Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Honest to god, just quit. I’m sure you have better things to do with your time.
OP here. Our kid wants to and we’ve agreed that makes sense at end of fall season. Baseball, btw. Cant compete with coach’s kids and all the other nonsense. Has been rough on everyone and we don’t need it in our lives. It just gets old after awhile.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:I coached softball. Here’s what I found and what I told parents:
This is travel ball. It is a select team. Yes, we are developmental, but playing time is neither even nor guaranteed.
In doubleheaders and pool play on Saturdays I bat the roster and rotate the defense evenly. Everyone gets an opportunity. That doesn’t mean your kid starts at their preferred position if there are other players better in that spot, but I will look for opportunities to put them there to give them a chance to prove themselves.
On elimination Sunday, however, only the best 9 are starting. And that “best 9” is situational — who worked hardest in practice that week, who produced on Saturday, who hits fast pitching better versus slow pitching (and vice versa). A lot of variables. And that “best 9” might change game-to-game if we advance, depending on the opponent. If your kid is on the bench, I will try to get them into the game, either as a courtesy runner or as a pinch hitter, but it’s entirely situational.
One time we lost our first game and were out of the tournament early. One kid didn’t play in that game. Parents start screaming at me. I looked at them evenly, told them they signed up for this and reminded them of the player contract they signed that, among other things, had a 24-hour rule.
I cut the kid the next day.
So you're an a**hole who is incapable of properly assessing kids at tryouts and then gives offers to kids who don't play?
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:I coached softball. Here’s what I found and what I told parents:
This is travel ball. It is a select team. Yes, we are developmental, but playing time is neither even nor guaranteed.
In doubleheaders and pool play on Saturdays I bat the roster and rotate the defense evenly. Everyone gets an opportunity. That doesn’t mean your kid starts at their preferred position if there are other players better in that spot, but I will look for opportunities to put them there to give them a chance to prove themselves.
On elimination Sunday, however, only the best 9 are starting. And that “best 9” is situational — who worked hardest in practice that week, who produced on Saturday, who hits fast pitching better versus slow pitching (and vice versa). A lot of variables. And that “best 9” might change game-to-game if we advance, depending on the opponent. If your kid is on the bench, I will try to get them into the game, either as a courtesy runner or as a pinch hitter, but it’s entirely situational.
One time we lost our first game and were out of the tournament early. One kid didn’t play in that game. Parents start screaming at me. I looked at them evenly, told them they signed up for this and reminded them of the player contract they signed that, among other things, had a 24-hour rule.
I cut the kid the next day.
So you're an a**hole who is incapable of properly assessing kids at tryouts and then gives offers to kids who don't play?
Anonymous wrote:I coached softball. Here’s what I found and what I told parents:
This is travel ball. It is a select team. Yes, we are developmental, but playing time is neither even nor guaranteed.
In doubleheaders and pool play on Saturdays I bat the roster and rotate the defense evenly. Everyone gets an opportunity. That doesn’t mean your kid starts at their preferred position if there are other players better in that spot, but I will look for opportunities to put them there to give them a chance to prove themselves.
On elimination Sunday, however, only the best 9 are starting. And that “best 9” is situational — who worked hardest in practice that week, who produced on Saturday, who hits fast pitching better versus slow pitching (and vice versa). A lot of variables. And that “best 9” might change game-to-game if we advance, depending on the opponent. If your kid is on the bench, I will try to get them into the game, either as a courtesy runner or as a pinch hitter, but it’s entirely situational.
One time we lost our first game and were out of the tournament early. One kid didn’t play in that game. Parents start screaming at me. I looked at them evenly, told them they signed up for this and reminded them of the player contract they signed that, among other things, had a 24-hour rule.
I cut the kid the next day.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Honest to god, just quit. I’m sure you have better things to do with your time.
OP here. Our kid wants to and we’ve agreed that makes sense at end of fall season. Baseball, btw. Cant compete with coach’s kids and all the other nonsense. Has been rough on everyone and we don’t need it in our lives. It just gets old after awhile.
It honestly sounds like you have a terrible coach. Having a coach like this can really damage the self-esteem. There are so many options for baseball teams at your son’s age.
I have three kids, all of whom play baseball or softball and they have been on and seen many, many other teams over the years. I have never seen kids mostly sit the bench unless they were literally an outlier in terms of skill. Never. Now, if the coach lied, that's an issue. But assess your kid objectively and find a team where his skill level matches that of the team. None of my kids have ever joined a team without DH or me, or later the kids when they were older, asking the coach where he or she saw our kid fitting into the team. One coach told DH my daughter likely would not get a lot of playing time but that was only after we asked--he did not volunteer that up front. So she did not join. If we misread things or the coach lied, I would have no problem leaving mid season.
I disagree. We have two who play baseball and two who play softball. In the younger years of softball, we see lots of girls of similar ability — with some sitting the bench endlessly and others never sitting.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Honest to god, just quit. I’m sure you have better things to do with your time.
OP here. Our kid wants to and we’ve agreed that makes sense at end of fall season. Baseball, btw. Cant compete with coach’s kids and all the other nonsense. Has been rough on everyone and we don’t need it in our lives. It just gets old after awhile.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Honest to god, just quit. I’m sure you have better things to do with your time.
OP here. Our kid wants to and we’ve agreed that makes sense at end of fall season. Baseball, btw. Cant compete with coach’s kids and all the other nonsense. Has been rough on everyone and we don’t need it in our lives. It just gets old after awhile.
It honestly sounds like you have a terrible coach. Having a coach like this can really damage the self-esteem. There are so many options for baseball teams at your son’s age.
I have three kids, all of whom play baseball or softball and they have been on and seen many, many other teams over the years. I have never seen kids mostly sit the bench unless they were literally an outlier in terms of skill. Never. Now, if the coach lied, that's an issue. But assess your kid objectively and find a team where his skill level matches that of the team. None of my kids have ever joined a team without DH or me, or later the kids when they were older, asking the coach where he or she saw our kid fitting into the team. One coach told DH my daughter likely would not get a lot of playing time but that was only after we asked--he did not volunteer that up front. So she did not join. If we misread things or the coach lied, I would have no problem leaving mid season.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Honest to god, just quit. I’m sure you have better things to do with your time.
OP here. Our kid wants to and we’ve agreed that makes sense at end of fall season. Baseball, btw. Cant compete with coach’s kids and all the other nonsense. Has been rough on everyone and we don’t need it in our lives. It just gets old after awhile.
It honestly sounds like you have a terrible coach. Having a coach like this can really damage the self-esteem. There are so many options for baseball teams at your son’s age.
Anonymous wrote:Coach: We are developmental and get everyone involved in games.
Reality: Some kids sit the bench all day.
At 11.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Honest to god, just quit. I’m sure you have better things to do with your time.
OP here. Our kid wants to and we’ve agreed that makes sense at end of fall season. Baseball, btw. Cant compete with coach’s kids and all the other nonsense. Has been rough on everyone and we don’t need it in our lives. It just gets old after awhile.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Honest to god, just quit. I’m sure you have better things to do with your time.
OP here. Our kid wants to and we’ve agreed that makes sense at end of fall season. Baseball, btw. Cant compete with coach’s kids and all the other nonsense. Has been rough on everyone and we don’t need it in our lives. It just gets old after awhile.
Report it to the commissioner, it needs to be in writing, and then quit.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Honest to god, just quit. I’m sure you have better things to do with your time.
OP here. Our kid wants to and we’ve agreed that makes sense at end of fall season. Baseball, btw. Cant compete with coach’s kids and all the other nonsense. Has been rough on everyone and we don’t need it in our lives. It just gets old after awhile.