Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:We went to the nova cavs 12u tryouts this week for boys. there were a lot of boys there. Some were very talented.
So you must not go to many tryouts. Team was decent (I was at couple of others over the last week or so where the talent was head and shoulders better). It was interesting that you would even call it a tryout given no numbers were handed out and the coaches didn't even have a clipboard. Not that I care but it is interesting to see how blatant, as in not important, the coach thought the tryout was. At least he had the decency to not charge for it.
Anonymous wrote:We went to the nova cavs 12u tryouts this week for boys. there were a lot of boys there. Some were very talented.
Anonymous wrote: When I hear a coach say tell any player in the open court to pass the ball away, I cross that coach off the list of coaches for my kid.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Parents of the "star" players complain and pull their kids off teams mid-season if their star isn't getting to play all or most of the game. The bench kids are there to subsidize and practice with the 5 starters.
Dumb question: How do we know if our son will become one of the NoVA Cavs “star players” getting more play time than others? We watched a lot of talented players today at tryouts, with different strengths. Do parents ask before accepting and will we get a straight answer about how our son ranks compared to other guards? Of course, we know a lot factors go into the play time decisions and they change.
Our son played for another large NoVA team but ended up as a bencher due to daddy ball favoring the coach’s son and his friends. He played as well, if not better, than the favorites. It was such a waste of time for us as a family, and money, to watch our bencher sit out most of every game.![]()
Anonymous wrote:
Does he play on a Division 1 fcybl team now? Does he play a lot on that team?
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Parents of the "star" players complain and pull their kids off teams mid-season if their star isn't getting to play all or most of the game. The bench kids are there to subsidize and practice with the 5 starters.
Dumb question: How do we know if our son will become one of the NoVA Cavs “star players” getting more play time than others? We watched a lot of talented players today at tryouts, with different strengths. Do parents ask before accepting and will we get a straight answer about how our son ranks compared to other guards? Of course, we know a lot factors go into the play time decisions and they change.
Our son played for another large NoVA team but ended up as a bencher due to daddy ball favoring the coach’s son and his friends. He played as well, if not better, than the favorites. It was such a waste of time for us as a family, and money, to watch our bencher sit out most of every game.![]()
Anonymous wrote:Actually there are a lot of well known team coaches by dads of a player they want to be a star. Those kids play no matter if another player is better. The kids on the teams are usually point guards.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Parents of the "star" players complain and pull their kids off teams mid-season if their star isn't getting to play all or most of the game. The bench kids are there to subsidize and practice with the 5 starters.
Dumb question: How do we know if our son will become one of the NoVA Cavs “star players” getting more play time than others? We watched a lot of talented players today at tryouts, with different strengths. Do parents ask before accepting and will we get a straight answer about how our son ranks compared to other guards? Of course, we know a lot factors go into the play time decisions and they change.
Our son played for another large NoVA team but ended up as a bencher due to daddy ball favoring the coach’s son and his friends. He played as well, if not better, than the favorites. It was such a waste of time for us as a family, and money, to watch our bencher sit out most of every game.![]()
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Parents of the "star" players complain and pull their kids off teams mid-season if their star isn't getting to play all or most of the game. The bench kids are there to subsidize and practice with the 5 starters.
Dumb question: How do we know if our son will become one of the NoVA Cavs “star players” getting more play time than others? We watched a lot of talented players today at tryouts, with different strengths. Do parents ask before accepting and will we get a straight answer about how our son ranks compared to other guards? Of course, we know a lot factors go into the play time decisions and they change.
Our son played for another large NoVA team but ended up as a bencher due to daddy ball favoring the coach’s son and his friends. He played as well, if not better, than the favorites. It was such a waste of time for us as a family, and money, to watch our bencher sit out most of every game.![]()
Anonymous wrote:Parents of the "star" players complain and pull their kids off teams mid-season if their star isn't getting to play all or most of the game. The bench kids are there to subsidize and practice with the 5 starters.
Anonymous wrote:Parents of the "star" players complain and pull their kids off teams mid-season if their star isn't getting to play all or most of the game. The bench kids are there to subsidize and practice with the 5 starters.