Anonymous wrote:I would also like to add something. My daughter played soccer until 6th grade. She was always the dominant player. She also picked up lax in 4th and slowly played it more and more. Without question the comradery with lax was exponentially more evident. They dress up for practice, where the silly eye black and text and tik tok constantly. (Let's set those last 2 aside..)
I sincerely never experienced that with soccer. Granted it was rec, but she also constantly played with the same girls during all stars.
Anonymous wrote:Boys or Girls - doesn’t matter. There are no friends in soccer. The players have friends but the parents on your sideline are not friends. They seem nice? They seem helpful? Given a choice, the other parents you share so many moments with will talk about your kid, and given a choice they will throw you under the bus, your kid under the bus just to get ahead.
If you dare do something nice trying to be different than the others - those people will abuse your kindness and crap on you. Be warned and find friends away from your club. Stay close enough to help your son (or daughter) keep their friendships.
Soccer is brutal. Wish I lived in Maryland or had a daughter even though I see much daughter drama there
Anonymous wrote:Boys or Girls - doesn’t matter. There are no friends in soccer. The players have friends but the parents on your sideline are not friends. They seem nice? They seem helpful? Given a choice, the other parents you share so many moments with will talk about your kid, and given a choice they will throw you under the bus, your kid under the bus just to get ahead.
If you dare do something nice trying to be different than the others - those people will abuse your kindness and crap on you. Be warned and find friends away from your club. Stay close enough to help your son (or daughter) keep their friendships.
Soccer is brutal. Wish I lived in Maryland or had a daughter even though I see much daughter drama there
Anonymous wrote:You do realize soccer is a team sport, don’t you? That means the team will win or lose based on multiple kids’ actions. It also means a forward and Gk are generally not competing for playing time.
We have a group of kids and parents we are friendly with, including a few that have moved to other clubs. We are positive during games, but, yes, we will talk afterwards within our family about who played poorly and why. I want our kid to learn from that, so they avoid the same mistakes and also can help out their friend. We praise teammates’ play even more frequently. I have found the most important part is not to talk about the outcome (a goal scored, a missed shot, a turnover in front of our goal), but what led to it (a great through ball, a bad pass, a teammate not helping out on defense).
The only time it gets a little edgy is when a kid has a bad attitude, is blaming teammates, etc. then we’ll be a little more pointed. But we’re generally not friendly with those kids’ parents.
Anonymous wrote:Boys or Girls - doesn’t matter. There are no friends in soccer. The players have friends but the parents on your sideline are not friends. They seem nice? They seem helpful? Given a choice, the other parents you share so many moments with will talk about your kid, and given a choice they will throw you under the bus, your kid under the bus just to get ahead.
If you dare do something nice trying to be different than the others - those people will abuse your kindness and crap on you. Be warned and find friends away from your club. Stay close enough to help your son (or daughter) keep their friendships.
Soccer is brutal. Wish I lived in Maryland or had a daughter even though I see much daughter drama there
Anonymous wrote:I disagree with the bottom line here, though I think you make a lot of good observations. I think a lot of parents fit this description. But not all. And my experience has been that the kids are more competitive with each other than the parents are among themselves. But what I have noticed is that there is a tipping point where a sufficient number of first-class jerks can adversely affect all of this, both among parents and players. And I think that threshold gets lower over time because parents think there is more at stake.
Academics are even worse, so I don’t think these are dynamics unique to soccer. You just observe them more directly and frequently. And basketball is far worse.