Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:volunteer.
ok, mouth shut... for now...
hate to say it but this is so true. I criticized the coaches once and the guy turned to me and said well if you want to volunteer to coach then do it. And he was right of course and I have kept my mouth shut since then.
no! i wasn't going to criticize or complain to the coaches! i guess i titled the thread terribly. i was thinking of asking if they'd like us parents to say something to our kids about taking the practices more seriously.
No, you are criticizing them by overstepping boundaries and trying to affect practice. Listen- if you know how to run a practice and keep 12 nine year olds focused, then get off your ass and volunteer to coach a team. Or talk to the coach and help out. But you're going to yell at another parent's kid from the sideline? Get over yourself.
There are typically two types of parents- those who sit on the sidelines and watch every practice but do NOTHING to help and those who drop off the kids and disappear. There are very few parents who actually help out. I can guarantee the coaches would love two or three parents with skill and knowledge to help and break into smaller groups. Instead, you've got a couple volunteer dads trying to herd cats a couple times a week.
Listen, I think practices should be structured well, broken into small segments to keep practices from getting boring, especially at that age. My guess is the kids were screwing around because the coach was doing something boring or for too long a time. Instead of yelling at the kids, its far more productive to keep the kids engaged in a specific activity so you dno't have to yell in the first place. Pretty hard to screw around when you have only 10 minutes to run a specific drill.
But you're not helping with that, are you? You're sitting on the sideline and being judgemental about kids' behavior and the coaches' inability to maintain order. Here's what will help- get off your ass and help coach. Otherwise, shut your mouth. Its a REC LEAGUE FOR NINE YEAR OLD BOYS.
Parents like you are why coaches quit.
bored on a fri pm, troll? that's fine, let me feed you some more.
Anonymous wrote:Hell, if I witnessed the behavior, I wouldn't bother the coach. I'd tell the kids to pay attention right then and there. Why wouldn't you?
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:volunteer.
ok, mouth shut... for now...
hate to say it but this is so true. I criticized the coaches once and the guy turned to me and said well if you want to volunteer to coach then do it. And he was right of course and I have kept my mouth shut since then.
no! i wasn't going to criticize or complain to the coaches! i guess i titled the thread terribly. i was thinking of asking if they'd like us parents to say something to our kids about taking the practices more seriously.
No, you are criticizing them by overstepping boundaries and trying to affect practice. Listen- if you know how to run a practice and keep 12 nine year olds focused, then get off your ass and volunteer to coach a team. Or talk to the coach and help out. But you're going to yell at another parent's kid from the sideline? Get over yourself.
There are typically two types of parents- those who sit on the sidelines and watch every practice but do NOTHING to help and those who drop off the kids and disappear. There are very few parents who actually help out. I can guarantee the coaches would love two or three parents with skill and knowledge to help and break into smaller groups. Instead, you've got a couple volunteer dads trying to herd cats a couple times a week.
Listen, I think practices should be structured well, broken into small segments to keep practices from getting boring, especially at that age. My guess is the kids were screwing around because the coach was doing something boring or for too long a time. Instead of yelling at the kids, its far more productive to keep the kids engaged in a specific activity so you dno't have to yell in the first place. Pretty hard to screw around when you have only 10 minutes to run a specific drill.
But you're not helping with that, are you? You're sitting on the sideline and being judgemental about kids' behavior and the coaches' inability to maintain order. Here's what will help- get off your ass and help coach. Otherwise, shut your mouth. Its a REC LEAGUE FOR NINE YEAR OLD BOYS.
Parents like you are why coaches quit.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:volunteer.
ok, mouth shut... for now...
hate to say it but this is so true. I criticized the coaches once and the guy turned to me and said well if you want to volunteer to coach then do it. And he was right of course and I have kept my mouth shut since then.
no! i wasn't going to criticize or complain to the coaches! i guess i titled the thread terribly. i was thinking of asking if they'd like us parents to say something to our kids about taking the practices more seriously.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:volunteer.
ok, mouth shut... for now...
hate to say it but this is so true. I criticized the coaches once and the guy turned to me and said well if you want to volunteer to coach then do it. And he was right of course and I have kept my mouth shut since then.
no! i wasn't going to criticize or complain to the coaches! i guess i titled the thread terribly. i was thinking of asking if they'd like us parents to say something to our kids about taking the practices more seriously.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:volunteer.
ok, mouth shut... for now...
hate to say it but this is so true. I criticized the coaches once and the guy turned to me and said well if you want to volunteer to coach then do it. And he was right of course and I have kept my mouth shut since then.
Anonymous wrote:volunteer.
ok, mouth shut... for now...
Whoa. I'm just trying to figure the scene here. A dozen 9 year old boys, two daddy coaches, and ten parents on the sideline watching/chatting. My kid is goofing around and you think its okay to yell at my kid from the sidelines? Fuck you.
Talk to the coach between practices and offer to help. If he/she agrees, then ask specifically what they want you to do. But don't overstep boundaries. What you'rr suggesting is way over the line. You sound like an obnoxious asshole.
Seriously, if you can do a better job, then get off your ass and volunteer your time to coach a dozen 10 year olds. Otherwise, continue sitting on the sidelines and keep your mouth shut.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Hell, if I witnessed the behavior, I wouldn't bother the coach. I'd tell the kids to pay attention right then and there. Why wouldn't you?
Because YOU DO NOT SPEAK TO CHILDREN DURING PRACTICE. THAT IS THE COACH'S JOB.
You can yank your own kid if your own kid is a problem.
In fact, if your own kid is a problem, ask the coach if he's worse or better when you are present, and then act accordingly.
Calm down, Muffy. No need to yell.
I've never heard there's a rule that you can't speak to 9 year olds goofing off during a REC practice? I've done it sports practice, at Cub Scouts and at school when a teacher wasn't available/around/engaged in something else. If those kids are interfering with those wishing to be coached or listen, I'll speak up. If the coach has got a problem with it, I'd be happy to get the feedback - but the coach will then get some of mine.
Anonymous wrote:Offer to help instead of complaining, because it's not easy being the volunteer coach

Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Hell, if I witnessed the behavior, I wouldn't bother the coach. I'd tell the kids to pay attention right then and there. Why wouldn't you?
Because YOU DO NOT SPEAK TO CHILDREN DURING PRACTICE. THAT IS THE COACH'S JOB.
You can yank your own kid if your own kid is a problem.
In fact, if your own kid is a problem, ask the coach if he's worse or better when you are present, and then act accordingly.