You must be a joy to be around. |
??? |
I’m an NVA parent and loved watching RA insult 15 year old girls. This is necessary to win soccer games and make the club look good. |
NVA parent as well. RA wasn't insulting anyone. Just because your little princess wasn't Mia like you thought, you run and cry wolf. Sad. |
Absolutely she insulted kids. Never my own kid, but I’ve seen her say things like “you don’t deserve to be here” when she invited them. Multiple kids, multiple instances and in front of many people. It would take long to add to this example. Whether these comments are true or not, doesn’t matter and is abusive language. It violates federal law when done repeatedly and is demeaning or abusive. will never coach again in Loudoun. |
The HORROR!!!! OMG....she told a player they didn't deserve to be there. Wow. She should be jailed for sure.
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Calm down keyboard warrior....You probably go cry in a bathroom if someone told you that... |
| Is RP coaching the 2012s already? rough weekend for sure. |
Go back to chasing butterflies. More your speed. |
^^^^mixed feelings 4 sure |
| More NVA ID sessions on March 19th? |
Haha. What a complete failure of vision and leadership. |
Building Champions for Life! |
Cool until it’s not. Hardly motivating for a teenage girl. Do some reading. Very insulting for a adult to do this to a kid in front of a group of friends. https://uscenterforsafesport.org/about/our-story/ |
No one is saying abuse is right. Different people have different thresholds for their opinion on what is/isn't abuse. A "tough coach" to some, is "an abuser" to others. It's not black and white. If a coach isn't right for you, then go to a different coach - no reason to put your kid through that. Different kids respond/thrive to different coaching styles and approaches. Some kids need constant praise, some need a more balanced approach with praise and criticism. Expecting a coach to change to your little princess isn't always the answer (yet it seems the approach always taken in this area), and parents demand coaching changes when they don't believe it's a right fit for their kid. |