Anonymous wrote:My son switched clubs last year and in the past, the coach would send a kid out for the coin toss, but it was always random. This last season, we had a designated "team" captain on the team and the things the coach would say to this kid was ridiculous such as "you are the Capt, you do that again and and you'll loose that role son." The kid was a solid player, other than wearing an arm band we couldn't figure out what the big deal was about being a "captain", my son was also perplexed why. This was for U11 and after a year of seeing/hearing this I still don't know why it was so important for this coach to appoint a team captain.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:It could be your new to the club and don't know that particular player/coach relationship. The coach may feel he he's pushing this player just out of his comfort zone enough to see some growth. If he has the confidence to make him captain. He may know the particular player can handle it. By pushing the player slightly out of his comfort zone to continue developing the player into a leader. The question is , Is he treating all the players the same? If he is that may get negative results at such a young age as all kids at U11 aren't ready or may never be ready for that. I would commend his efforts as a coach if he can figure out each player individually. Developing each player by individually finding and expanding their comfort zones is what great coaches do. To answer the original question, Yes captains should be at all ages and used as a tool to develop leadership.
NO NO NO, not at the younger ages. You do realize, you want the team captain to really lead during the game, keeping teammates focused, etc. None of them are able to do that at the younger ages, they need to listen to the coach.
Anonymous wrote:It could be your new to the club and don't know that particular player/coach relationship. The coach may feel he he's pushing this player just out of his comfort zone enough to see some growth. If he has the confidence to make him captain. He may know the particular player can handle it. By pushing the player slightly out of his comfort zone to continue developing the player into a leader. The question is , Is he treating all the players the same? If he is that may get negative results at such a young age as all kids at U11 aren't ready or may never be ready for that. I would commend his efforts as a coach if he can figure out each player individually. Developing each player by individually finding and expanding their comfort zones is what great coaches do. To answer the original question, Yes captains should be at all ages and used as a tool to develop leadership.