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A
Coach's Letter
to Parents
Dear Parents,
Here are some hints on how to make this a fun season, with lots of positive
memories for your kids and your family.
- Make sure that win or lose you love
them, as the person in their life that they can always look to for support.
- Try to be completely honest with
yourself about your kids' athletic capability, their competitive attitude, their
sportsmanship, and their level of skills.
- Be helpful, but don't coach your
kids on the way to the game or at the breakfast table. Think about how tough it must
be on them to be constantly inundated with advice, pep talks, and criticism.
- Teach your kids to enjoy the thrill
of competition, to be out there trying, to be constantly working to improve their skills,
to take physical bumps and come back for more. Don't tell them that winning doesn't
count because it does, and they know it. Instead help them develop a healthy
competitive attitude, a "feel" for competing, for trying hard, for having a good
time.
- Try not to live your life through
your kids. You've lost as well as won. You've been frightened and backed off
at times. Sure they are an extension of you but they may not feel the same way as
you did, want the same things, or have the same attitude.
- Don't push them in the direction
that gives you the most satisfaction. Don't compete with your kids' coaches. A
coach may become a hero to your kids for a while, someone who can do no wrong, and you may
find that hard to take. Conversely, don't automatically side with your kids against
their coaches. Try to help them understand the necessity for discipline, rules, and
regulations.
- Don't compare your kids with other
players on their team - at least not within their hearing - don't lie to them about their
capabilities as a player. If you are overly protective you will perpetuate the
problem.
- Get to know your kids' coaches.
Make sure that you approve of each coach's attitude and ethics. Coaches can
be influential, and you should know the values of each coach so that you can decide
whether or not you want them passed on to your kids.
- Remember that children tend to
exaggerate. Temper your reaction to stories that they bring home from practice or
the game about how they were praised or criticized. Don't criticize them for
exaggerating, but don't overact to the stories that they tell you.
- Teach your kids the meaning of
courage. Some of us can climb mountains, but are frightened about getting into a
fight. Some of us can fight without fear, but turn to jelly at the sight of a bee.
Everyone is frightened about something. Courage isn't the absence of fear.
Courage is learning to perform in spite of fear. It's overcoming it.
- Winning is an important goal.
Winning at all costs is stupidity.
- Remember that the officials are
necessary. Don't overreact to their calls. They have rules and guidelines to
follow representing authority on the field. Teach your kids to respect authority and
to play by the rules.
- Finally, remember, if the kids
aren't having fun, we're missing the whole point of youth sports.
Darrell Burnett, Ph.D.
Darrell J.
Burnett, Ph.D. Clinical and Sports Psychologist, has several
publications in the area of YouthSports. You may contact him at:
FUNAGAIN Press
P. O. Box 7223
Laguna Niguel, CA 92607-7223
1-800-493-5943, Fax # (949) 495-8204
Email: funagain@pacbell.net
Website: http://www.djburnett.com
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