Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:So parents can't observe the performance and see that she should be with the higher level? I know what I saw, her skills are similar, and she wants to be with her friends. She needs the challenge.
Travel baseball coach here.
I don't know if you're trolling but I have never seen a parent actually do what you describe.
No. Your judgement about your kid's ability is useless. Some parents can be objective, you are obviously not objective.
My guess is your kid is a solid player that won't hurt a team but when the baseball folks talk about wins above replacement... your kid is the replacement they are talking about.
The coach wants the best possible team and if your kid isn't making the cut, it's because the other players on that team are better than her.
Sure there are some close calls but in that case you:
A) Try to keep friends and siblings together
B) Give a tip for the kids with great parents that help out and make my life easier.
C) Avoid nightmare parents.
You are now checking the box for C. Your behavior just made sure that your kid loses every close call in that organization. You would be better off leaving and starting over and hoping noone calls your current club to find out about your kid and instead finds out about you. Sure you can rehabilitate yourself but it's a lot of work and if you were into hard work, your initial reaction to not making the cut wouldn't have been to do what you did, it would have been to ask what you do could improve to move up.
I am hoping you are trolling because this is so outrageous I don't know if you can actually outrun your reputation even if you became a saint at your next organization.
Anonymous wrote:So parents can't observe the performance and see that she should be with the higher level? I know what I saw, her skills are similar, and she wants to be with her friends. She needs the challenge.
Anonymous wrote:So parents can't observe the performance and see that she should be with the higher level? I know what I saw, her skills are similar, and she wants to be with her friends. She needs the challenge.
Anonymous wrote:Ever think 🤔 the coach and the program have your child’s best interest in mind?
This is what’s wrong with youth sports - parents - not trusting those in charge and letting go. If your child’s math teacher said they weren’t ready for algebra 2 and need more time in algebra 1, are you going to argue that you want your child to move up with her friends regardless?
Value a coaches input - it’s probably in the best interest of your child’s development.
Anonymous wrote:My kids coach is refusing to move my kid (12) up a level with her friends. This is a pretty high level group. I keep saying that I am not taking no for an answer and they stopped responding. The director of the program has already been brought into the discussion and they agreed with the coach. What are my next steps?
Anonymous wrote:Our club has a policy in our annual contract that says that there will be no level discussions with parents except to confirm levels during move-ups. It also says in writing that athletes should not expect to be moved up with their peers and that some will play up, repeat, or move up with their age groups.
Regardless of if your DD deserves to move up, the team has said no. They’re never going to change their mind because they don’t care about how your DD feels, or at least they care more about keeping that younger kid in their pipeline. We went through this and it hurt and it really sucked to watch someone new waltz in and bump my kid. Ultimately we knew we had zero agency because there are more kids who want to do the sport at that club than there are spots.
Time for a new team.