Anonymous wrote:I’ve got a similar situation.
My 9, almost 10 year old has decent skills and she’s by far the fastest on the team, but you’d never know it from watching a game. She’s on a new team and shy anyway, so last week I asked her why she wasn’t giving the same level of effort in games that she gives in practice and it boiled down to confidence in skills. She essentially said she’d rather not enter a 1v1 situation than try it and lose.
I signed her up for private lessons with her (amazing) coach. Note - I’ve also got an 8 year old and there’s no way I’d sign her up for private lessons at that age. It is incredibly expensive, but I want her to learn that practicing can build mastery and confidence. I don’t care if she plays soccer past 5th grade, but I do care that she learn the results of practice and giving 110% for your team on the field.
So, my suggestion is practice with her or get someone else who can.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Leave her alone op. It’s a pandemic.
OP here. The kids are wearing masks. The kids entered the league because they want to play. My daughter wants to play, and isn't fearful of COVID. She wants to be on the field. She wants to improve. In the rare moments I give her constructive criticism, she isn't upset. So I think the solution isn't to "leave her alone", but rather to figure out best to help her improve.
Refrain from hurting her brain and participating in child abuse. If she plays she must do so without a mask. Otherwise, subject yourself to one hour of cardio with a mask on. #equity #OneForAllAndAllForOne
Anonymous wrote:Is she competitive by nature? Does she have the drive to win at everything, be the best at everything? You either have that innate competitiveness or you don’t.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Leave her alone op. It’s a pandemic.
OP here. The kids are wearing masks. The kids entered the league because they want to play. My daughter wants to play, and isn't fearful of COVID. She wants to be on the field. She wants to improve. In the rare moments I give her constructive criticism, she isn't upset. So I think the solution isn't to "leave her alone", but rather to figure out best to help her improve.
Anonymous wrote:Leave her alone op. It’s a pandemic.
Anonymous wrote:This is hard to teach. Focus on having fun. Make sure she is on a team with other kids she likes. I'd be careful about being too critical. She may decide to stop playing.