Anonymous wrote:Coaching is very much a skill. You'll have to develop it, and also an instructional relationship with your kid. It's worth doing though, because it will only make your kid that much more coachable. It's worthwhile reading relevant coaching material, even if it's only sports nutrition and conditioning.
We recently switched teams, and I think my DD's new coach was somewhat surprised she actually listened and implemented the things he was talking about in practice (while the coaches' kids barely listened to word they said). She very quickly became the go to player. Coaches' kids not listening seems par for the course in AAU basketball, it's kind of weird, we love them for organizing the teams anyway. AAU basketball is still very much parent coach oriented.
The bottom line is until you get to MS/HS program where they coaches are training them 5+ days a week, you'll have to figure out how to plug the gaps and get the right amount of training when they need.
Anonymous wrote:I got into coaching basketball after getting an email that there would not be a team unless someone volunteered. It took me longer than I thought to get good at coaching, at least up to my standards, the kids were young enough that it didn't matter that much.
Don't do it if you can't control your temper. I've seen coaches slam their clipboards in rec league games. Don't be more ambitious than your kid, I've seen kids drop the sport because the parent was pushing too hard.
But the payoff is pretty great, seeing the kids advance into higher levels.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Jade Carey, Chelsea Memmel, and Nastia Liukin would all say yes.
So on that point, do they still have good relationships with their parents? I don't know their stories. Andre Agassi ended up hating his dad.
Anonymous wrote:They say professional athletes often make the worst coaches because they instinctively know how to do something, are not great imparting their knowledge to others and impatient when their kid/student isn’t picking it up quickly.
We had one LL coach who played in the MLB and was by far the worst coach we had. Possible he just was coaching the wrong age…couldn’t teach the kids much and had a short fuse. Lots of yelling at the players and the Umps.
On the flip side…many MLB players are children of MLB players, but that’s likely great genes passed down and not sure how much they coached their own kids.
Anonymous wrote:Jade Carey, Chelsea Memmel, and Nastia Luikin would all say yes.
Anonymous wrote:OP here. My kid is starting to show some genuine interest in my sport after trying several others. I'm finding it hard not to jump in and correct technical mistakes or offer tips when we're at home, but my input isn't landing well. I'm starting to think my role should just be to cheer from the sidelines and find them quality coaches instead. This would all be would be easier if they'd picked a different sport!
Anonymous wrote:Jade Carey, Chelsea Memmel, and Nastia Luikin would all say yes.