Anonymous wrote:Bingo. You are correct. It’s all what you make it. You can’t trust a coach, team, club, program. Your child has to put in the effort and work. Someone is always there, waiting and working to take your place. Parents will stab each other in the front…if it increases their child’s chances to further develop or better themselves. It’s a joke. You can only laugh at it and realize you have to look out for your child’s future - without trying to damage others along the way.
Anonymous wrote:Bingo. You are correct. It’s all what you make it. You can’t trust a coach, team, club, program. Your child has to put in the effort and work. Someone is always there, waiting and working to take your place. Parents will stab each other in the front…if it increases their child’s chances to further develop or better themselves. It’s a joke. You can only laugh at it and realize you have to look out for your child’s future - without trying to damage others along the way.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:My kid turned 17 and handled it all himself…let me tell you the sh@t and politics and nepotism and incompetence and favoritism in both HS and club soccer prepared him better for life than anything else.
This kid got screwed over more times than I count and we didn’t fight it each time. Cut, benched, etc. for coach’s son and friends, etc. passed over for promotion by bench kids of donors, etc. just told him something better always comes along…and it always did.
It took until end of senior year in HS. Cream really does find a way to rise to the top.
But, be warned, college soccer is filled with the sane horsesh@t. Thankfully, the backbone and self-worth and grit he developed from not having mommy and daddy up the coaches’ butts or us cozying up and wining and dining the HS coaches paid off, not just in soccer but life. Kids get great confidence from all of this when you let it happen and teach them ways to deal with it and move on.
Let me guess you joysticked your kid through a whole bunch of clubs and teams because they never told you what you wanted to hear .
I’m going to throw you a hypothetical here… Perhaps all of the poorly paid coaches aren’t part of a Snidely Whiplash cabal to ruin just your child. Perhaps they were just being honest?
Persecution complex is a dangerous thing . I’d suggest seeking help.
Anonymous wrote:My kid turned 17 and handled it all himself…let me tell you the sh@t and politics and nepotism and incompetence and favoritism in both HS and club soccer prepared him better for life than anything else.
This kid got screwed over more times than I count and we didn’t fight it each time. Cut, benched, etc. for coach’s son and friends, etc. passed over for promotion by bench kids of donors, etc. just told him something better always comes along…and it always did.
It took until end of senior year in HS. Cream really does find a way to rise to the top.
But, be warned, college soccer is filled with the sane horsesh@t. Thankfully, the backbone and self-worth and grit he developed from not having mommy and daddy up the coaches’ butts or us cozying up and wining and dining the HS coaches paid off, not just in soccer but life. Kids get great confidence from all of this when you let it happen and teach them ways to deal with it and move on.
Anonymous wrote:Go Space Force!!!
Anonymous wrote:all of this- coaching, players, teams. promote your child. do the work. trust nobody!
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:all of this- coaching, players, teams. promote your child. do the work. trust nobody!
Sir, this is a Wendy's ...
I lol’d
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:all of this- coaching, players, teams. promote your child. do the work. trust nobody!
Sir, this is a Wendy's ...
Anonymous wrote:all of this- coaching, players, teams. promote your child. do the work. trust nobody!