One child told one of my daughter's teammates to "suck it." Another child said "up your butt" to a different teammate of my daughter's.
My husband emailed the league commissioner (or whatever it's called), too.
Anonymous wrote:I know -- during a tournament game last year, a parent actually called my kid "fat boy" while he was in the middle of a play. (And he is a chunky kid, so already pretty sensitive about it.)
He still thinks about that.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:That is just the tip of the iceberg, OP. My kids have repeated things other teams have said to them for years and it is appalling. It is really shocking what some young kids will say when they are losing or another team is significantly better at a game. I do not know where they get this stuff but your only responsibility is your own. I always tell DD, DS and their team mates to "rise" above" as replying in a similar manner "takes you down to their level and only loser talk like that." That kind of language is only employed by sad and pathetic kids who can not show their skill and so have to resort to bad language and name calling. My kids absolutely know that and therefore it slides right off their backs and just makes them play better. I truly believe that is the only way to combat such languiage from other children. Don't give it any power and do not respond with words, just play even better.
And other teams have been going home with stories of what your kids and teammates have said. Truly - it is never only the other teams.
Anonymous wrote:That is just the tip of the iceberg, OP. My kids have repeated things other teams have said to them for years and it is appalling. It is really shocking what some young kids will say when they are losing or another team is significantly better at a game. I do not know where they get this stuff but your only responsibility is your own. I always tell DD, DS and their team mates to "rise" above" as replying in a similar manner "takes you down to their level and only loser talk like that." That kind of language is only employed by sad and pathetic kids who can not show their skill and so have to resort to bad language and name calling. My kids absolutely know that and therefore it slides right off their backs and just makes them play better. I truly believe that is the only way to combat such languiage from other children. Don't give it any power and do not respond with words, just play even better.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:OP here- I left that part out. Sorry. He DID say something to the other coach and the coach said he would talk to his players after the game. From what my husband could tell, he did nothing after the game which is why I said he did nothing about it. My husband emailed the league commissioner (or whatever it's called), too.
Then all he can do is to discuss the situation with his players, reinforcing why those actions are inappropriate. Sadly, he'll also have to remind them that some adults take NO responsibility for their players' behavior.
pathetic
It gets worse as they become older. Last year's swim team was a mess - parents fighting with each other over swim times.
You can only continue to model appropriate behavior and hope that it sticks - despite the inappropriate actions they may see from time to time.
Anonymous wrote:OP here- I left that part out. Sorry. He DID say something to the other coach and the coach said he would talk to his players after the game. From what my husband could tell, he did nothing after the game which is why I said he did nothing about it. My husband emailed the league commissioner (or whatever it's called), too.