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Zak Zahner

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March 3, 2026

What Kids Really Need in Training (That Schools Don’t Teach)

Most parents assume that because their child plays a school sport — and maybe even lifts in the school weight room — they’re getting everything they need to grow as an athlete. They’re practicing, conditioning, and working hard, so it feels like development.

But there’s a huge piece missing:

School sports teach the sport.

They don’t teach the athletic abilities that make kids better at the sport.

And that difference is what determines whether a young athlete struggles, plateaus, or truly thrives.

Why Movement Skills Matter More Than Just Working Hard

Even in schools with weight rooms, the focus is usually on:

  • Running plays
  • Conditioning
  • Lifting basic weights
  • Team drills

All of that is valuable — it just isn’t the same as teaching kids how their body should move to perform at its best.

Most athletes are never taught:

  • How to land safely when they jump
  • How to accelerate and decelerate efficiently
  • How to cut and change direction without losing balance
  • How to use their hips for power
  • How to align their knees and ankles to prevent injury
  • How to build speed mechanics that actually make them faster

These are the skills that unlock performance.

These are the skills that protect their body.

These are the skills that build confidence.

And they’re not part of most school programs simply because coaches have limited time and big teams to manage.

Coordination: The Foundation Schools Don’t Have Time to Build

Coordination is the base layer of athleticism. It’s what helps kids:

  • Control their body
  • React quickly
  • Stay balanced
  • Move smoothly
  • Learn new skills faster

But coordination training requires intentional, age‑appropriate progressions — not just drills with a ball or general conditioning.

This is why two kids can practice the same amount, but one looks confident and fluid while the other looks unsure or “behind.”

The difference is coordination, not effort.

Strength vs. Athletic Strength

School weight rooms help kids get stronger — and that’s great.

But athletic strength is different from just lifting weights.

Athletic strength means:

  • Being strong in the positions their sport demands
  • Being stable when they cut, jump, or rotate
  • Being powerful without losing control
  • Being able to absorb force and produce force safely

This type of strength requires movement coaching, not just sets and reps.

Confidence Comes From Knowing How to Move

When kids understand how to move, everything changes:

  • They feel more capable
  • They take more risks
  • They learn skills faster
  • They stay healthier
  • They enjoy their sport more

Confidence doesn’t come from running kids until they’re tired.

It comes from helping them feel in control of their body.

Why This Matters for Your Child’s Future

Kids today face more competition, more pressure, and more physical demands than ever. But they’re also growing up with:

  • Less PE
  • Less recess
  • More sitting
  • Less movement variety

So when they show up to sports, they’re expected to perform without ever being taught the athletic skills that make performance possible.

That’s where intentional training fills the gap — not replacing school sports, but supporting them.

What Young Athletes Actually Need

To thrive in sports, kids need:

  • Movement quality — not just effort
  • Coordination training — not just drills
  • Athletic strength — not just weight room strength
  • Speed mechanics — not just “run faster!”
  • Confidence through competence — not comparison
  • A coach who teaches the body, not just the sport

This is how you build durable, resilient, confident athletes who stay healthy and love the game long‑term.

The Takeaway for Parents

School sports are important. School weight rooms are valuable.

But they’re not designed to teach the athletic abilities your child needs to perform at their best.

That’s where intentional athletic development comes in — building the movement, coordination, and confidence that make everything in sports easier, safer, and more fun.

Ready to Help Your Athlete Build the Skills That Make Sports Easier?

If your child is ready to develop the movement, coordination, and athletic strength that schools simply don’t have time to teach, reach out and we’ll get them started.

417‑441‑2766

info@wellstreetfitness.com

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