Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Rex coaches have to play everyone. This is why people leave for travel.
I seriously doubt people's kids are talented enough to make a travel team, and also the rec coach is sitting them out for 75% of the game and letting other kids play 100% of the game. Lol.
Not what PP is saying. PP is saying because rec coaches have to play everyone, the team cannot compete the way they could if you have to earn your time so the better players leave for a more competitive environment.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Rex coaches have to play everyone. This is why people leave for travel.
I seriously doubt people's kids are talented enough to make a travel team, and also the rec coach is sitting them out for 75% of the game and letting other kids play 100% of the game. Lol.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Rex coaches have to play everyone. This is why people leave for travel.
They have to play everyone, but not necessarily everyone in the first 15 minutes, right?
I want to know what OP means when she says the coach was upset.
Anonymous wrote:I've coached rec soccer here and there for seasons when they needed more coaches. Only for younger ages- second grade and below- because once kids got older, IMO they needed coaches who actually knew something about coaching soccer, and not me, the random mom who quit soccer in middle school.
I always gave kids equal playing time, no matter how talented they were, or no matter if they spent the entire time standing there looking at the clouds. I kept a timer on my phone and rotated those kids in and out every 5 minutes like clockwork. That being said, substitutions were done on the fly, and many times, a kid would say "I'm too tired" or "my tummy hurts" or "I'm not ready to play yet" or "I don't want to play anymore today I hate soccer". If they said that, I didn't push, I just said ok no problem and I let one of the more enthusiastic, soccer-loving kids stay on for a second rotation. Half the time, that was my own kid, because he was one of the kids who always wanted to stay in for extra minutes, and you know what, I'm out there volunteering to coach every week, so I'm going to let my kid take the extra minutes over a different kid, not every time, but a lot of the time. So sometimes this was misconstrued- a dad once came up to me after the game and asked why his son sat out the entire second half while my son and another kid played almost the whole time. I told him that his son didn't want to play, and I asked him twice and he said no twice and that I am not going to cajole kids into getting onto the field if they tell me adamantly that they don't want to.
Coaching rec sports is a pretty thankless job sometimes honestly.
Anonymous wrote:Rex coaches have to play everyone. This is why people leave for travel.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:My husband coachs a similar age group and I have a son who has had other coaches in similar leagues. You really should not be interfering during a game. It’s pretty tough to make sure everyone gets equal playing time especially if the kids have different positions. There are kids who play the whole game because they are the only ones willing to be goalie but also want a chance to do other positions. There are other kids who refuse to go in for anything but Striker because they think they are Messi. The coach is trying to explain sportsmanship but also keep the game moving.
Also, my husband usually sketch’s out playing time ahead of the game but then parents will tell him at the start oh we have to leave at half time so he usually adjusts to let the kid play earlier since at this age it’s not the kids fault usually.
The only time I have seen a kid really get dramatically less playing time is when he got benched for refusing to listen to court rules from either the coach or the referee. Hopefully you would notice if that was the case! Anyway, it’s fine to ask but wait till the end of the game and ideally do it via email.
+1 to all this.
Most coaches my kids have had (DH included) plan out playing time ahead of the game, but have to pivot last minute with kids not showing. A few times after a game my DH has realized he didn’t play a certain kid enough. He always feels bad about it and makes a note to play that kid a bit more the next game. Sometimes he’ll text the parents proactively to make sure they know it was an oversight.
If this is not typical of the coach, I’d give him the benefit of the doubt. Agree with others you should ask your kid about it first. Then send an email later or bring it up to the coach quietly at the next practice.
Some other things to consider:
1. Our rec basketball refs will stop a game and tell parents to sit down if they see them approach the bench/attempt to speak to a coach during the game. It is against league rules, and I’ve seen them enforce it.
2. Coaches might bench a kid for not following rules. Again, this is why you should talk to your kid first.
3. Some leagues allow coaches to sit kids who don’t show up to practice repeatedly. Obviously it’s preferable to coaches to communicate this to the parent before it’s done, but does your kid go to practice?
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:It's hard to tell what is going on from OP's scenario. Did your kid get to play at all or were they benched the whole time? What 15 minutes are your referring to?
Not all rec leagues have "equal" playing time rules. Most have minimum playing time rules. Before I talked to the coach, I'd read up on this. Different coaches and different leagues have different approaches to setting this up. Just because your kid didn't play in the first 15 minutes doesn't mean they didn't get minimum or equal playing time.
Pretty standard to have equal playing time at that age. The coach getting upset tells you all you need to know.
Anonymous wrote:Rex coaches have to play everyone. This is why people leave for travel.