Anonymous wrote:Our club sent an email asking for no post-season parties. If we want to keep soccer going, just let them play soccer and skip the parties. It's additional time together, and they're probably sitting near each other for longer periods when eating and sitting at a table, then they are in a huddle. Our huddles are just a few minutes, eating pizza together is at least 30 minutes. Why risk it? My friend's son's travel team had their coach catch Covid right at the end of the season, all the kids have had to be tested, and luckily none have tested positive, but can you imagine if they were sitting next to Coach at a pizza restaurant?
Anonymous wrote:DS's team recently had a team dinner to celebrate the end of the season and it was indoors. The coach and all the other players/parents on his team were ok with it but we weren't. It was tough having to tell him that we weren't going to attend because he understandably wanted to celebrate with his teammates. But I'd rather him be safe and unhappy than momentarily happy and run the risk of ending up with COVID. I've seen pictures from the event and there was not a single person wearing a mask so in retrospect, I feel certain that we made the right decision. And just as you mentioned, in a few of the photos, all of the boys were bunched up around a table playing games and watching videos on their phones.
Anonymous wrote:For a sports team like soccer where the kids are already breathing all over each other outside, I’d have no issue with an outdoor celebration. But not inside.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:the kids are playing games and practicing together- what is the difference in pizza outdoors post game??
They are playing yes, but the contact is short-lived and fleeting. Pizza party is sitting next to each other talking and eating and whatnot.
Anonymous wrote:the kids are playing games and practicing together- what is the difference in pizza outdoors post game??
Anonymous wrote:No! Have you not seen what happened in local catholic schools due to Halloween parties?
Anonymous wrote:no
Anonymous wrote:Our club sent an email asking for no post-season parties. If we want to keep soccer going, just let them play soccer and skip the parties. It's additional time together, and they're probably sitting near each other for longer periods when eating and sitting at a table, then they are in a huddle. Our huddles are just a few minutes, eating pizza together is at least 30 minutes. Why risk it? My friend's son's travel team had their coach catch Covid right at the end of the season, all the kids have had to be tested, and luckily none have tested positive, but can you imagine if they were sitting next to Coach at a pizza restaurant?
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:DS's team recently had a team dinner to celebrate the end of the season and it was indoors. The coach and all the other players/parents on his team were ok with it but we weren't. It was tough having to tell him that we weren't going to attend because he understandably wanted to celebrate with his teammates. But I'd rather him be safe and unhappy than momentarily happy and run the risk of ending up with COVID. I've seen pictures from the event and there was not a single person wearing a mask so in retrospect, I feel certain that we made the right decision. And just as you mentioned, in a few of the photos, all of the boys were bunched up around a table playing games and watching videos on their phones.
Do you have a crowd-sourcing site to raise funds for their hospital stay? Or the wakes and funerals?
Hyperbole doesn't help. You think multiple pre-teens and their coaches are doing to die?