Anonymous wrote:OP here.
Not being deliberately vague. Didn't see/hear it, but had a kid in tears later that night, who said that's what happened after he missed a pass.
I'm not inclined to say anything to the coach unless it becomes a pattern, but I'm wondering whether I'm underreacting.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:OP here.
Not being deliberately vague. Didn't see/hear it, but had a kid in tears later that night, who said that's what happened after he missed a pass.
I'm not inclined to say anything to the coach unless it becomes a pattern, but I'm wondering whether I'm underreacting.
If you weren’t there, you don’t know whether your child is accurately describing what happened (not that he is necessarily lying, but if he felt embarrassed to have his mistake pointed out, he may have perceived the coach’s response as more than it was). If you are concerned, you need to observe a couple of practices for yourself to see what’s happening.
NP - but the kid is in tears. That suggests a coach who doesn't know a player - an 11 year old player, nonetheless - well enough to know what motivates him. And I'm someone who did respond to that kind of feedback as a competitive adult athlete. For a kid? Nope.
OP, I'd put it as a 3.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:OP here.
Not being deliberately vague. Didn't see/hear it, but had a kid in tears later that night, who said that's what happened after he missed a pass.
I'm not inclined to say anything to the coach unless it becomes a pattern, but I'm wondering whether I'm underreacting.
If you weren’t there, you don’t know whether your child is accurately describing what happened (not that he is necessarily lying, but if he felt embarrassed to have his mistake pointed out, he may have perceived the coach’s response as more than it was). If you are concerned, you need to observe a couple of practices for yourself to see what’s happening.
Anonymous wrote:OP here.
Not being deliberately vague. Didn't see/hear it, but had a kid in tears later that night, who said that's what happened after he missed a pass.
I'm not inclined to say anything to the coach unless it becomes a pattern, but I'm wondering whether I'm underreacting.
Anonymous wrote:OP, you know we need more information than that to give you a valid answer, so I suspect you are making it deliberately vague to get to elicit the answer you want rather than the answer you know the situation deserves. If the kid in question is making a sincere effort to do what the coach is asking them to do but their skill development isn’t there yet, that’s one thing. But if this is about the kid’s conscious decisions, particularly those that go against what the coach has told him to do, then the response may be warranted. Last season I sat kid’s coach react similarly to a player on the team. The issue was that the kid was refusing to pass to a particular teammate that the kid felt wasn’t good enough, no matter how many times the coach told him that he needed to pass to the teammate in that situation. The kid’s arrogance in repeatedly defying coach’s instructions absolutely warranted a strong response. And no, my kid wasn’t the other teammate.