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Sports General Discussion
Reply to "How to get noticed by your own coaches?"
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[quote=Anonymous][quote=Anonymous][quote=Anonymous]My DD is stuck in a pattern in which at the beginning of a year or season, coaches are really excited about her attitude and potential. She works super hard, shows up with a positive but aggressive attitude every day, and is renlentless in trying to execute what the coaches ask her to do. Unfortunately, after a couple of seasons in more than one sport with different coaches, I’ve noticed a pattern. As the season goes on, coaches’ attention gravitates to everyone but her. The main reasons I notice is that coaches give focused attention to girls who are behind in certain areas, and to girls who have behavioral problems/bad attitudes/slack off. The recipients of the negative attention especially seem to bloom athletically. Worse yet, even when their attitudes or work ethic doesn’t change, the coaches just seem to eventually shrug it off since their performance improves with all of the extra attention. The girls who are behind benefit from the 1:1 attention and the coaches notice their progress since it’s so obvious. On an objective basis, my daughter is consistently in the top 1/3rd of her teams skill-wise and athletically at the start of the season, and coaches always compliment her attitude and work ethic. But as the season progresses, she kind of disappears and the coaches forget about her. She loses playing time and eventually loses confidence. This has happened 3-4 times. I think that because she isn’t a jerk or a superstar, but also isn’t totally struggling, it’s hurting her. Is there something about her attitude or mindset that she can work on to help the coaches “see” her? What motivates a coach to invest in an athlete?[/quote] OP I am sorry but it is you and your kid, not the others. If your kid is not getting play time that is because the other kids are better. Coaches are not playing those unruly kids to lose. They play what they consider the best to win. Winning is the ticket and they don't think your kid has what it takes. I am not trying to be mean. It's reality. Of course, there are some favorites on every time, however, you said this has happened more than once. A pattern...[/quote] Real coaches bench even the superstars when they misbehave, all the way up to the professional level. A good coach doesn't put up with that crap. IT undermines his authority and creates animosity on the team and amongst teammates. We have seen it on our teams (basketball) that are ranked in the top 10 in the nation. It's these super pay to play crap teams that will create these mini prima donnas with parents to match that get away with their temper tantrums. We have seen the college coaches will not recruit these kids.[/quote]
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