18/02/2026
“Weightlifting is dangerous for kids…”
…might be one of the most outdated myths in sport 😅
Here’s the irony 👇
When coached properly, Olympic weightlifting is actually safer than many sports kids regularly play — including rugby, football, and even gymnastics.
🏋️♂️ Weightlifting (done properly)
• No collisions
• No tackling
• No unpredictable contact
• Loads are progressed slowly and deliberately
• Technique, posture, balance, and control come before weight
• Movements are coached, repeatable, and highly monitored
In youth weightlifting, the goal isn’t maxing out — it’s learning how to move well under control.
🏉 Rugby & ⚽ Football
• High-speed collisions
• Falls, tackles, awkward landings
• External forces you can’t control
• Injuries often happen to the athlete, not because of poor movement
You can do everything right… and still get hit from the side 😬
🤸♀️ Gymnastics
• Extreme ranges of motion
• High impact landings
• Huge forces through wrists, elbows, shoulders, and spine
• Often very high training volumes at young ages
It’s not “bad” — it’s just far from low risk.
🧠 The big difference?
Weightlifting is controlled chaos-free strength.
Kids learn:
• How to squat, hinge, push, pull
• How to absorb force safely
• How to generate power without crashing into someone
• Body awareness, confidence, and resilience
All skills that carry over to every other sport.
📊 What the research actually shows
Youth weightlifting when properly coached, age-appropriate and technique-led has one of the lowest injury rates in youth sport.
Most injuries people blame on “weights” actually come from:
• Poor coaching
• Ego lifting
• Or confusing weightlifting with unsupervised gym sessions
Final thought 💭
If we trust kids to:
• Tackle each other at speed
• Jump, twist, and land repeatedly
• Sprint into crowds
Then teaching them how to lift properly might be one of the safest things we can do.
Strong kids ≠ broken kids
Strong kids = resilient kids 💪