This perspective on human performance is super interesting!

Many of our stories about "genius," "superstars," and high performers are grounded in assuming that the patterns of early learning will extrapolate to the rest of life - e.g., child prodigies, gifted students, and those with early steep curves on the achievement trajectory. But what happens when you expand the window of observation?

This review challenges some of our long-standing myths about high performance. They suggest:

"The pattern of predictors that distinguishes among the highest levels of adult performance is different from the pattern of predictors of early performance. Higher early performance in a domain is associated with larger amounts of discipline-specific practice, smaller amounts of multidisciplinary practice, and faster early discipline-specific performance progress."

https://www.science.org/doi/10.1126/science.adt7790

@grimalkina FWIW this appears to align with the thinking of an old friend of mine Duff Gibson ... he has written quite a bit about the importance of multi-sport experiences for children in the context of later high performance. I don't think he's on Mastodon. Thought you might find this interesting https://www.darkhorseathletic.ca/general-6
The Tao of Sport book | Dark Horse Athletic

Dark Horse Athletic
@snowdolphin very fun thank you! I talk about sports psychology a lot with my trainer and she will enjoy too