration in execution of sports plays or routines such as those performed in figure skating and gymnastics

  • Decreased ability to achieve training goals

  • Lack of motivation to practice

  • Getting tired easily

  • Irritability and unwillingness to cooperate with teammates

Unfortunately, when a parent or coach is confronted with signs of overtraining, the tendency is to push the child harder. But if overtraining is the culprit, any increase in training will only worsen the situation.

Too much training may eventually lead to overuse injuries in which actual damage to the bones and soft tissues occurs because the body can't recover from the repetitive physical demands placed on it by sport activity. This raises an important question: How much is too much? Unfortunately, not a great deal of hard data is available on this subject. In the absence of data obtained from clinical studies, we need to formulate our guidelines based on observations made over the years by coaches and sports scientists.

How long can kids train for?

As a general rule, children shouldn't train for more than 18-20 hours a week. If a child is engaged in elite competition there may be pressures to train for longer – especially in the lead-up to a major event. Anytime a child trains for longer than this recommended length of time she must be monitored by a qualified sports doctor with expertise in young athletes. This is to make sure abnormalities in growth or maturation do not occur. Any joint pain lasting more than two weeks is justification for a visit to the sports doctor.

It's also important to ensure restrictions against excessive sports activity are not exceeded. For instance, young baseball pitchers in America are not allowed to pitch more than seven innings a week. While this restriction is mostly adhered to in the game setting, it is pointless if kids are pressured by their coaches to throw excessively during practices (parents, too, need to remember that going to the park with their kid to "throw a few" needs to be counted as part of the number of pitches he makes). In general, young baseball players shouldn't perform more than 300 "skilled throws" a week; any more than this and the risk of injury dramatically increases.

How much of an increase in training is safe?

Increasing the frequency, duration, or intensity of training too quickly is one of the main causes of injury. To prevent injuries caused by too-rapid increases in training, I am a strong believer in athletes following the "ten-percent rule." This rule refers to the amount of training that can be increased every week without risking injury to a young athlete. In other words, a child running 20 minutes four times a week can probably safely run 22 minutes four times the second week – an increase of ten percent per week.

Most of the injuries I see in my clinic are the product of violations of the ten percent rule, when young athletes have their training regimen increased too much, too soon.

How hard should kids train?

When young athletes are growing the emphasis should be on developing athletic technique. Although power or speed are important qualities in sports, stressing them to children at the expense of technique can lead to injuries. Once good technique is mastered, power and speed can be introduced.

It is important for you to safeguard your children against being overtrained. The danger of this happening is especially acute if your child is an elite athlete or one engaged in a very competitive sports environment. Perhaps the most effective measure any parent can take is to make sure his child's coach is certified. Another is to look out for the signs of overtraining, as described above, as well as the early signs of injuries themselves.

In many cases, I believe, kids drop out of sports because of low-grade pain that is actually the early stage of an overuse injury. The pain is never diagnosed as an early-stage overuse injury because the child simply quits the program. What this may do is prejudice a child against physical activity and exercise for life.

Given the state of fitness in this country, overtraining children has the opposite effect of what we want, which is to instill in our young people a love of exercise that will stay with them through life, and inspire them to stay fit and healthy long after their youth sports days are done.

Source: Adapted from The Sports Medicine Bible for Young Athletes by Lyle J. Micheli, M.D., Sports Medicine Director, Children's Hospital Boston, with Mark Jenkins (Sourcebooks, Inc., 2001). Dr. Micheli is director and co-founder of the world's first sports medicine clinic for children, located at Children's Hospital Boston. He is also the chairperson of the Massachusetts Governor's Committee on Physical Fitness and Sports, and a past president of the American College of Sports Medicine.

Last Updated: 08/01/05
2007 Children's Hospital Boston . All rights reserved.

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