Don't worry about that poster, a known troll. Always talking about therapy or therapists when they're the one that needs it. |
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I was dilusional at that age about my talents as well… I got the message eventually and I turned out ok.
I’m not really fond of some of the responses so I will try to frame this in the best way possible. I would not worry so much about the specific in-game feedback. It can be overly judgmental. I would focus on why he has accepted no playing time and ask questions like: Do you enjoy your role in the team? If no. What does your coach need from you in order to contribute more to the team? What can you specifically work on daily in order to contribute in the way you want to? I would lay out a realistic path to where he wants to go. Every path is different but I would work with him to create benchmarks. If he does not meet those benchmarks, it will lead to self-discovery. Hope this helps! |
| To PP: plays the full game on club. Just none on school. And neither coach has provided any constructive feedback. I know enough about soccer to see it for myself but can’t say anything to kid. Not my place. So when they think they are playing like Pulisic, hard to say. Um…. No. I keep it positive but they need more to get their goals. Watching tape w private coach might be just the thing. |
Use whatever influence you have including money and social media to hype your kid and get him/her recruited to a top D1 program and pretend that he/she is really a great player. |
| If the coach isn’t coaching but the team is hug level, I would have my child guest play or join practices with other teams and see how other coaches do. At 15, leave the coaching to the coaches. |
Yeah, we've had 4 different coaches in 4 years. Some coaches don't do a lot of 1 on 1 development with the kids or provide actual feedback with a real status where a player is. They just stick with team training and general feedback/ general individual development. Most kids will not seek direct feedback from the coaches on their own, ever at any age without some encouragement from the parents. |
| Above is true. And mine has specifically asked and been told nothing useful, or even correct for that matter. It really stinks that you pay $3500 per year and don’t actually get coaching. You have to pay extra for that. Honestly I find the whole thing ridiculous but kid LOVES soccer. |
| enjoy the ride progress sometimes come with maturity and that varies by kid. aggressiveness/grit might only come later to your kid. |
Coaches are employees paid to do a job. Just like with all jobs, there are good ones and not so good ones. And especially at these mostly low end paying jobs that most coaches fall into, you aren't getting the very best, and there isn't a lot of motivation for them to go above and beyond. High school coaches are barely paid and it's usually a side gig for a teacher to make some extra money so we should tailor our expectations accordingly. |
| This guy is a troll. |
who did you hire? |
| Echo the question! |
Just ask them if they had fun and let them know what they did in game that you liked. What is healthiest for the kid is your support and honest enjoyment of their playing and effort. |