Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:I agree with the texting part, but arm on shoulder? I think I have seen that from every coach we've ever had, male or female.
I agree on that one but the arm came after a few weeks of texting. Groomers are always inching into what they are allowed to do. I think you guys are right, we need to tell the club.
The behavior is unsettling as is other aspects
Please tell the club. Grooming works because it identifies kids with parents who aren’t aware of what’s happening. You protected your daughter, which is fantastic, and now you can protect others too.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:I agree with the texting part, but arm on shoulder? I think I have seen that from every coach we've ever had, male or female.
I agree on that one but the arm came after a few weeks of texting. Groomers are always inching into what they are allowed to do. I think you guys are right, we need to tell the club.
The behavior is unsettling as is other aspects
Anonymous wrote:I agree with the texting part, but arm on shoulder? I think I have seen that from every coach we've ever had, male or female.
Anonymous wrote:A male coach texting a young female player about non team information is bad? Inform the girls, check on injuries maybe but daily texts about reminding them how special they are or reminding a young female player how important it is “we stick together” is just inappropriate. I can’t tell my daughter how to avoid certain types of men if a coach does it and she is pressured to accept it.
This is a process called “grooming” and it invokes control and dominance. Probing to look for the boundary. Happens when a coach also pulls a girl aside at team sessions or games with their arm on their shoulder. It’s a difficult conversation to have with the coach and even harder to tell a player to control these things.