Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:My kid has played on MSI since kindergarten. We always had a parent who was an "assistant" coach who was in charge of kid wrangling. Parents will presumably be in their cars in the parking lot, so could be quickly fetched if there is an injury.
Games will probably be more enjoyable for kids, coaches, and refs without all the parents standing around anyway.
Thats not true for younger kids. Like K,1 st and some 2nd
They play alot on the sidelines, flips, play wrestling. They are still learning sideline etiquette and behavior. And most kids this age do NOT Want drop off without a parent. They dont even do drop off birthday parties at this age.
Do you actually have a Kindergartner? People definitely do drop off bday parties with kindergartners. Maybe you need two assistant plus the coach for the younger kids. Your teams will figure it out, but, you do not need a parent for every child.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:My kid has played on MSI since kindergarten. We always had a parent who was an "assistant" coach who was in charge of kid wrangling. Parents will presumably be in their cars in the parking lot, so could be quickly fetched if there is an injury.
Games will probably be more enjoyable for kids, coaches, and refs without all the parents standing around anyway.
Thats not true for younger kids. Like K,1 st and some 2nd
They play alot on the sidelines, flips, play wrestling. They are still learning sideline etiquette and behavior. And most kids this age do NOT Want drop off without a parent. They dont even do drop off birthday parties at this age.
Anonymous wrote:We have had a few scrimmages. They parents are masked up but there is little social distancing. It’s just a matter of time before a photo of the sidelines becomes viral and the county or states takes action.
Anonymous wrote:My kid has played on MSI since kindergarten. We always had a parent who was an "assistant" coach who was in charge of kid wrangling. Parents will presumably be in their cars in the parking lot, so could be quickly fetched if there is an injury.
Games will probably be more enjoyable for kids, coaches, and refs without all the parents standing around anyway.
Anonymous wrote:MSI has said that they are interpreting the new MoCo guidance to not allow any spectators on the sidelines (even if they are masked and socially distanced). This means that one coach and one assistant coach will be totally responsible for coaching the game, making sure the players wear their masks, dealing with injured players, making sure that the little kids don't run off from the sidelines, etc....
Is this really what MoCo said? This seems to me even a bigger problem than the masks. How is it safe/fair to ask the volunteer parent coaches to do this for an entire team? Why can't they at least have 2 parent volunteers on the sidelines to monitor kids who are not actively playing and deal with anyone that gets injured?
Anonymous wrote:MSI has said that they are interpreting the new MoCo guidance to not allow any spectators on the sidelines (even if they are masked and socially distanced). This means that one coach and one assistant coach will be totally responsible for coaching the game, making sure the players wear their masks, dealing with injured players, making sure that the little kids don't run off from the sidelines, etc....
Is this really what MoCo said? This seems to me even a bigger problem than the masks. How is it safe/fair to ask the volunteer parent coaches to do this for an entire team? Why can't they at least have 2 parent volunteers on the sidelines to monitor kids who are not actively playing and deal with anyone that gets injured?