Why 70% of Kids Quit Sports by 13 & How Parents Can Stop Killing the Joy of the Game featuring Jonathan Carone
The Dad Edge Podcast
Larry Hagner
4.8 • 1.6K Ratings
🗓️ 11 December 2025
⏱️ 55 minutes
🧾️ Download transcript
Summary
If you're a parent with a kid in youth sports—rec, competitive, or full-blown travel—today's episode will hit home. I sit down with Jonathan Carone, creator of Healthy Sports Parents, for a powerful conversation about what youth sports have become, why burnout is skyrocketing, and how well-meaning parents (including me in the early years) unknowingly make the experience more stressful for their kids.
We break down shocking stats—like why 70% of kids quit sports by age 13, why travel leagues are burning families out, and how overtraining is causing injuries in 9-, 10-, and 11-year-olds. Jonathan brings immense wisdom about the car ride home, sideline behavior, when to step in with coaches, and how to raise confident, resilient athletes without crushing the joy of the game.
Timeline Summary:
[0:00] The surprising reason most kids quit sports by age 13.
[2:14] Larry shares his own evolution from "obnoxious sideline dad" to quiet encourager.
[3:41] Introducing guest Jonathan Carone of Healthy Sports Parents.
[4:10] Why travel sports are wrecking family time and burning kids out.
[4:40] The truth about scholarships and NIL fantasies.
[5:00] How the car ride home can make or break a kid's love for the game.
[6:04] The pressure kids feel once sports stop being fun.
[7:04] Why rec leagues are disappearing—and why that matters.
[8:29] How travel sports exploded over the last 25 years.
[10:25] A realistic look at what travel sports demand from families.
[12:09] Early onset injuries from overscheduling and year-round seasons.
[14:21] Real-life stories of parents whose kids never get a break.
[16:06] Why travel sports can destroy family dinners and family culture.
[17:05] The fear-based mindset driving parents to overcommit.
[19:47] The burnout cycle and why most kids stop enjoying the sport.
[20:05] The psychology behind parents who push too hard.
[21:13] Self-love vs. self-glory and how they influence parenting.
[22:29] The myth of scholarships and how rare they really are.
[23:24] How unhealthy pressure destroys a child's love for physical activity.
[24:13] Why running became punishment for our generation.
[26:33] Protecting kids' mental health in the digital age with Bark.
[31:43] What parents should be doing on the sidelines.
[34:36] The car ride home: three things you should ALWAYS say.
[35:42] When and how to give feedback the right way.
[38:44] Using a 5-to-1 positivity ratio to help kids grow.
[41:22] Being an "obnoxious encourager."
[43:33] The power of tone and why it changes everything.
[45:04] When coaches only play to win—and your kid never gets in.
[47:04] Teaching kids to advocate for themselves, age by age.
[49:20] How ADHD affects emotional regulation in sports.
[53:14] The long-tail impact of how we parent through sports.
[54:18] Generational change starts with how we show up today.
Five Key Takeaways
- Kids quit because the game stops being fun—not because of screens, school, or injuries. Pressure from adults is the biggest culprit.
- Travel sports demand 6–15 hours per week before adding training or lessons, often at the cost of family dinners and downtime.
- Overuse injuries are exploding in kids as young as 9 due to year-round seasons and lack of rest.
- Parents often push due to fear, self-validation, or scholarship fantasies, even though less than 5% of athletes ever receive any scholarship money.
- The car ride home should NEVER be coaching time. The only things kids need to hear are: "I loved watching you play," "Where do you want to eat?" and "What do you want to listen to?"
Links & Resources
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Bark Monitoring for Families: https://thedadedge.com/bark
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Healthy Sports Parents (Jonathan Carone): https://healthysportsparents.com
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Healthy Sports Parents on Social: https://www.instagram.com/healthysportsparents/
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Episode Show Notes: https://thedadedge.com/1413
Closing Remark
If this episode gave you a new perspective on supporting your youth athlete, take a moment to rate, review, follow, and share the podcast. Your support helps us reach more dads who want to lead with intention—on the sidelines and at home.
Transcript
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| 0:00.0 | Welcome to the Dad Edge podcast. The Dad Edge movement creates leaders of men, leaders of families, and leaders of communities. We will not only impact this generation of fathers, but the next generation as well. The kids we are raising will have better chances and odds stacked in their favor because of the amazing example |
| 0:21.2 | that their fathers emulated for them. We are here to change the world. We are here to change |
| 0:27.6 | relationships. We are here to positively disrupt this generation of fathers so no man goes to their |
| 0:33.6 | grave with regret. We disrupt the drift of busyness and replace it with razor-focused intention, |
| 0:40.3 | passion, purpose, and direction. |
| 0:43.7 | We are the Dad Edge, |
| 0:45.7 | and we're here to change the game. |
| 0:47.8 | We're here to change the game. |
| 1:04.7 | I don't know. I've got a scary, if I have this statistics for you guys today. |
| 1:07.2 | What if I told you that 70% of kids quit sports by the age of 13? And the number one reason isn't because they get injured. It's not because of school. It's not even because of screens. It's because that it stops being fun. Gentlemen, what's going on? My name is Larry Hagner. I'm the host and founder of the Dad Edge podcast, the Dad Edge Movement. I'm also the founder of the Dad Edge Alliance. That is our mastermind for our career men. I'm also the founder of the Dad Edge Business Border and Brotherhood. That is for our entrepreneurs out there who want to build empires but refuse to leave their families in the dust. They want to build, they want to build legendary marriages, they want to leave their kids, they want to build empires. That's what we do in the dad edge business boardroom brotherhood. So I've got a great show for you guys today. And one, I think if you've got a youth athlete, doesn't matter if it's a girl or a boy, if you got a youth athlete, you might be one of two parents. You might be the parent that's screaming from the sidelines because |
| 2:01.2 | you want your kid to do so well. You might be the quiet one. And what I can tell you is I've been both. Presently, I'm the quiet one. Years ago, I was the loud one. I was the obnoxious one. I was the one that one of my kids would do so well in sports. And then by doing this podcast, I was able to learn a few things and |
| 2:17.7 | realize that I was actually doing my kids more harm than good by doing that. So I've got some |
| 2:24.7 | stats for you guys today and just some ways to maybe look at this whole situation with youth athletes, |
| 2:30.2 | maybe just a little bit differently. So I don't know if you guys know this, but roughly |
| 2:34.2 | one out of three kids and youth sports report actually having high stress and anxiety around |
| 2:38.8 | game time. Fewer than two out of 100 ever play at the college level. I actually did not know |
| 2:45.4 | those stats. Only two out of 100 will play at the college level. That's crazy when you really |
| 2:50.1 | think about it. yet a ton of |
| 2:52.3 | us me included i used to be like this we're at our kids games or tournaments or whatever and we're |
| 2:57.1 | cheering them on like their performance is going to dictate whether or not they get a full ride |
| 3:02.3 | scholarship into college like like literally like that's the kind of stuff i don't know about |
| 3:06.6 | you guys but that's the kind of stuff i used't know about you guys but that's the kind of |
... |
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