Sports medicine stats: Age of single-sport specialization

When comparing college athletes to high school athletes who don’t play college sports, an interesting trend about the age at which both groups began playing only one sport emerges. A study presented at the 2014 meeting of the American Medical Society for Sports Medicine (AMSSM) found that the former high school students who didn’t play college sports began single-sport specialization at an average age of 14.2 years, compared to an average age of 15.4 years for the college athletes.

Likewise, a study of Swedish tennis players found that the elite athletes played a variety of sports until age 14, while the sub-elite tennis players quit all sports other than tennis by age 11.

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Source: Statistics presented in the Op-Ed column “Sports Should Be Child’s Play” by David Epstein in The New York Times June 11, 2014.

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