Anonymous wrote:One child told one of my daughter's teammates to "suck it." Another child said "up your butt" to a different teammate of my daughter's.
THIS is all the kids said? And
My husband emailed the league commissioner (or whatever it's called), too.
Total over-reaction.
Guess what? Kids say mean things to each other sometimes. Especially during sports. It doesn't make it right. And I would remind the kids of the importance of sportsman like behavior. But really, making such a big deal of out relatively mild language is silly. I'll bet you don't keep score in your league either. The pussification of children in the D.C. area never ceases to amaze me.
Anonymous wrote:I was sideline coaching yesterday for my son's first grade soccer team and he scored a goal. Running back he yelled "in your butt," (kinda like "in your face") and I immediately took him out and sat him for a quarter.
Anonymous wrote:One child told one of my daughter's teammates to "suck it." Another child said "up your butt" to a different teammate of my daughter's.
THIS is all the kids said? And
My husband emailed the league commissioner (or whatever it's called), too.
Total over-reaction.
Guess what? Kids say mean things to each other sometimes. Especially during sports. It doesn't make it right. And I would remind the kids of the importance of sportsman like behavior. But really, making such a big deal of out relatively mild language is silly. I'll bet you don't keep score in your league either. The pussification of children in the D.C. area never ceases to amaze me.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:I'm not sure why this wasn't taken up with the ref - that's the ref's job. In most of the youth leagues around here, vulgarity (defined in an age-appropriate way) is a cardable offense, but if the ref doesn't call it, the ref doesn't call it.
I was stunned when a ten year old dropped the F-bomb and nothing was done (should have been a yellow card), but I am not the ref.
Agree that this seems odd to me. My DS is in U16 and kids get yellow and even red carded for language.
Anonymous wrote:I'm not sure why this wasn't taken up with the ref - that's the ref's job. In most of the youth leagues around here, vulgarity (defined in an age-appropriate way) is a cardable offense, but if the ref doesn't call it, the ref doesn't call it.
I was stunned when a ten year old dropped the F-bomb and nothing was done (should have been a yellow card), but I am not the ref.
I am not sure it is worth going to the commissioner, but it is certainly part of the value system we try to instill in the kids we are working with as parent volunteers.
Anonymous wrote:One child told one of my daughter's teammates to "suck it." Another child said "up your butt" to a different teammate of my daughter's.
THIS is all the kids said? And
My husband emailed the league commissioner (or whatever it's called), too.
Total over-reaction.
Guess what? Kids say mean things to each other sometimes. Especially during sports. It doesn't make it right. And I would remind the kids of the importance of sportsman like behavior. But really, making such a big deal of out relatively mild language is silly. I'll bet you don't keep score in your league either. The pussification of children in the D.C. area never ceases to amaze me.