Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:As I see it there are three issues here:
1) Coach doesn't like your kid as much as the others.
2) Coach doesn't praise the kid when they play well.
3) Coach doesn't give the kid feedback on how to improve.
1...there isn't much you can do about this. The reality is that people always will like some more than others.
2...this isn't really worth worrying about either. And not much you can do
3...this is where she should take action. She deserves actionable feedback from her coach on how to improve her play. Have her approach the coach and ask for feedback. But only do this if she is prepared to listen non-defensively to the feedback and try to improve.
What happens if your kid plays the same position as the coach's kid? It's happened twice to my kid and that was the situation both times. If you just stuck getting minimal playing time because the coach's kid is obviously a star, you just have to grin and bear it
Anonymous wrote:As I see it there are three issues here:
1) Coach doesn't like your kid as much as the others.
2) Coach doesn't praise the kid when they play well.
3) Coach doesn't give the kid feedback on how to improve.
1...there isn't much you can do about this. The reality is that people always will like some more than others.
2...this isn't really worth worrying about either. And not much you can do
3...this is where she should take action. She deserves actionable feedback from her coach on how to improve her play. Have her approach the coach and ask for feedback. But only do this if she is prepared to listen non-defensively to the feedback and try to improve.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Look for a new team. If others are noticing, it’s a problem.
To clarify, the coach seems to be favoring a few kids and there is very little feedback for the others.
Anonymous wrote:Look for a new team. If others are noticing, it’s a problem.
Anonymous wrote:Is the coach outwardly nicer to the other kids? Could he just not feel like he can "like" any of them?