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In youth sports, the pressure to specialize earlier and train harder is everywhere. But what if the best path for young athletes is actually slower, more patient, and more focused on the long game? In this episode of Heaven or Heisman, former Texas A&M University runner and endurance coach Mike Hummel joins us to share a different perspective on developing athletes—and why protecting a child’s love for the sport matters more than early results.
Mike reflects on his own journey as a competitive runner and coach, including the moment his ten-year-old son told him he wanted to go to the Olympics. Instead of rushing into intense training, Mike chose to wait, focusing on playful habits, family challenges, and building the underlying skills that sustain long-term growth. Through stories from coaching elite youth triathletes and lessons from athletes like Stephen Curry and Kobe Bryant, we explore how parents can shift their focus from outcomes to process.
This conversation challenges parents to move from being the drivers of their child’s sports journey to becoming the architects of the environment—creating spaces where discipline, curiosity, and joy in the work can grow naturally over time.
By heavenorheisman.comIn youth sports, the pressure to specialize earlier and train harder is everywhere. But what if the best path for young athletes is actually slower, more patient, and more focused on the long game? In this episode of Heaven or Heisman, former Texas A&M University runner and endurance coach Mike Hummel joins us to share a different perspective on developing athletes—and why protecting a child’s love for the sport matters more than early results.
Mike reflects on his own journey as a competitive runner and coach, including the moment his ten-year-old son told him he wanted to go to the Olympics. Instead of rushing into intense training, Mike chose to wait, focusing on playful habits, family challenges, and building the underlying skills that sustain long-term growth. Through stories from coaching elite youth triathletes and lessons from athletes like Stephen Curry and Kobe Bryant, we explore how parents can shift their focus from outcomes to process.
This conversation challenges parents to move from being the drivers of their child’s sports journey to becoming the architects of the environment—creating spaces where discipline, curiosity, and joy in the work can grow naturally over time.